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did i screw myself?
i had a dinner party tonight and ended up with 1800-1900 calories instead of 1200. is this like WAY overboard? do you think it will stall my weight loss or cause a gain? it is WAY more than usual, but is that number of calories that excessive?
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I don't think so. You may have a smaller loss than normal this week, but an additional 6-700 calories won't cause a GAIN as long as you create a matching deficit the rest of the week.
****, maybe it will give your metabolism a boost! :) |
Think about it - if you're eating 1200 calories a day, and one day a week, you hit 1900, you're still averaging only 1300 a day. Some people even do this on purpose - it's called Calorie Zigzagging.
So just get back on plan and move ahead. |
Not a big deal at all. As mandalinn suggests, just cut back a little the next day and move on (or frankly I don't think you even need to do that). If this happens every day, then obviously you need to rethink the strategy but otherwise, just move on and stay on plan.
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Relax, you'll be fine. I zig zag my calories whenever I hit a mini plateau. This will probably be good for you, you'll be surprised. 1200 is pretty low for your weight anyway, I'm surprised you're not plateauing already.
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You'll be fine! The problem will happen if you let yourself think that because you weren't "perfect" that everything is over ! That kind of all-or-none thinking foils many a dieter!
The fact that you know roughly how many calories you ate is good! |
thanks girls, you're the best. ;)
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What they said up there. :)
An occasional zig-zag won't hurt you, as long as you get yourself back on track and move forward from here. And really, at your height and current weight 1800-1900 is probably pretty close to a maintenance level. |
I started "maintenance" a month ago and eat around 1800 calories a day, and I'm still losing (went from 147 to 144). I lead a sedentary lifestyle but work out for about an hour at least 5x/wk
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700 calories is only 1/5 of a pound (tha's 0.2 pounds).. so if you would have lost 1lb this week, now you'd lose 0.8, for example. Heck, 0.2lb is the smallest increment my scale even measures! I don't think you'll have a big problem.
I will say that if you ate more food than usual, especially if it was higher in sodium than your usual diet, you might gain a little water weight for a few days. So if your weigh in is tomorrow, or maybe even the next day, you might see it on the scale. But it's not REAL weight gain. |
Originally Posted by mayness: |
Julia, quite frequently when people eat more food than what their bodies are used to (like the example of you eating 1,900 calories when you are used to 1,200), they gain a sudden amount of water weight. It happens to me all the time. I've also noticed when I am consistantly, perfectly "on plan" I am around 135, yet as soon as I fall off even for a SECOND, I'm 140. Now, I KNOW logically that a FEW extra calories (or even just a few wrong foods) will not actually make me gain five whole pounds, but my body loves holding onto water. Most of us will retain easily -- the amount of water our bodies choose to retain depends on the person, of course.
You'll be fiiiiiiiiiiiiine! :D |
Originally Posted by NightengaleShane: |
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