As you lose weight your body requires less calories per day. It looks like you have lost 38 pounds from your tracker-so the next step is to drop your calorie intake SLIGHTLY, or to UP your exercise.
I am a great example of this.
I found in my personal experience that I lost the first 5-10 pounds very easily when I started out a few years ago. I started out simply cutting my calorie intake to about 1800-1900 a day from who knows what it was before.
I went from not exercising at all with a brand new infant to doing a 10 minute ab tape 3 days a week. That was enough change to get the first few pounds off.
After I hit about 190, I had to add some more exercise in. I started doing 10-15 minutes of exercise bike in a couple times a week along with the ab tape...and dropped my calories to 1700-1800. (just 100 a day) That took me down another 5 pounds or so over time.
When I plateaued again, I didn't drop my calories any further, but I changed WHAT I was eating. I kept the calories the same, but made more of them fruits and veggies, and went to all whole grains (pasta, brown rice, whole wheat bread, etc.) instead of white starches. I started drinking more water. That change alone in the quality of fuel helped another couple pounds drop over the next couple months.
Over the past couple years I have to continually change my exercise routine more and more-working out for longer, more intense sessions, and improving my food intake. I have not dropped my caloric intake all that much in the past two years-because I don't want it to be too low. I am currently around 1400-1600 a day now-but the quality of food is good. (Very little "junk" calories like 100 calorie packs or fat free ice cream.)
My exercise that started out as a 10 minute ab tape 3 days a week now averages over an hour each day. I do strength training on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday for 30 minutes to an hour on those days-and walk a mile on those days as well afterwards.
On my cardio days (the other 4 days of the week) I do either longer powerwalks of either 2-4 miles, or 1-2 hour dance rehearsals when I have them scheduled.
About once a month or so I attend a dance workshop (for intense technique training) that are usually 3-6 hours long.
The thing is to keep pushing yourself. I by no means am saying everyone should be a bodybuilder or professional dancer-but change up your exercise and make it more intense so your body will progress.
If you do the Walk Away The Pounds 1 mile tape each day-alternate it now every other day with the 2 mile one. If you do a weighted workout tape using 2 pound hand weights and you no longer "feel it" like you once did-go to 3 pound weights instead, and add ankle weights to the leg exercises. (I recommend the adjustable ankle weights if you do this-mine go from 1/2 pound to 5 pounds each leg, so you can keep progressing with them.)
If you do a 20 minute Pilates tape, then buy one that is 30 minutes long and switch to it instead.
When your fitness level improves, you want to keep pushing it so it will improve more. If you keep doing the same old thing, your body will not progress any further. Push it to the next level.
Small dietary changes make a big difference as well. Cutting out more junk in your diet and upping your exercise by even 5-10 minutes a day can make a big difference in a month's time.