For the first week I barely lost at all...but now since about monday, I've gone from 279 to 275.6 without really changing much except eating more soup and energy bars but with roughly the same amount of calories
First of all it's possible the scales are not that accurate, it's worth getting a decent set of digital scales which can weigh in something like 0.25 or 0.1 pound increments.
However having said that, weight loss measured on a weekly basis can be extremely misleading, the problem is that your body can naturally swing at least 3-4lbs of weight within one day. So even an accurate measurement is essentially up to 3-4lbs wrong, try to look at your weight as 275.6lbs ± 2lbs (this means plus or minus 2lbs)
This fluctuation can make it look like you've lost nothing or even gained weight when in actual fact your real body weight may be lower, for example if you weigh yourself and come out 275lbs, and you drop 2lb that week, you'd expect to see 273lbs on the next weigh, but if your first measurement was on a low point and your 2nd measurement is on a high point it could be a good 4lbs higher which would put you in at 277lbs on the scales.
The opposite is also true, if you weigh 275 at a high point and lose 2lbs and then measure at a low point it can make you look as if you've lost 5-6lbs in a week.
It's disheartening to see but you must make sure that logic is in control and not emotion, it's perfectly normal and everyone gets this to some degree, I've had weeks where I've stuck to my diet really well and exercised a lot and come out 1-2lb heavier, and I've had weeks where I cheat and don't exercise and I've lost 5lbs.
Fleur de Lis,
your numbers are dangerously incorrect. 1200 is too low in nearly all cases. Usually it is more around 1800 for females, and 2200 for males, and even that is only a very, very rough guideline.
1200 is an often cited minimum for women and 1800 for men during
weight loss. 1800/2200 is the appox
maintenance calories for men/women unless you're heavily overweight this daily amount wont help you lose weight. Obviously it differs for each person, mostly based on height, height decides your natural weight and weight naturally effects the energy you need per day, heavier people need more energy to move about.
I'm a large guy, 6'1" and started at 250lbs and I started on a target of 3lbs a week weightloss which put me at about 1300 per day, as I lost weight this value dropped closer to about 1100 which was getting too low I feel, so I set my new loss at 2lbs per week which gave me 500 calories more to play with (1600 daily), I'm still at that now although realistically I eat a bit less than that if I'm not hungry during the day, I'd say that my average is still probably closer to the initial 1300 per day.
I wouldn't advise people go below the recommended limits but I will say that for me it's been no problem at 1100-1300 per day so the hysteria some people make about going below these limits is a little misplaced.