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I don't know. I guess I really am the only one who is having this problem. I'm really not trying to be resistant, in fact, I haven't given up after an entire year so I think that says something. |
Renee it sounds like you are doing everything right for sure! I think it may be a matter for your physician to figure out, thyroid, possible diabetes? pcos? I mean many many health reasons can cause a stall.. birth control pills...new medications etc etc but I wanted to commend you on sticking with the plan for a year at this plateau! that is amazing! Hopefully some medical tests can give you some answers and things will pick back up for ya :)
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For me, I found that can't eat all my weekly points and activity points and still lose effectively. I find that I lose better if I eat less than 10 weekly points. For activity points, it is very very easy to overestimate the intensity and duration of exercise. I am very conservative and always choose the lowest intensity and round down in terms on duration. I think I probably do earn more AP but this way I seem to lose better. |
Is it possible this IS the weight you should be at?
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Argh! that must be so frustrating!
I went through something similar. I was doing WW (not the new plan pointsplus but the one just before that) and not losing anything. I was down to 19 points and still not losing anything. I stopped eating after 8 pm, cut out salt, maybe lost 5 lb maximum over months and months (6 months?). I am 36 years old, and thought, well maybe because I'm getting older it's getting harder? Anyway, I read something about breaking through personal barriers, and decided to do a 30-day hot yoga challenge. It was only after 30 days of intense 1-hour per day exercise that I FINALLY lost some weight. 7 lb in 30 days. Which is HUGE for me. So... my point is I guess is that bodies are annoying. you can be doing everything right food-wise, but sometimes it takes a monumentous change in a completely different type of exercise to spark things up again. I see you were exercising heavily in the summer. However, two things came to mind - one is that maybe a completely different type of exercise might shake things up. And two is that maybe you shouldn't eat your activity points? That's what worked finally for me. For example - I ran for 30 min on the treadmill FIVE TIMES A WEEK. you think that would do something right? nope. I lost nothing actually. With the hot yoga, I suddenly started to lose. *shrugs* I don't know why! I hope any or part of that helps you. I did read your post thoroughly, and it sounds like you know exactly what you're doing food-wise, and how to tweak things. So I was just thinking of ANYTHING that could try and help you! ~BreathingSpace~ |
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I hardly even take aspirin. Only vitamins when I remember! :) |
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I don't want to be "skinny" I just don't want these extra 10Kilos (22 lbs). |
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Thanks for this. And thanks actually to all who responded!! |
Renee
Could you have sodium sensitivity? I stalled on the program, and as soon as I started cutting back on table salt, the scale started moving downward. It is painful, because I love the taste of salty foods. However, the results I am getting make the sacrifice totally worth it. I hope that you find the answer. I know how frustrating it is to not lose weight when you are doing everything "right". Good luck. |
1. The more you diet, the more your metabolism slows down. Given your statements about having been a WW for over 10 years and just now having 22 pounds to lose tells me that you've yo-yo'd, probably several times (if you're like a lot of us, then a dozen times or more). Each time, it gets harder to lose the weight again, because your metabolism never bounces back all the way, even when you gain back weight. Sadly, you can be stuck with a body that simply won't lose fat until you get to a more rigorous calorie/point level than WW recommends (e.g. like the PP suggests- no weekly points and/or no activity points).
2. Most people have a tendency toward "portion creep" whenever they stop weighing and measuring. It doesn't take much added food to add an extra 200-300 cal/day, without being aware of it. Measure ALL of your food again for awhile. 3. I agree with PP, that if you do the same form of exercise at the same level of intensity for many months, you become increasingly efficient at it. Efficiency is BAD for weight loss. If you like running, try doing interval training- basically, alternate jogging at a slow-comfortable speed for 1-2 minutes with running all-out (enough that you're gasping for air and couldn't keep it up for another minute). Or mix cardio with body-weight training (the Jillian Michaels approach). Good luck. |
yes, your body can plateau. mine is really resistant to losing, and i have to totally jolt it into losing anything. it will go through the jolt, then quit. rinse and repeat, assuming i can jolt it again. if your exercise has been mostly running, you've probably lost some muscle mass and have less tissue to burn any calories. if you have been doing strength training, it could just be a plateau because now your body has figured out how to be efficient. i understand not much time to exercise, etc. but maybe some of those short dvd workouts to switch things up? i just know my own body will plateau any chance it gets.
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Hmmm. How could I find out if I have a sodium sensitivity? I never considered it because I don't really bloat and drink loads of water. Thanks for your response :) |
Renee
You would have to check with a doctor to know for sure. For me, the symptoms were high blood pressure, swollen hands, knees, ankles, and feet, and weight gain. I am told that some people may be sodium sensitive and have normal blood pressure, but their bodies still could be retaining water. Water is heavy! If you consume a lot of restaurant meals, canned and processed foods, or salty condiments, you may be taking in way more sodium than your body can efficiently process, even though you stay within your DPT. If for some reason your body can't eliminate enough sodium, the sodium starts to accumulate in your blood. Because sodium attracts and holds water, your blood volume increases. Increased blood volume makes you heavier than you would be if the excess sodium had been excreted. Since you have tried so many other things, why not reduce you salt intake and see if that makes a difference? |
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