Help No weight Change

ElizabethAshleigh
on 2/14/12 12:48 am - CO
Ok so I hit my losest weight so far on January 30th. Since then I have been stuck on a plateau. Last week I started P90x and have been doing it every night and giving it 100% effort. I have gained a pound or two. I know muscle weighs more but I feel like I have been burning lots of calories and have not even seen a pound melt off. Help!! How do I get off this plateau. I have to continue P90x as I am training for a Tough Mudder Competition in June, but should I add anything? Please any suggestions you have I would appreciate.
Scott William
on 2/14/12 3:08 am
How is your eating going. It's common for people training for marathons to increase their intake without realizing it due to the strenuous work. Other than that, you are probably adding muscle which is more dense than fat. It will also burn more calories as you rest which is great for weight loss or maintaining. I would stick with it and watch the food intake.
Scott

Link to my running journal
http://www.disboards.com/showthread.php?t=1303681

4 full's - 14 halves - 2 goofy's and one Mt. Washington!
cabin111
on 2/14/12 4:12 am
Below is a copy and paste from DX...very knowledgeable man.  It might help.  He had said after WLS it is like decending stairs...

Still staying on-track calorie-wise? And the scale shows you stopping? Or Even Gaining?!?!?--Re-Post Unsolicited advice/info… -------------------------------------- Pull back from your ‘daily’ charting, and look at a weekly or even monthly. There are up and down spikes each day, But if you ‘graph’ the highest to the lowest, I’d bet there is still A downward slope over the course of the month. There’s an 8 to 10lb. volume of "wiggle room" due to water alone. And it comes into play a lot. This has to do with our bodies using glycogen for short term energy storage. Glycogen is not very soluble, But it is stored in our muscles for quick energy – One pound of glycogen requires 4 lbs of water to keep it soluble, And the average glycogen storage capacity is about 2 lbs. So, when you are not getting in enough food, (Like when you drop down to your calorie intake) Your body turns first to stored glycogen, Which is easy to break down for energy. And when you use up 2 lbs of glycogen, You also lose 8 lbs of water that was used to store it Voila -- the "easy" 10 lbs that most people lose in the first week of any diet. As you stay in caloric deficit, however, Your body starts to ‘realize’ that this is not a short term problem. You start mobilizing fat from your adipose tissue And burning fat for energy. But your body also ‘realizes’---- (by way of your liver releasing hormones signaling low Cal intake) ---That fat can't be used for short bursts of energy – Like, to outrun a saber-tooth tiger. So, it starts converting some of the fat into glycogen, And rebuilding the glycogen stores. And as it puts back the 2 lbs of glycogen into the muscle, 8 lbs of water has to be stored with it to keep it soluble. So, even though you might still be LOSING energy content to your body, (Thus showing negative Calorie load overall) Your weight will not go down or you might even GAIN for a while As you retain water to dissolve the glycogen that is being reformed and stored. Yes? The whole ‘weight-loss’ process is not a straight "Slide" down the scale. More like "Stair-Steps," (Down then forward, then down, then forward, etc... As your body cycles fat out of "deep storage" and through the Liver Into the muscles as Glycogen. The muscles and Liver can hold about a 3 weeks supply. This is why many people find that their "Stall" or "Plateau" Breaks when adding a bit of exercise And upping their water intake, or in the case of an "extreme exerciser," The total Calorie or Protein Intake, To signal the liver to let go of more Glycogen. Fear not, many people who are now enjoying life at a normal BMI Once had a few weeks or so of thinking- "...my weight loss has been awfully slow, has it stopped..."? Hope this helps some. You are doing Great! Keep it Up! Best Wishes-Mike Wazowski Dx

mcarthur01
on 2/14/12 4:34 am - Cumming, GA
this is a great explanation, thanks.  we should make this "sticky"
Where are we going??  And why am I in this handbasket??

right now.  somewhere.  somebody is working harder than you.

cabin111
on 2/14/12 5:09 am

A couple other things in no special order.  Hard physical work would break a stall for me.  Things like cleaning out the car, washing windows, cleaning gutters causes your body to use muscles that it normally wouldn't.  Upping your protein a bit may help...An extra protein shake or put a spoonful of cottage cheese on the nightstand...In the middle of the night have the spoonful if you need to get up and pee...since you are sip sip sipping away on the water.  Brian

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