Quote:
Originally Posted by butterfly28
Thanks for the advice. Can you really not lose weight if you don't eat enough calories?
Well eventually your body's going to have no choice but to start feeding off of what you've already got if you don't provide it with enough 'fuel' to get by on, but the problem with that is it starts eating away muscle. Yeah, you'll lose weight, but you'll lose muscle as well. Or so they say.
But if you don't give your body the fuel it needs, it basically shuts everything down to hold onto what it already has for dear life. That's what the "starvation mode theory" is that Susan posted a link to.
I'm kind of unbalanced on the starvation mode theory because I've seen (and have been) on both sides. For example, years ago when I wanted to lose weight, I started eating nothing but salad, when I ate at all. Salad salad salad and that's it. I dropped down to almost 120 pounds. And now that I know what I know about calories, eating only one or two salads a day, I know damn well I wasn't even close to the "magic number" of 1200 calories a day. Did I go into this starvation mode and not lose anything? Nope, I dropped a bunch of weight in a pretty short time. Did I become a squishy blob because I lost too much muscle? Nope. Had a nice, tight little bod that I ended up screwing up completely, which I wish I never did. But we ALL wish that. Nothing I can do about that now except try and get it back off again.
However, they say dropping weight that fast isn't good for you. That's when I was younger and could probably handle it. Now than I'm older, and more educated on the whole weight loss deal, I wanted to lose slowly and safely. That's why I started counting calories. I lost at the rate of about 1-2 pounds a week. It's taken me 20 months to lose 80 some pounds. Of course, though, in the beginning, the weight came off fast. I was losing about 10 pounds per month. But then it slowed to 1-2 pounds a week.
I've ALSO been on the 'other side', where I wasn't losing weight for a while, so when I upped my calories a little bit, it started coming back off again. Whether that has anything to do with the starvation mode theory or not, I don't know. I personally think it's just a shake-up in your routine that gets things moving again. Because it takes calories to burn calories. This is why many of us believe in the calorie cycling or the "zig zag" method. Your body tends to get stuck in a rut when you consume the same amount of calories every day and kind of just gets 'bored' and used to the intake and burns calories at a steady pace. When you do a day or two of increasing calories, your body kind of
wakes up and says, "Hey, cool! More calories to burn!" and starts revving things up again. Then you drop your calories back down, therefore your body is still burning at a faster pace but it no longer has all those calories to burn (from when you increased your food) so it ends up burning calories you're not really eating and, therefore, you break your plateau. That's the story behind THAT theory.
God I hope that made sense, lol.