Quote:
Originally Posted by EmmyMac
Good for you! I'm 5'2 with 100 pounds to lose. I have a lot of behaviors to change and in the long run I thought it would be better to go with what my calorie calculator told me would net a 1.5 pound/week weight loss. Slow and steady generally wins this race.
Again - I am tweaking my calories and my exercise. Just as you have found what is best for you and your body, I am sure I will find what works for mine. It's just taking a little more work for me this time around.
Unfortunately, calorie calculators are notoriously inaccurate. They're based only on averages, and your body may not be average. Many of the online calculators underestimate my calorie needs by as much as 1000 calories, which means to lose a pound a week, I have to eat 1000 calories less than the calculator estimates for me. If I were to eat what the calculators recommended for one pound per week, I'd actually gain a pound.
There may a caloric advantage to low carb. For myself, I noticed it's about 300 calories - that is I can eat 1800 calories low-carb or 1500 calories high carb to lose about the same amout of weight (just don't try to compare the first couple weeks or low-carb will always win.
Some recent research has found similar results as I experienced (an average 300 cal advantage to LC).
Worth trying.
You may have to try a lower calorie range (or try to see if LC eating helps).
You may also want to try nothing different and see what happens. You may be a person who loses in "wooshes," rather than gradually. Or you may be retaining water due to exercise.
I wouldn't recommend stopping the exercise, because it's not necessary. The water gained from exercise is temporary, used by the body to heal the small muscle tears that are caused by exercise that is new or more intense than your normal amount. When the muscle adjust to the new amount and kind of exercise, the water retention will disappear.
It is possible that you're drinking too much liquids, which can delay water release. If your salt intake is low or if you're on certain medications, especially high blood pressure medications, that much water could cause water poisoning (also called hyponatremia or water intoxication). It's rare, but very dangerous (my mom was hospitalized several years ago, and had only been drinking about a gallon of fluids per day).