Trying to lose weight but getting worried cause I can not do cardio

buddyy26

New member
Hello all I am new to this sight and I have been dieting and strength training since Feburary of this year I was at 215 lbs at 5'4 male. Since then I have lost 47 lbs to drop to 167 my healthy weight is 130. I can not do cardio because I broke my foot last year and when I did the bone cut a nerve in half and developed into RSD/CRPS. I was just wondering if there was any advice or should I just stick with the strenght training. As for the 47 lbs in 2 months I am not sure exactly how I did it. I don't starve myself I eat about 1300 calories aday. With about 1 hour of strength training where I do 4 sets of 4 this week to the point where the last one is barely made. Next week I will go back to 3 sets of 6 hopefully if I can get the new weight I am working out with up that high by then. Open to any advice I am doing this to lose weight and get stronger and to take my mind off the constant pain I am in. Thank you for taking it easy on me. :p
 
Hello all I am new to this sight and I have been dieting and strength training since Feburary of this year I was at 215 lbs at 5'4 male. Since then I have lost 47 lbs to drop to 167 my healthy weight is 130. I can not do cardio because I broke my foot last year and when I did the bone cut a nerve in half and developed into RSD/CRPS. I was just wondering if there was any advice or should I just stick with the strenght training. As for the 47 lbs in 2 months I am not sure exactly how I did it. I don't starve myself I eat about 1300 calories aday. With about 1 hour of strength training where I do 4 sets of 4 this week to the point where the last one is barely made. Next week I will go back to 3 sets of 6 hopefully if I can get the new weight I am working out with up that high by then. Open to any advice I am doing this to lose weight and get stronger and to take my mind off the constant pain I am in. Thank you for taking it easy on me. :p

Couple of things...

1. Congrats on the huge loss!

2. I would have liked to have seen you lose it at a more reasonable rate. You lost as quickly as you did because you at a very low calorie diet relative to your size. Remember, calorie needs are dictated, in large part, by your size, among other things. Your maintenance, without knowing your activity levels, at 215 was likely close to 2700 calories. There are roughly 3500 calories in 1 lb of fat. You were eating 1300 calories per day, given you a daily deficit of 1400 calories and a weekly deficit of 9800 calories. That's an approximate rate of fat loss of nearly 3 lbs per week, which would account for 24 of your 47 lbs. Because your calories were set so low relative to your size... you likely lose muscle as well, which would account for some more of your weight loss. And then of course water loss makes up a significant portion. I only bring these things up to a) make you aware and b) make sure you're on a sustainable path and c) make sure that the path you're on, sustainable or not, is actually leading to your ultimate goal.

3. You don't need cardio for weight loss, obviously, as you've proven. You need an energy deficit. In theory, that deficit can come entirely from a reduction in calorie intake. Ideally it's a combo of exercise and diet though. I'd say there's nothing to worry about.

4. And cardio isn't all about running, elliptical, biking or whatever. If you're concerned about not getting the adaptations derived from cardio, you can still do some form of cardio such as high volume, low weight circuit resistance training.

Throwing a lot at you here, but wanted to start with this. If you have questions, please feel free to let them fire.
 
Thank you for the advice I think my biggest calorie cut was I use to drink 6 to 8 20 oz bottles of Mountain Dew aday. As for muscle loss I was really worried about that too but I was only able to do 16 lbs curls the first few weeks and within a month I jumped to 50 so I hope I didn't lose any muscle but if I did it should come back I hope. Activity levels when I was 215 was I was in to much pain to leave the couch due to workman's comp playing around with paying for my meds. I still haven't got my meds back but was tired of letting the RSD rule my life. Again thank you very much I will look into the low weight circuits and try to find a good way put it into my off day workouts that would be great.

P.S. Another reason so much came off so fast I think is because of having to quit all the pain meds and lyrica I had to take due to RSD.
 
That would explain even more of your weight loss, sure.

And I'm sure you lost a considerable amount of muscle. Because you gained strength doesn't mean you gained or maintained muscle. Strength increases, especially in novices when it comes to weight lifting, are primarily neurological. Put differently, your neuromuscular system adapts in such a way that promotes strength gains.

I wouldn't sweat it though. I'd simply adjust what you're doing to preserve the muscle you have. You're doing that with the heavy weight training. I'd also focus on getting sufficient protein in - something like 1 gram per pound of goal body weight would help.
 
Back
Top