Weight-Loss caloric intake: too much, or not enough?

Weight-Loss

kateedid

New member
Hello. I have always had a problem with my weight. I used to weigh 185 pounds, but when I moved about a year ago I lost around 30 pounds by just barely eating (not on purpose, I just lost my appetite). Well, losing this much weight without trying encouraged me to try and get it under control once and for all. So, i watched this show on the health channel and these people were trying to lose weight, so they were told to keep their caloric intake under 1500 a day. So I started doing the same, keeping my caloric intake under 1550 a day. I also started eating healthier foods, like more fruits and veggies, fat free milk, ground turkey instead of ground beef, wheat bread, stuff like that. I dont exercise at a gym, but at my job I keep really busy and hardly ever stop moving. I try to exercise almost every night to tone up. However, I am not losing weight. I'm not getting smaller at all. It has been about three months now, and I'm not losing any more weight. I don't know what to do, but I'm getting tired of trying so hard for nothing. :(
What else can I do? I'm afraid if I try to eat fewer calories I'll be too hungry. Someone said i was eating too few calories and making my metabolism too slow, but I don't understand that. Any advice?
 
Hi there,
proper calorie intake is a highly individualized thing. Telling people "eat under 1500 calories" in my opinion is a bad idea. SOme people need more, some people need less. I weight 117 pounds and I need 2500 calories a day to maintain my weight. If I ate 1500 my body would shut down! I have a male friend who weighs nearly 200 and has a super slow metabolism...he maintains around 1400 a day. That's just an example.

Anyway, my point being that it may not be the right calorie level for you. I think calorie calculators are dangerous too. There are so many factors that they don't take in to consideration. As a professional I don't receommdn them. They could give you a good number for you, or it could be way off. When I assess my clients I ask so many questions before I ever make calorie recommendations. There are countless factors to consider.

How do you FEEL on the calories that you are eating now? Hungry a lot? Full? How is your energy level? If you're hungry a lot and tired you may not be eating enough. If you feel full you may want to try a slight decrease. Another option for you would be to consider calorie cycling. You said you weren't eating much for a while. That probably messed up your metabolism. Calorie cycling may help it.

Hope that made sense and let me know if it didn't!

Sarah
 
Hi there,
proper calorie intake is a highly individualized thing. Telling people "eat under 1500 calories" in my opinion is a bad idea. SOme people need more, some people need less. I weight 117 pounds and I need 2500 calories a day to maintain my weight. If I ate 1500 my body would shut down! I have a male friend who weighs nearly 200 and has a super slow metabolism...he maintains around 1400 a day. That's just an example.

Anyway, my point being that it may not be the right calorie level for you. I think calorie calculators are dangerous too. There are so many factors that they don't take in to consideration. As a professional I don't receommdn them. They could give you a good number for you, or it could be way off. When I assess my clients I ask so many questions before I ever make calorie recommendations. There are countless factors to consider.

How do you FEEL on the calories that you are eating now? Hungry a lot? Full? How is your energy level? If you're hungry a lot and tired you may not be eating enough. If you feel full you may want to try a slight decrease. Another option for you would be to consider calorie cycling. You said you weren't eating much for a while. That probably messed up your metabolism. Calorie cycling may help it.

Hope that made sense and let me know if it didn't!

Sarah

ive started just keeping it under 2000 a day and that seems to be working. i wasnt eating enough and it was storing what i did eat as fat. however, i now need help managing hypoglycemia. i have never been to the doctor to see about it, but i have been told by an ex-paramedic and a nurse that i have hypoglycemic spells when i feel very tired and sick because my blood sugar drops. im still trying to learn what i need to eat to prevent this from happening.
 
Hi,
I have hypoglycemia as well so I very much understand that struggle. Your macronutrient breakdown--how much of your diet is carbs, protein and fat, will matter a lot for you. Also, what type of carbs you eat and at what times of the day matters even more for you than the average person. It's a pain in the neck, but you can adapt to a lifestyle where your blood sugar will stay stable. Keeping your blood sugar stable will enable your body to lose fat a lot easier!

Sarah
 
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