Do lightweights lose less weight or lose slower?
There is a estimator somewhere on this site that seems to be pretty accurate from most who have used it. Lightweights don't lose the number of pounds that our heavier friends do but we don't have that much to lose. Our % of excess weight loss is about the same. So they may have 200 to lose and lose 30 pounds the first month where we have 100 and lose 15. We have lost the same % of excess weight.
It isn't a sprint, it is the rest of your life. Don't worry about how fast or slow you will lose but that you will stay on course, follow the program and set a new pattern for the rest of your life.
66 yrs young, 4'11" hw 220, goal 120 met at 12 months, cw 129 learning Maintainance
Between 35-40 BMI? join us on the Lightweight board. the Lightweight Board
There are no dumb questions, that's what I always say! :) Unfortunately there is no clear answer either. Generally if you have less to lose, it comes off slower. You probably won't be one to drop 20-30 lbs in a month. I feel like I am a very slow loser and I have a lot of stalls (I go 2-3 weeks at a time without losing anything).
I am very eager to get to goal and 100% focused on the plan. I will not quit until I reach my goal. Then I'll never stop being on maintenance. I have been overweight my entire life and I am never going back!
You can see my month to month progress in my signature line. :)
on 4/24/15 7:16 am
That's a good question, and one I'd like to know the answer to too! I also can't figure out if I can expect it to take more or less time to get to goal having lost a good bit pre-op. It would make sense to be quicker overall since I have a "jump start," but I'm sure I'll lose more slowly post-op at 230 lbs than I would have at 300+.
I found the estimator!! If you go to the top of the page and click on More, resources, then post op planner. I was always ahead of what it said which gave me a lot of comfort.
66 yrs young, 4'11" hw 220, goal 120 met at 12 months, cw 129 learning Maintainance
Between 35-40 BMI? join us on the Lightweight board. the Lightweight Board
It's not POUNDS, it's PERCENTAGES!
By Carolyn M.
Two people, both 6 months post-op. One has lost only 63 pounds and feels bad about her "slow" weight loss. The other has lost 96 pounds and thinks she's doing great.
They are both wrong.
Person A had only 105 excess pounds, so she has already lost 60% of her excess weight. She is actually ahead of the game at 6 months out and is on track to lose it ALL.
Person B had 265 excess pounds. At 6 months out she has only lost 36% of her excess weight. At this rate, she will end up retaining 28% of her excess weight, enough to keep her in the obese category.
What this means is that the percent excess weight loss is a much more critical number than that absolute number of pounds lost.
Percent of excess weight lost: pounds lost divided by total excess pounds.
Use a BMI of 30 as a goal weight.
Please note: These are averages. A patient’s individual weight loss will be different.
Duodenal Switch (Lap) 01-24-11 | Surgeon: Stephen Boyce | High weight: 250 in 2002 | Surgery weight: 203 | Lowest weight: 121 | Current weight: 135 | Goal weight: 135