METABOLISM HELP... 'Here we go again', but please!

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  • aproc
    aproc Posts: 1,033 Member
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    Increase you calories slowely. Try adding 300 for the first week and then more the next, etc. You WILL gain a good bit of weight to begin with but don't freak out. Most will be water weight and your body adjusting. It will start to stabalize with consistent eating. After I reached a healthy weight I was maintaining on around 1700. I continued eating more and eventually I was averaging 1800. Now after months of eating at a surplus and lifting weights, I tried on my bodymedia band to see what I'm burning and I am now averaging 2000. It takes time but it is something you have to stick with! Don't give up when you see that weight gain. Your going to feel miserable for months and your eating disorder is just going to get stronger and keep pulling at you. It's a tough process mentally and physically. But you will feel so much better and healthy down the road.
  • RuthieCass
    RuthieCass Posts: 247 Member
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    Increase you calories slowely. Try adding 300 for the first week and then more the next, etc. You WILL gain a good bit of weight to begin with but don't freak out. Most will be water weight and your body adjusting. It will start to stabalize with consistent eating. After I reached a healthy weight I was maintaining on around 1700. I continued eating more and eventually I was averaging 1800. Now after months of eating at a surplus and lifting weights, I tried on my bodymedia band to see what I'm burning and I am now averaging 2000. It takes time but it is something you have to stick with! Don't give up when you see that weight gain. Your going to feel miserable for months and your eating disorder is just going to get stronger and keep pulling at you. It's a tough process mentally and physically. But you will feel so much better and healthy down the road.

    Second this. Also, at a bmi of 18.8, you are near the lower end of what is considered "healthy." So it's perfectly fine if you gain a few pounds while you're waiting for your metabolism to adjust. It will take time, but if you increase you calories, your weight will eventually level out. You should look up calculators for BMR and TDEE-- you eventually want to increase your calories to your TDEE. Make sure you accurately account for your activity level for your TDEE. You can also focus on eating a healthy balanced diet and add in some weight training once your calories are up to help your metabolism.
  • aejones02
    aejones02 Posts: 15
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    Increase you calories slowely. Try adding 300 for the first week and then more the next, etc. You WILL gain a good bit of weight to begin with but don't freak out. Most will be water weight and your body adjusting. It will start to stabalize with consistent eating. After I reached a healthy weight I was maintaining on around 1700. I continued eating more and eventually I was averaging 1800. Now after months of eating at a surplus and lifting weights, I tried on my bodymedia band to see what I'm burning and I am now averaging 2000. It takes time but it is something you have to stick with! Don't give up when you see that weight gain. Your going to feel miserable for months and your eating disorder is just going to get stronger and keep pulling at you. It's a tough process mentally and physically. But you will feel so much better and healthy down the road.

    Second this. Also, at a bmi of 18.8, you are near the lower end of what is considered "healthy." So it's perfectly fine if you gain a few pounds while you're waiting for your metabolism to adjust. It will take time, but if you increase you calories, your weight will eventually level out. You should look up calculators for BMR and TDEE-- you eventually want to increase your calories to your TDEE. Make sure you accurately account for your activity level for your TDEE. You can also focus on eating a healthy balanced diet and add in some weight training once your calories are up to help your metabolism.

    Could someone please explain TDEE to me?? I know about BMR. I suppose to complicate things further, because of my depression, I do have bad days and worse days, resulting in my intake fluctuating somewhat. Will this negatively affect metabolism?? Would it be better if I could try and have consistency daily? Thanks for peoples support.
  • jhigg11
    jhigg11 Posts: 121 Member
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    I honestly think the best thing you can do for yourself is get a therapist who deals with this sort of thing. Also, your depression will affect your metabolism. That is awesome the strides you are making. You need someone to help you deal with the underlying issue. You will never be healthy physically, if you aren't healthy mentally. I also mean all this with the upmost respect. My sister has suffered with an eating disorder and even though she is healthy she still sees her therapist so she doesn't relapse.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
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    Increase you calories slowely. Try adding 300 for the first week and then more the next, etc. You WILL gain a good bit of weight to begin with but don't freak out. Most will be water weight and your body adjusting. It will start to stabalize with consistent eating. After I reached a healthy weight I was maintaining on around 1700. I continued eating more and eventually I was averaging 1800. Now after months of eating at a surplus and lifting weights, I tried on my bodymedia band to see what I'm burning and I am now averaging 2000. It takes time but it is something you have to stick with! Don't give up when you see that weight gain. Your going to feel miserable for months and your eating disorder is just going to get stronger and keep pulling at you. It's a tough process mentally and physically. But you will feel so much better and healthy down the road.

    Second this. Also, at a bmi of 18.8, you are near the lower end of what is considered "healthy." So it's perfectly fine if you gain a few pounds while you're waiting for your metabolism to adjust. It will take time, but if you increase you calories, your weight will eventually level out. You should look up calculators for BMR and TDEE-- you eventually want to increase your calories to your TDEE. Make sure you accurately account for your activity level for your TDEE. You can also focus on eating a healthy balanced diet and add in some weight training once your calories are up to help your metabolism.

    Could someone please explain TDEE to me?? I know about BMR. I suppose to complicate things further, because of my depression, I do have bad days and worse days, resulting in my intake fluctuating somewhat. Will this negatively affect metabolism?? Would it be better if I could try and have consistency daily? Thanks for peoples support.

    TDEE - what your body burns on all activity in a day. Usually a figure when you look at average week of activity divided by 7 for daily average.
    If you are maintaining on 1000 cal day - that is your TDEE. I'm thinking that will concern you, as yes indeed, that does mean your metabolism is very slow still.

    And you cannot increase your metabolism if you don't eat enough.

    Your BMR, basic metabolism for some basic functions of life, is about what your body would like to burn to accomplish them.
    If it can't have that energy, calories, food, to accomplish that, things will be slowed down.

    For instance, sitting in a cold room to start shivering, your body may not only delay it, but when it does start, those calories it's not getting enough of will just not be spent on other necessary things, because right then, staying warm is required.

    This is why many with slow metabolism's report being cold mostly, and when metabolism speeds up, being warmer.
    In the strictest sense, that's how metabolism is measured, heat output from body.

    Anyway, eat an extra 100 calories a day for a week. Then another week, then another, until you are at least eating at level of BMR. Though at that point, you'll probably start feeling hungry again, and can raise it on up to maintenance level.
    Keep walking, don't add extra exercise. Eat that first extra 100 around walking. Come back from walk, have 100 cal snack.
    Almonds. I'm betting you keep the fat way too low, equating eating fat to getting fat. Fat will help your mind work better, and many body functions actually.

    Once at BMR level + extra 200, start putting some lifting in there in between the walks. Dumbbells at home is fine. Body weight exercises. You can start viewing your body as desirable and strong outside the image it may present in the mirror, which you know is distorted for you right now and probably for a while.
  • murphy612
    murphy612 Posts: 734 Member
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    I can't help you with your eating disorder problems, other than offer my empathy and hope you continue to improve. But as for slow metabolism, I also am cursed with this. My weightloss doctor said the only way to increase metabolism is to build muscle. Of course you'll need to increase how much you each and lift weights to do so. Everyone is different of course but I thought I'd just share what I know.
  • sunnyflower1177
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    Ok so u did the first thing and that was confessing what u have and what u are going through, that takes alot from someone in your situation. Second I'm just gonna tell u like it is: This is just a demonic spirit trying to dominate your life, you have control but u have to speak to it with authority, just like it says u can't eat more than such and such, well u have to tell urself I run this and i will eat a little more and with the help of God I won't be depressed! Speak those things as tho they were, make positive statements, life and death lyes in the power of the tounge, we have what we say! As a man thinketh so is he! Trust me I've been down jericho road and It may not have been through what exactly your going through but I been in the wilderness and it didn't matter what advice other people gave me or what others told me I should be doing, It first had to come from within and that was "I need help" and I'm tired of being the way that I am. I had to change the way I was thinking--It all starts in the mind. Everyone has their own opinion of what they think and all with good intentions, I just know what worked for me and that was giving my life first to God and then asking him to help me change the way I think! I never gave up the prayer I just kept on asking and one day, I can't tell u when cuz I don't know but something happened down on the inside, and I never thought those thoughts again, yeah they try to come every now and then but I tell myself and that evil spirit, "I run this! and God is in control!"
  • bcattoes
    bcattoes Posts: 17,299 Member
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    Exercise, including walking, will do as much or more to repair your metabolism as more food will. Aerobic exercise can boost your metabolism for many hours after you stop. How long depends on how long and now intense you do it. Building muscle also increases your metabolism. Make sure you are staying hydrated. Your body needs water to process calories.

    Eating more often, eating more protein, drinking caffeine, and some other dietary changes can boost your metabolism as well. But these are all minimal compared to what a combination of aerobic exercise and strength training can do.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
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    You really, really should speak with your doctors, or at a minimum a nutritionist who deals with eating disorders about this instead of an internet forum.

    This. Only professionals can give you the advice and help you need.

    Well, how do I get that if my GP can't help?? I'm already with a therapist. I've asked a simple qu anyone else may ask. I appreciate peoples concern but even more appreciate responses to my actual question rather than advice thats not possible to follow.

    Is it possible for you to see another GP and/or get a referral to a specialist? Your therapist might be able to get you a referral, too. I don't know how NHS works, but I know most insurance companies here (in the US) will cover the cost of at least a few visits to a specialist if you went to them via a referral.

    I know it's not what you want to hear, but I think it's worth looking into, because really, only the people that know you *and* know enough about medicine as it relates to eating disorders will truly be able to help you. The best we can do here is give you general advice, which can be sketchy, at best, due to the delicate nature of recovering from eating disorders and the fact that we know very little about you. The last thing you need is to take some of our advice and end up freaking out and relapsing because you gained weight too fast for you to cope with.

    That said, keep doing what you're doing to recover. As others have already stated, keep fueling your body and your metabolism will straighten itself out. Keep telling yourself that the small gains you're seeing are good, because your body is recovering from being in a starved state. Take up some strength training to help build your muscles back up and increase your bone density (building the muscle will also help the metabolism speed back up). Take it one day at a time. You seem to be doing great so far. :)
  • senyosmom
    senyosmom Posts: 613 Member
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    Good for you for taking steps to being healthy!!!! Keep it up honey

    But I think the best person for you to consult is a doctor/nutritionist considering you have had some issues with this in the past. Stay strong and keep up the good work!
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
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    Exercise, including walking, will do as much or more to repair your metabolism as more food will. Aerobic exercise can boost your metabolism for many hours after you stop. How long depends on how long and now intense you do it. Building muscle also increases your metabolism. Make sure you are staying hydrated. Your body needs water to process calories.

    Eating more often, eating more protein, drinking caffeine, and some other dietary changes can boost your metabolism as well. But these are all minimal compared to what a combination of aerobic exercise and strength training can do.

    Sorry, can't boost your metabolism if there is no calories for it to use. Just means other things the metabolism should be doing are left undone or slightly done to take care of those artificial stimulates.
  • DoozerDMB
    DoozerDMB Posts: 129 Member
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    I have a friend who is a recovering anorexic. I know each day is a struggle to get the calories in for her. Her metabolism is all screwed up. She had to maintain a caloric intake of 1200 for two weeks to see how her body handled this. It was then increased by a hundred every week. She is 5'2" and currently 121 pounds. She is maintaining at 1800 calories a day spaced out into 6 mini meals and some snacks (probably how you are grazing).
    She does yoga daily, as she was told not to do any strenous/exertive exercising. She is now lifting weights to tone up her muscles and to kick up her metabolism.
    The body image she fights daily and when ED starts to tell her cut back on food/calories she has to forcefully tell it to shut up!
    The metabolism takes a few weeks of proper eating/caring for it to come back "online" properly.
  • aejones02
    aejones02 Posts: 15
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    I honestly think the best thing you can do for yourself is get a therapist who deals with this sort of thing. Also, your depression will affect your metabolism. That is awesome the strides you are making. You need someone to help you deal with the underlying issue. You will never be healthy physically, if you aren't healthy mentally. I also mean all this with the upmost respect. My sister has suffered with an eating disorder and even though she is healthy she still sees her therapist so she doesn't relapse.

    Please read my past posts - I do see therapist and psychiatrist and GP but they won't help with this. Focusing on psychological issues not practical - i.e. metabolism.