met my goals but no loss!!
ais048
Posts: 19 Member
Anyone shed any light on this I have set myself a goal of 1500 calories a day to lose 2lb a week i have met this goal everyday for the past week and was 2200 under my net calories weekly goal, so when i weighed in this morning how is it i'd not lost any weight not even an ounce it was exactly the same??
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Replies
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Why were you so far under your net calories? You're supposed to NET 1500 calories, not just eat them.0
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I was ill and didn't eat much through the week, when you say NET 1500 what exactly do you mean??0
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Your body went into starvation mode. Eat your daily cals and get some mild exercise until you feel better. Then keep eating and increase your execising. The pounds will fall off a lot in the beginning...Then you should start seeing the 1-2 weekly loss...0
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We set your nutritional target in Net Calories which we define as:
Calories Consumed (Food) - Calories Burned (Exercise) = Net Calories
What that means is that if you exercise, you will be able to eat more for that day. For example, if your Net Calorie goal is 2000 calories, one way to meet that goal is to eat 2,500 calories of food, but then burn 500 calories through exercise.
Think of your Net Calories like a daily budget of calories to spend. You spend them by eating, and you earn more calories to eat by exercising.0 -
Even if you knew EXACTLY what your TDEE was (which you can't, you only have estimates, this is worsened if you exercise since judging calorie burn for exercise is difficult and notoriously off)
Even if you knew EXACTLY what your calorie intake was (which you can't, you only have estimates, and again people are generally extremely bad at accurately estimating calorie intake)
You still wouldn't see linear weight loss. It doesn't work like that. Keep at it for a couple months and then gauge your progress.0 -
If you were 2200 under your net goal that means you didn't eat the 2,200 calories you should have, which means your body is holding on to what it can because you aren't fueling it enough.0
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oops i think i've been going about this the wrong way!! so if i have a daily goal of 1500 that doesn't mean i just have to stay within 1500 calories to meet that goal?? i'm confused now!0
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You still wouldn't see linear weight loss. It doesn't work like that. Keep at it for a couple months and then gauge your progress.
Since I can't see your diary, I can't comment - but based on what you said, you really need to fuel your body a bit more.0 -
I would agree with the consensus that you are not eating enough calories. I know it sounds counter-intuitive, but it's true. There is a fine line between starvation mode (body calorie-hoardes) and weight loss mode.
Be kind & patient with yourself. Try giving yourself a few more high-quality calories (starch-free veggies, for example) this week and see if that gets things moving!
Hang in there!0 -
Did you measure?0
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oops i think i've been going about this the wrong way!! so if i have a daily goal of 1500 that doesn't mean i just have to stay within 1500 calories to meet that goal?? i'm confused now!0
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Even if you knew EXACTLY what your TDEE was (which you can't, you only have estimates, this is worsened if you exercise since judging calorie burn for exercise is difficult and notoriously off)
Even if you knew EXACTLY what your calorie intake was (which you can't, you only have estimates, and again people are generally extremely bad at accurately estimating calorie intake)
You still wouldn't see linear weight loss. It doesn't work like that. Keep at it for a couple months and then gauge your progress.0 -
oops i think i've been going about this the wrong way!! so if i have a daily goal of 1500 that doesn't mean i just have to stay within 1500 calories to meet that goal?? i'm confused now!
nothing to be confused about .." eat some to all" your workout calories
MFP tells you in big bold numbers how many calories you have left on your main page0 -
To make what others said even more blunt: if Your body is starving it will eat your muscles so it can reduce your metabolism thous lower your need for calories to maintain your weight so now you need a lower calorie diet & a higher exercise regime just to get back to where you were before metabolism-wise.0
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Thanks for the advice everybody on average i burn around 500 calories a day from walking? if I have a goal of 1500 a day should i be eating 2000 calories to get my 1500 target??
If so i've been missing out on a lot of eating!!!0 -
yes that would do it ..
try that for a while .. though at 1st you might see a slight gain since you under ate up to this point
but your body will adjust
make sure your making good choices for the most part ( no one can be perfect 100% of the time)
you will do great
also take measurements and note how clothes feel ( scales can lie some times)0 -
Thanks for the advice everybody on average i burn around 500 calories a day from walking? if I have a goal of 1500 a day should i be eating 2000 calories to get my 1500 target??
If so i've been missing out on a lot of eating!!!
The basic idea behind this has to do with how you are coming up with your daily calorie targets. If you use MFP, it calculates your target intake if you did no exercise whatsoever. Other calculations actually take exercise into account. That's why, with MFP, you are supposed to eat your exercise calories back (ie on mfp your daily might be 1500, and then you eat the calories you burn from exercise, another program might not have you eat your exercise calories back, but set your daily target to 2000).
The thing to keep in mind is, as I mentioned previously, people are notoriously bad at estimating calorie intake and calorie expenditure from exercise. For this reason, some people will eat 50% of their exercise calories back or something like that. Test the waters (you need to keep at it for more than a week to truly gauge progress)
The primary point is to eat enough to fuel your body properly. This prevents health complications, and at least for me keeps me from going postal at work.
You'll see a lot of folks saying that if you don't eat enough you can gain weight. That's not the entire story. If you burn more calories than you consume, you will lose weight no matter what (bear in mind things like water weight, when your last bowel movement was, etc can foggy up the actual results which is why weight loss isn't linear). The problem is that your body adapts to your calorie intake, and your metabolism slows if you restrict your calories enough. This metabolic slowdown would reduce the number of calories you burn throughout the day, and would obviously reduce the number of calories you would be able to eat and still maintain the original deficit, so to a point excessive restriction is a vicious cycle.
Hope that helps.0 -
Thanks for the advice i think i've got it now just a couple of questions, I had a pedometer on in work for 2 days lastweek and i burnt an average of 500 calories per day does this go onto my net target calories i.e do i add this on to burn off??
and if you don't meet the target for the day say you eat 1000 calories instead of 1250 can you use the extra at weekend??
thank alot0 -
The pedometer question first:
Unfortunately it depends. I personally think that the bit in MFP where you say if you're sedentary, lightly active, etc accounts for the usual walking around calories that you burn throughout the day. Strictly speaking that's not the case, and yes you can eat back those calories, however I have found that since I underestimate my calorie intake a lot that sort of thing 'balances it out'. At the end of the day a lot of it has to do with finding what works for you. Unfortunately that means time (i.e. try it, do it for a few weeks, and track your progress...if you aren't getting the results you expect after that much time, make some slight changes, and try again).
As for 'saving' calories:
Most certainly, a lot of people do this, including myself. It's the basic premise behind 'cheat days' or refeed days or whatever you want to call it. I would suggest being careful about taking that to an extreme (ie not eating for 6 days and then eating until your stomach ruptures on the 7th) but other than that there is no problem with banking calories for the weekend.0 -
when banking calories is it important to make sure you use all the calories you have left? yesterday i had 2000 left over from the week and never used them and i didn't lose weight?0
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As I said originally, you want to make sure that, over time, you are feeding your body enough for it to function optimally.
I good rule of thumb for speed of weight loss is:
75 lbs or more: Choose to lose 2lbs/week
40-75 pounds: Choose to lose 1.5lbs/week
25-40 pounds: Choose to lose 1lb/week
15-20 pounds: Choose either 0.5lb - 1lb / week
Less than 15-20 pounds: Choose 0.5lb/week
If you try significantly higher deficits, you could run into problems.0
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