How can I get out of starvation mode?
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I refuse to be harsh in this situation because you are total opposite of me in a way and rec'd negative feedback. If I were you, I'd be happy. You are at a great weight if anything gain a few pounds. You stated you have stopped getting your period which isn't good. So, I recommend talking to your doctor. What does your doctor say about losing weight?0
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Metabolic damage is reversible starvation mode is fantasy. You can also screw up your metabolism by eating to much. We call that Gluttony mode .Did you not read above? There is the myth of starvation mode and the reality of starving yourself.Hundreds of people don't think starvation mode exists and they give out great advice. I dont think someone at 600 calories are in starvation mode i think they are eating very low and unhealthy amounts of food. To the OP you can change your eating habits but what may hold you back is your mind. My suggestion find friends and family who will support you unconditionally.
So, you do not agree that eating this amount will impact someones metabolism? If so, there is a very big gap between what you think versus what is reality.
I did read it, and your response did not answer my question - do you, or do you not, agree that eating at 600 calories a day will screw someones metabolism? (Not whether it unhealthy or not - you seem to agree with that one)0 -
Metabolic damage is reversible starvation mode is fantasy. You can also screw up your metabolism by eating to much. We call that Gluttony mode .Did you not read above? There is the myth of starvation mode and the reality of starving yourself.Hundreds of people don't think starvation mode exists and they give out great advice. I dont think someone at 600 calories are in starvation mode i think they are eating very low and unhealthy amounts of food. To the OP you can change your eating habits but what may hold you back is your mind. My suggestion find friends and family who will support you unconditionally.
So, you do not agree that eating this amount will impact someones metabolism? If so, there is a very big gap between what you think versus what is reality.
I did read it, and your response did not answer my question - do you, or do you not, agree that eating at 600 calories a day will screw someones metabolism? (Not whether it unhealthy or not - you seem to agree with that one)
Who said it was not reversible? Just because something is reversible does not mean it does not exist, So if I am reading this right, you do agree that eating too little will detrimentally effect someones metabolism (and is revesible!). So, this whole thing is about semantics.0 -
Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.0
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Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.
Sorry for hijacking your thread in a pissing match. Just ignore my and Watboys tet-a-tet and read through the rest of the thead. Good luck.0 -
5'7" and 122 pounds is considered underweight. You are flirting with an eating disorder and serious damage to your organs. Get some psychological help, as soon as possible. The longer you wait, the more disordered your thinking will become. You are living on almost no nutrients, and your brain can no longer distinguish right from wrong apparently.
this was my thought. you need to start eating more and figure out what your maintenance calories are and yes you will gain weight but you are underweight and i agree with the person who suggested an ED. I think you may already know that and hopefully this is a sign you are trying to break free from it.0 -
Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.
Sorry for hijacking your thread in a pissing match. Just ignore my and Watboys tet-a-tet and read through the rest of the thead. Good luck.0 -
5'7" and 122 pounds is considered underweight. You are flirting with an eating disorder and serious damage to your organs. Get some psychological help, as soon as possible. The longer you wait, the more disordered your thinking will become. You are living on almost no nutrients, and your brain can no longer distinguish right from wrong apparently.
this was my thought. you need to start eating more and figure out what your maintenance calories are and yes you will gain weight but you are underweight and i agree with the person who suggested an ED. I think you may already know that and hopefully this is a sign you are trying to break free from it.0 -
Sarauk I like you. You have tons of class. To OP I share Sarauks sentiment and wish you luck.Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.
Sorry for hijacking your thread in a pissing match. Just ignore my and Watboys tet-a-tet and read through the rest of the thead. Good luck.0 -
Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.
I don't want to be a nagging old lady, but you're already quite thin. If you're at the point where you're body is starting to revolt against you, you might need to take a break from trying to lose for a while. Get healthier, get your body functioning 100%, and re-evaluate.
You might be at the point where you won't lose any more weight. You're very young, and you're at that age where you're getting the body of a woman and not the body of a girl. You might not be able to be healthy at 110 pounds anymore.
That doesn't mean your body can't change for the better. I'm the exact same weight I was last summer, but I've been lifting weights, fueling my workouts, and ignoring the scale, and all the shorts I bought last summer are falling off my hips now. The number on the scale is meaningless at this stage. Being strong, fit and healthy is everything.0 -
This is long but I hope it helps. I just read it and it answered a ton of questions for me. It gets into how to fix "starvation mode" and what to expect during the process.
Living With Obesity At 700 Calories Per Day!
By: David Greenwalt
I want you to consider a common female client. She's a woman about 5'5" and 185 pounds. A combination of a mostly sedentary lifestyle, quick-fix, processed foods and consistent excessively low calories has resulted in an incredibly stubborn fat loss scenario. Not only has it created a stubborn fat loss scenario but her ability to add body fat is remarkably strong.
Most would believe there is simply no possible way she could be 185 pounds eating mostly low calories. While it's true the average obese American created their own obesity by being a huge over consumer, a sedentary glutton if you will, many are able to maintain their level of obesity with the following formula in very precise ratios: starvation + binges + sedentary lifestyle.
An initial review of this woman's calories indicates she is just above starvation level in the 400-700 per day range. The food choices are mostly protein in this case (low-carb is all the rage you know) and there are virtually no vegetables or fruits to speak of.
Five or six days per week the calories remain low in this range, however, there are nighttime binges from time to time and weekend binges where carbs loaded with fat (doughnuts, rolls, cookies, pizza etc.) are consumed.
So while the calories are very low the majority of the time, there are one to two days per week where this isn't always the case. Even so, the nighttime binges and weekend slack offs don't amount to what you might presume would be thousands of extra calories, thus explaining the 185-pound body weight.
Very few foods are prepared from home. There are lots of fast foods being consumed. Convenience and taste rule.
I must say. Early on in my coaching and teaching career this woman was a real head scratcher for me. Isn't it calories in and calories out? Even if she's not active she's starving!
How in the heck does she stay at 185 eating an average, including all binges, of maybe 750 calories per day? She's frustrated beyond belief. She sees her friends and coworkers eating more and weighing less. Is she simply unlucky? Is everyone else blessed? And what in the world is she supposed to do to fix this, if it can be fixed?
Why Is She Not Losing Weight?
First, let me tell you why she's not losing weight. Then I'll tell you what she has to do to fix the situation. With a chronic (months and months) intake of less than 1000 calories per day and a 185-pound body weight her metabolism is suffering greatly. It's running cool, not hot. It's basically running at a snail's pace.
Think of it this way. Her metabolism has matched itself to her intake. She could, indeed, lose body fat but she's in that gray area where she is eating too few calories but not quite at the concentration-camp level yet.
If she were to consume 100-300 calories per day her body would have virtually no choice but to begin liberating stored body fat. This is NOT the solution. It's unhealthy and, in fact, quite stupid.
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Not only has her metabolism matched her intake, her body has maximized production of enzymes that are designed to help store any additional calories as fat. Anytime additional, immediately-unnecessary calories are consumed the enzymes are there and waiting to store the additional calories as fat. Her body is starved nutritionally and it has one thing on its mind - survival.
Being mostly sedentary, her metabolism (hormones play a large role here) can do a pretty good job of keeping things slow enough so that the pathetically low calories she's consuming are just enough to maintain.
But since certain enzymes are elevated, waiting for more calories so more bodyfat can be stored, every nighttime binge or weekend mini-feast will contribute to fat stores.
So on the days she's not bingeing her body does not lose fat, or if it does, it's very little. And on the few days or times she does binge a bit her body is quite efficient at storing fat. So, while she may lose a smidge of fat from starving it is quickly replaced with every binge.
Remember, these binges aren't a gluttonous 4000-calorie feast. Oh no, a binge might be 4-5 cookies worth about 500-700 calories. Nevertheless, since the binge foods are mostly carbs and fat it's very easy for the enzymes to shuttle the dietary fat into stored body fat. It's what they were designed to do.
So, What's The Solution?
Well then, now that we presumably know some valid reasons why she's not seeing a scale change and definitely no body fat change how do we fix her? We have to do something she's going to freak out over.
We have to get her eating more. Not only do we have to get her eating more but more of the right, whole foods need to be eaten. Foods lower in fat that aren't as easily STORED as body fat have to be consumed. And we have to warn her.
A Discouraging Start
We have to warn her that since she's been sedentarily living on protein with binges of carbs and fats she is likely to see a weight gain right away. It's true.
Once we begin really feeding her body with nutritious carbohydrates so she can become more active, her glycogen-depleted body will hang on to some of those carbohydrates (in skeletal muscle and liver) so she has stored energy for activity.
When her body hangs on to those carbohydrates it has no choice but to hang on to more water too. For every gram of glycogen (stored carbs) she stores she'll hang on to three grams of water.
This is not a negative response by the body but it will be interpreted by her as quite negative when she steps on the scale.
It's quite likely she'll see a five to seven pound weight gain when she really starts eating properly again. This weight gain will remain for one to three weeks before it starts moving in the other direction.
For argument's sake let's assume my Calorie Calculator and Goal Setter at Club Lifestyle suggests a 1500-calorie per day average in week one for a one-pound loss per week. First, she is going to freak out about this many calories.
For months she's been eating less than 1000 and usually around 400-700 in one to three feedings total per day. To her 1500 calories is a ton of food. And if she even begins to eat less fast and packaged-foods it will be a ton of food.
There is no doubt whatsoever that she will resist the increase. This resistance may take one to three weeks to overcome. During this period no weight loss will occur. She is too fat already in her mind and believes it will only hurt her to increase her food intake.
I mean, after all, isn't that how she got fat to begin with? In her early stages of fat gain this was probably true. She overconsumed. But as I've said already, that's not why she's staying heavy.
In addition to a freaked-out mindset about adding more food to her already overfat body she will simply find that it's all but impossible to eat four or more times per day.
She's just not hungry at first. Makes sense when you think about it. Why would she be hungry three hours after eating a 300-calorie, balanced breakfast? Her body is used to 400-700 calories per day!
So, even though she gets a plan and begins using my nutrition analyzer to log foods and meals she finds after having a balanced breakfast of 250 calories she couldn't force herself to eat meal number two on time.
It'll take several more days of realizing what is going on and being one-hundred percent honest and diligent with her logging and planning before she begins to eat her meals as planned no matter what - even if she's not hungry.
By now two to four weeks have passed and the only thing she's seen on the scale is it going up--not very encouraging if I say so myself.
Raising The Grade
After the first two to four weeks have passed she's probably beginning to consume her meals as planned although not quite like an "A" student yet. That is coming. She feels better because she's working out and is more active.
And she feels like she has more energy throughout the day because she's feeding her body more calories and the right kinds of calories.
She has finally begun eating the right kinds of fast foods (low in fat, moderate in protein) and less packaged food overall. She is making more meals from home and taking them to work for lunch rather than always grabbing something quick from a vending machine or the break room that always has some treat another employee brought in.
After another two weeks or so she's moved from a "B" grade to more consistent "A"s. She's planning her days one day ahead in the Nutrition Analyzer; she's consuming fresh veggies and fruits on a daily basis.
Her calories are almost ALWAYS in line with what is recommended by my Lean Account and she has seen her first signs of the scale moving in the right direction.
She is now dropping from 190 pounds (her high after reintroducing food and carbohydrates again) to 189.3! "Progress at last!" she says. In actuality, the entire process was progress. But that's not how she saw it in the beginning.
With a total of two to four weeks of increased caloric intake behind her and eating more consistently the right kinds of foods her metabolism has truly begun to rebound.
She didn't kill it as she thought. She only wounded it. And since our metabolisms are like kids (they are quite resilient) and she doesn't have thyroid issues or diabetes or any known wrench that could be thrown into the spokes of fat loss, she will begin, for the first time in months or years, to see results that make sense and that one would expect of someone who is active (30-60 minutes five or more days per week) and consuming a caloric intake of 1300-1500 calories per day.
Butterfly Effect: The Basics Of The Thyroid - Part 1.
Avoiding Sabotage
This process is in no way easy. I think you can see a plethora of ways it could be screwed up, sabotaged, given up on too early and so forth.
A key to success for this very common woman (men too) is not giving up too soon, having faith in the fix, and moving sooner rather than later to the increased, quality food intake.
It's going to take effort to overcome the mental hurdles of eating more food as well as the increase in scale weight that is going to occur in weeks one to three or so. It's disheartening, however, to charge hard down the weight-loss field only to get to the one-yard line and decide it's time to quit.
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Many don't realize they only had one more yard to go and they'd have had a touchdown. You gotta hang in there with this plan. It's going to take some time for the glycogen levels to be replenished and level out. It's going to take some time for mental adjustments to occur.
It's going to take some time before hunger signals are restored to anything close to normal. It's going to take time for the metabolism to rebound and not be in its protective mode.
Giving A Stubborn Body The Message
In certain, very stubborn cases, it may be necessary to eat at a eucaloric (maintenance) or hypercaloric (over maintenance) level for a few weeks to ensure the metabolism does get the signal that everything is alright and you aren't going to kill the body.
Remember, your body could care less about your desire for fat loss. It just wants to survive.
Some Take-Home Points
The most common cause of obesity is Americans are sedentary overeaters/drinkers. Nothing in this article should be construed as to say that under eating is the root cause of obesity. It's not.
It IS common for many men and women to be under eating with sporadic binges as I described here. This creates a perfect environment for continued obesity even if total caloric intake is quite low on average.
Low-carb followers or "starvers" WILL see the scale go up when calories are consumed at reasonable levels again and carbohydrates are reintroduced. Live with it. Deal with it. It's going to happen. 98% of the gain will be water.
The time it takes for mental acceptance and other adjustments to occur will vary but one should expect a two to four week window for these things to take place. Being forewarned with an article like this may speed this process up some.
Once the right types of foods are consumed and the right caloric intake is consumed and the right ratios of carbohydrates, proteins and fats are consumed on a consistent basis, then, and only then, will metabolism begin to be restored and the key to fat loss be inserted into the lock with a noticeable drop in the scale resulting.
This may take an additional two to four weeks to occur. Your metabolism is never dead or broken for good. But it may take several weeks of proper eating and activity for it to be restored.
From day one, until the first, noticeable drop in the scale occurs may be four to six weeks--maybe one to two weeks longer. Those who give up on the one-yard line will never see the scale drop as will occur when intelligent persistence and consistency over time are adhered to.
David Greenwalt
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Thanks so much for posting this. It's the first post on MFP I actually read to the end0 -
Yesterday I ate 600 calories and GAINED half a pound. Every day lately I've stayed under 1000 calories and I keep gaining weight. I've stopped getting my period as well I think. I'm 5'7 and 122. How can I beat starvation mode without gaining more than a few pounds? I used to be 196 and so I'm terrified of gaining weight. I'm ready to just call it quits. Anyone help?
Without reading what everyone else has already posted over 3 pages... I suggest you need to eat more.
1st off- you can't gain a half a pound from eating only 600 calories. Its probably water retention or something of the sort.
2nd- you're eating way too little which is why your body is trying to hold on to any type of calories you are willing to give it- which is what you are perceiving as "weight gain". To get out of starvation mode you need to stop starving your body.
3rd- 5'7 and 122lbs seems verrrrrrrrrry low, pretty much almost underweight depending on your body frame. And if you have stopped getting your period, that is a major sign that something is wrong and is a very common indicator of being underweight. I'd go to a doctor.
Also, you sound very much like this whole weight loss thing may have turned into an unhealthy obsession for you and you might even need to consider some counseling on how to have a better relationship with food and your body. Considering all that you've been through (coming from close to 200lbs), it wouldn't be uncommon to form that type of obsession. Best wishes to you on your journey.0 -
I will pray for you to get the right help. God knows what you are suppose to weigh and what is healthy for your height/shape/body. Seek Him and he can help you. He cares for you and knit you in your mothers womb...who else knows you more than Him. His desire is to be there to help...always.0
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please eat. eat healthy/smart, but eat.0
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Eat until "0 calories remaining". Repeat.0
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Yesterday I ate 600 calories and GAINED half a pound. Every day lately I've stayed under 1000 calories and I keep gaining weight. I've stopped getting my period as well I think. I'm 5'7 and 122. How can I beat starvation mode without gaining more than a few pounds? I used to be 196 and so I'm terrified of gaining weight. I'm ready to just call it quits. Anyone help?
....and 5'7" 122# is on the low end of the spectrum...teetering on "underweight" (not that i put a whole lot of weight into BMI calcs). but still low. i bet you look wonderful just as you are!0 -
I didn't even read the rest of this but you need to eat. Eat all the food.0
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gaining weight would do you good, you weigh too little for your height.0
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EAT!! Your body is pretty much saying, "hey, she's not giving me enough calories, so I guess I'll HOLD ON to everything instead of burning it off to survive." Trust me, the starvation mode is real!!!!!! Thats the worst thing you could do. Move it up to 1200, and BE SURE to eat JUST THAT MUCH!! Good luck. :-)0
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Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.
((((((((((((hugs))))))))))))
You also said you were happiest at 110 pounds?
(((((((((((((((((hugs))))))))))))
I have an eating disorder. I've had it practically my entire life and have struggled significantly at times. What you have written here worries me. A LOT. You said all you care about is losing weight (or at least not gaining?). You also seem to be equating happiness with a certain weight. These are both signs of an unhealthy relationship with food and weight. I'm not going to say you have an ED because I am not a doctor or a psychologist, so I cannot diagnose, but I will say that you display two big red flags.
Weight has nothing to do with happiness. When one equats weight with happiness, there is usually a bigger problem.
When all one cares about is losing weight, there is usually a bigger problem.
((((((((((((((hugs)))))))))))))
I'm glad you will be seeing a nutritionist. Could you promise YOURSELF that you will be 100% honest with him/her about not only how little you are eating, but also about how you feel about weight and weight loss?0 -
I'm in a similar boat. I've been eating around 1000 calories for maybe two years, mostly because I don't have time to eat! But the past three weeks I've upped my calories to about 1400-1500 calories of healthy calories. And I can barely fit into my biggest pair of pants. I'm hoping*wishing*praying that this will subside soon and my body will adjust to the new amount of fuel. I'm not sure if it's water weight or what, but how long will it take my metabolism to adjust to the new amount of food I'm eating? Should I keep eating this amount despite gaining?0
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Thank you all for the support. While I am for sure not willing to fan any weight I will try to up to eating 1200 a day.
On a related note, what if I work out? Today I was able to eat about 1200 but I also burnt off 500 calories at the gym because I'm trying to turn fat into muscle right now. I've heard some people say basically that I should eat the 500 back afterwards and have an intake of 1700 but I've heard some say if you burn 500 eat back 250? What's right?0 -
Gain* not fan. Darn autocorrect.0
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*sighs *0
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Ok first things first.....weighing yourself every day can just be frustrating. You're body will fluctuate day to day...pick one day a week...same time, same clothes or no clothes, first thing in the morning is good after you first wake up...and track that number.
Also, when MFP gives you a number of calories, it's already figuring in your deficit for exercise. If you don't eat back any of the calories, you may be eating way less than necessary and that in itself can slow down weight loss. You really need to eat good heatlhy whole foods, up to your calorie goal, and strength train to minimize your muscle loss and focus on how you look and feel. The scale is nothing more than just one way to track but there are times that a measuring tape will be so much more accurate.0 -
You won't be able to gain muscle eating so little. That's the suckiest part of "dieting" is that when you have too large of a calorie deficit, your body loses muscle. And when you lose muscle, you might weigh less, but you look bigger. Years ago, when I lost weight by eating under 1000 calories a day, I got to my goal weight, but wore clothes two sizes bigger than I do now at that same weight. The difference? This time around, I ate around 1800-2000 calories a day.
The absolute best you can hope for while losing weight is to keep as much of your muscle as possible. Doing that, you need a very small calorie deficit. You shouldn't be aiming to lose any more than a half pound a week at this stage, plus most of your exercise calories. You don't have enough excess fat to support a larger deficit. Plus, to keep muscle, you need a LOT of protein and to strength train with heavy weights.
But really, the best thing I did was to take loads of photos from every angle, and gauge my progress through pictures, measurements and how clothes fit, rather than on the scale. The scale doesn't tell the whole store, and can really mess with your head. I know it's messed with mine.0 -
Now this is all getting too overwhelming. I just want to stop gaining and lose weight. Pretty much all I care about to be honest.
Then came a 5 years period of unhappiness with some choices I made, ending up with a depression and a 7kg gain. Now, I knew my body change, but a real wake up call came few weeks ago when I was buying some t-shirts online and for the first time in years took a measurement of my waist. 8cm more than 5y ago. that was it. So for the first time in my life I decided become REALLY serious about my fitness and my body. And here is the story so far: I started in mid March by doing P90X and following their recommended diet without counting calories, just their recommended portions. Then the inevitable happened - whenever I start eating less I lose my appetite very quickly. So I stuck to the exercise regime but was eating less and less because I wasn't hungry. The stupid scale didn't move at all in two weeks. I knew I needed to up my calorie intake if I were to use P90X properly (and also, I had no energy at all). Then I went for a 2 day trip and said "wth, I know that few chocolate cakes will bring me my appetite back". so I did it . when I came back the scale was still stubbornly at the same number like before. so I decided to forget P90X diet but to come back to MFP (I tried using it once last August when I thought I might do P90X but I got injured in very quickly so gave up on this site as well), set up my goals, track all I eat and all I exercise (I use a heart rate monitor and then calculate Cals burned) and do it properly. I started, of course, with a 2lb per week goal. MFP spat out some number very close to 1200 and for a couple of days I was netting close to that. During those two days I read more about weight loss, calorie deficit etc. and decided to lower my goal to 0.5lbs per week, up my calories to ~1520 and of course eat everything I burn (even if it means eating chocolates, just to get to a calorie deficit not larger than 250 per day ). This morning, for the first time in my life, my scale moved because I consciously did something about it. I didn't lose 0.5lb, I lost about 1kg. I am still not believing it and I'll wait another week before I record my weight here.
Now, why did I up my calories fuor days ago, despite my brain screaming "I might be doing it wrong! this may not work! I won't lose any weight and in a month I'll be sooooooo disappointed and lose all my motivation instead of losing weight!"? Well, because everything I read about high calories deficits and their consequences made perfect sense. I know for many people "the less you eat, the more you lose" seems like a common sense, but common sense is a tricky thing - it works only with the information it has at the moment (common sense was telling us for a very long time that Earth is flat). And I majored in molecular biology and physiology, and did a PhD in molecular genetics, and all this talk about metabolic response, storing fat on a low intake etc. simply made sense based of everything I know about biology (well, made sense for the rational part of my brain - the emotional one was still screaming "nooooo, you should be eating lessssss!". it finally shut up this morning when a scale showed below 63kg for the first time in a very long time. ).
Why am I telling you all this? Call it a 'starvation mode' or however you want, metabolic and hormonal response to very low caloric intake (but not low enough to kill you) is as real as your body is. It will manifest itself at a different time period/caloric deficit for different people, but you can't escape it if you persist. It is an evolutionary burden that we got from millions of years of living on unstable, unreliable food supplies. Your body simply doesn't know the difference between dieting and starving, and it couldn't care less about how you want to look; it only wants to survive. You pushed it too hard and your body is fighting back - you lost your period, you stopped losing weight. The sad truth is: you can't win this battle by force, you can only outsmart it. The same way you can't change, say, a concentration of certain hormones in your blood just by wishing for it to happen - the same way you can't 'explain' to your body that you are just dieting and there is no mortal danger due to the lack of food available to you. You have to make it 'think' that all the food it needs is freely available out there. You can only do that by upping your calories. Maintain some 200 - 300 deficit but give it more food. Again, I fully understand your fear of gaining, and another sad truth is: it will probably happen for you initially (since you've been on such a high deficit for too long). But every battle has it's loses (ironically, in this case it will be the gain ), so prepare yourself for it. Be strong and persistent to go through it - weight loss requires many will powers, not just a self control to restrain form eating; or forget about your scale for a while.
and feel free to add me if you want. good luck!0 -
See audio clip 2 @ www.fat2fitradio.com0
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I know it sounds pretty harsh what everyone is telling you but look at it this way everyone here cares enough about you and wants you to be healthy. Even though we don't know you were all family here.. we all look for support at some time in our travel of weight loss maybe some of the comments were a bit harsh but they see the red flags and want to help you just as all of us do..
eat more lose more eat less lose none.....0 -
Thank you all for the support. While I am for sure not willing to fan any weight I will try to up to eating 1200 a day.
On a related note, what if I work out? Today I was able to eat about 1200 but I also burnt off 500 calories at the gym because I'm trying to turn fat into muscle right now. I've heard some people say basically that I should eat the 500 back afterwards and have an intake of 1700 but I've heard some say if you burn 500 eat back 250? What's right?
Step by step;
1. Go to www.fit2fatradio.com/tools and use the Military Bodyfat Calculator, and then the Calories and Basal Metabolic Rate calculator.
2. Scroll down on the Calories calculator results page to see your suggested Calorie Intakes at different activity levels. There is a deficit factored into this already. Choose the appropriate activity level and the corresponding calorie intake.
3. Here on MFP, go to Home > Goals > Change Goals > Custom > Change Net Calories Consumed to the calorie recommendation given by fat2fit on their Calorie calculator.
4. Change carbs to 40%, protein and fat to 30% respectively.
5. Hit Change Goals.
6. Over the next month, gradually increase your daily intake to meet your new Net Calorie goal.
7. You will probably gain. Hormonal changes take time, but after a few weeks your weightloss should start to happen.
8. If after two weeks of being at your goal net calories you find you are maintaining, drop your calories by 100 a day and stick to that new goal for another two weeks.
9. Rinse and repeat 8.
10. Enjoy a greater food allowance and a body working for you rather than against you.
Don't be ignorant. Lowering your intake further isn't going to help you. Unless you're going to properly work out what you need, eating 1200 calories a day is probably a token gesture and will have about as much effect as pissing in the ocean.0
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