This is what annoys me about that "Biggest Loser" show. Contestants sometimes lose like 20 lbs in a week and everyone cheers then they get all upset when they "only" lose say 3 lbs.
I think people at home watch that and think that's how they should lose weight
I totally agree...that show entirely messes with people's perception of realistic weight-loss! My own (ignorant) brother once scoffed my taking 3 weeks to lose 2 pounds....he doubted my efforts by telling me how those FF's on BL lose double-digits each week, implying that I wasnt' trying hard enough or cheating on my eating. :azzangel:
Look, my brother works at NBC and he's privy to what goes on with that program. Most those people are eating 1,500 calories per day and doing about 3 hours of exercise each day (cardio & weights). They're huge and given the opportunity, their bodies are just dying to drop major poundage! Early and dramatic results are typical...but won't last.
Let me just be clear that I do not expect this sort of weight loss or feel disappointed if it doesn't happen. My goals are for a healthy, sustainable weight loss.
I was mostly wondering if perhaps I had backpedaled and lost muscle because I was ill.
I was just looking for some insights as to "why--could this possibly be true??".
Sara (Derwyddon) is right and Gooch is correct in agreeing with her. There's way too much hype about catabolism (loss of muscle). It can happen, but it takes serious deprivation/exertion and today we ring that alarm way too quickly. I had a pro-trainer once tell me that when I do weights I'm breaking-down the muscle and then by following-up immediately with cardio I was then consuming that same muscle: ABSURD!!!!
You know what this REALLY comes down to? That darn scale. Listen folks, the scale is merely an instrument that measures your total weight, IT IS BLIND TO COMPOSITION. It can't discern between fat, muscle, water or even the gold fillings in your teeth.
My own example. Towards the beginning of my program I went one month: I biked till water poured from my helmet, I swam laps, weight-trained, played racquetball and kept my calories down. After one month I felt & looked lighter & leaner. I went in, got on the scale and I had gained 2.25 pounds!!!!!!!


But then my guy slapped the body-fat calipers on me, they sank much deeper then before and we found I had lost an amazing 2.8% body-fat.
It's ALL about the fat. Focus people, focus!!!
I once came in early for my appointment and swam in the indoor Olympic pool. A lap is back & forth across 25-meters. It took me a bit over 2 hours, but I swam 100 laps (a wee over 3 miles). I then went to my appointment and recorded my biggest loss of 5.25 pounds (in 3 weeks). My guy and I both knew it was a "false low"....from 2 hours swimming I was dehydrated. My body-fat still had a loss of like .7%
So that's weight down 5.25 pounds, body-fat% down .7%
Sure enough, 3 weeks later I came in w/o having swam....on the scale, I had GAINED 1.5 pounds since my last visit. Did I stress??? Nope...I knew the game. We slapped the calipers on me and sure enough, another .5% drop since the last visit.
So that's weight UP 1.5 pounds, body-fat% down .5%
Do ya see what's happening here??? That's right, your scale weight is about as critical as the number of freckles you have on your body. Look at the bigger picture, LOOK AT THE ACCURATE PICTURE!!!
Diane (GreenhornGal)....you're right. You didn't lose all that weight in pure nasty FAT. You loss some fat (GOOD FOR YOU GIRLFRIEND)...but much of your drop on the scale was likely water and a depleted glycogen supply. Typical of the losses Atkins people have. Once you start eating proper again, you'll rehydrate and replenish your glycogen. In summary, at your next weigh-in, don't be surprised if you haven't lost any numbers on the scale....but you will have lost more fat.
So long as you maintain some degree of exercise, you're telling your body not to burn that precious muscle....and so long as you eat healthy and not starve yourself....true muscle-loss is just not going to happen!
Again: at each monthly visit I've watched my weight go up and down, but each visit always brings a lower and lower body-fat reading. That's where the battle is won or lost. Learn it, accept it...live it!
