Cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Is this normal?

ANSWERED

I normally used to eat 2500+ calories during the day, most of it being junk food. In the past week, I changed it to carefully eating under 1500 calories everyday. I changed all the foods I am eating, my typically day consists of fruit and a weight loss shake at breakfast, a salad at lunch, a meal bar at dinner, an ice cream bar for dessert, and various healthy snacks during the day. My starting weight was 176, and in just a few days, I am 169 pounds. I weigh myself every morning. Is it normal to lose this much weight in just a few days when changing your diet? I haven't even exercised, I am always sitting at my work desk most of the day.

Best Answer
0 Votes
5 BEST ANSWERS

Accepted Solutions

More than likely you have lost a lot of water weight.

 

You seem to be eating very little, though. I'd recommend eating more whole foods (not diet shakes, or meal bars, but REAL food)

Competitive Crossfitter
Novice Runner
Getting Better EVERY Day

View best answer in original post

Best Answer

Yes. At the start of the diet your body loses fluids quickly so you lose weight fast in the beginning.

View best answer in original post

Best Answer

A healthy amount of weight to lose per week is about 1-2 lbs.

 

It sounds like you cut down on your calories A LOT. That's probably why you have the amount of weight loss that you have. However, from what you say you eat in a typical day, that doesn't sound like something you can or should keep up with, especially if you decide to become more active. Since you have essentially replaced two meals a day with a weight loss shake and a meal bar, if you start eating actual meals at those times, you'll probably be likely to gain weight back.

 

Even keeping up with this eating plan, you are likely to gain weight back because your body will become used to the reduced amount of calories and streamline how it burns calories. Also, just based on the information in this post and your profile and looking up a simple BMR calculator, you should be eating at least 1600 calories a day just for your body's normal functions.

 

Also, expect 1-2 pounds of fluctuation when weighing yourself everyday. Based on your numbers, you've actually lost some weight but weight can vary day to day.

View best answer in original post

Best Answer

It's not about dieting, but changing food habits, becoming healthier, fitter, leaner..

 

Diets don't work in the long run, they work temporary and as soon as eating back the way before, some or all weight can come back if falling into 'old habits' (eating when not hungry, eating foods which have been restricted..).

 

By changing food habits,.. and honoring the body when it has enough. Lots of Weigh gain is less likely to come back, new habits take over the 'old habits'.

 

Reaching to be at a healthy weight range and body fat percentage, getting leaner (exercising when desired) is the most important. Changing body composition, rather than being at a fixed number. This fluctuates anyway 'cause of natural fluctuations, gaining muscle.. look at the body fat percentage and not the weight itself.

 

Allow yourself to have any food regardless good or bad food. Anything you'd fancy. Don't restrict a certain food, it leads eventually to crave so much for to at a certain point going to eat it anyway but eating much more from it.


Eat everything but in moderation. It's about changing food habits, one thing at a time so the body can adjust and easier to change habits over time.

 

When wanting something to eat out the planned meal now, allow yourself to have it at the next opportunity when going to eat something (plan it in the plan).

 

Eat what you desire, when eating something else first but actually *really* wanting to have that certain food, it leads to eating that certain food eventually and eating more calories in the long run.

 

When desired, try aiming to eat nutritient rich food (don't change your food habits to dramatically, but making smaller changes over time):

 

Fruits such as banana's, apples..

Whole Grains (bread)

Protein (yoghurt, eggs, cheese, lean meat (chicken/fish..)


These foods contain plenty of nutritients which the body needs while being low in calories, keep feeling satisfied for longer. These foods are easier for the body to process, improve digestion, boost immunity..

 

Aim to have 50% raw (cooked) vegetables at dinner.

 

Try eating those foods first before eating other food which lack in nutritients (pizza, prepackaged food which contains ingredients not being able to read).

 

Eating nutritient lacking food first which are higher in calories, the body still craves to have more cause of asking to eat more food to ensure it gets the nutritients it requires, automatically cutting back on 'extra unneeded' calories when eating the nutritient rich food first.

 

It's ok to have some pizza, piece of chocolate, prepackaged foods, a piece of cake, your favourite food. Eat everything in moderation.

 

Never skip breakfast or the body can stop sending hunger / appetite signals.

 

Protein is used to repair muscles, don't go for a to large deficit, rather have a lower calorie deficit otherwise the body starts using muscle as energy for survival instead of wanting to use body fat.

 

It can take longer for weight loss, but it ensures that most weight loss would come from body fat, and allows the body to adjust to changing food habits and the weight loss. It also limits the possibility that the body is going to fight back by when being at a natural weight range, and regardless how much food is eaten, it can go back to a higher weight, adding in a few pounds more since there's been a shortage of food and does want to survive.

 

When being at a healthier weight and body fat range, it's possible that the body can be at it's happy weight range, this weight can be higher than your desired goal but being in a healthy weight range.

 

No matter if overeating a bit, or undereating when being at the natural weight range. When only eating to nourish the body, and only when hungry (eat anything you'd like but stop eating more when satisfied) the body will stay at it's natural weight range. It defends this range regardless of having eaten a bit under or more, it always reverts back to the weight where its the most happy at (without counting calories and not restricting or forbidding any food). It does this by sending appetite / hunger signals, lowering or increasing metabolism, sending out a craving for a certain food,..

 

The weight range is determined by genetics, activity, food choices.

 

Try honoring your body, when feeling satisfied but not stuffed and not being hungry, try not to eat more. Regardless if allowed to eat x hundred calories more.

Calories to eat are a guidance, when your body has all nutritients it needs, it can be perfectly happy with less.

 

Try listening to your wonderful body what it needs (can be tricky at first) rather than the mind.. your mind would like a pizza, but would it nourish the body now or would the body be more satisfied with a salad, piece of fruit or something else instead?

 

Looking at a certain food you'd like first, but then actually getting a feeling to 'not really want to eat that now' since the other food looks more appealing at the moment and the body actually wanting to have that other food instead.

 

When some food taste bad, don't eat more of it (even if it would be a healthier food option), it's a sign that your body doesn't like that certain food. While for others it may taste great, the body doesn't like it and gives a signal to not wanting any of that food instead have something else.

 

When possible and desired eat smaller portions throughout the day instead of having 3 larger meals, when being truly hungry and having 3 larger meals, it can lead to overeating cause of being so hungry and making less 'healthy' food choices.

 

When eating smaller portions throughout the day, the body keeps feeling satisfied and not to hungry at for example dinner, choosing to take less food overall at dinner 'cause of not feeling so hungry, leading to eating less calories overall. :smileywink:

 

Make peace with yourself, your body and food.

 

Try eating with your non dominant hand, to automaticly eat slower and enjoy the food while sitting down at the table. Notice the taste, notice what you are eating (try not to eat to quickly). Recognize the love that got into the food before being available to yourself (don't need to do always) but think about that banana for example has been available by nature, growed by a farmer in another country, it got taken aboard on a ship to get to here, taken from aboard, delivered by a truck driver to a store nearby, the people from the store put on the shelves.. and you or a beloved one got the food from the store to your home so you can enjoy that piece of fruit now to nourish your body.

 

Thanks to everyone involved including nature, that piece of fruit got to you. It's amazing how much :heart: got into it. :smileyhappy:

 

Make smaller steps at a day, keep believing, don't give up when hitting a plateau (weight remains the same for a while..) (can be due a increase in muscles when exercising for example, but body fat can have been lower) so keep a eye that body fat decreases rather than weight itself. It means getting leaner and that's a great sign.

 

Enjoy!

 

Baby Goal

View best answer in original post

Best Answer
0 Votes

@anniebae wrote:

I normally used to eat 2500+ calories during the day, most of it being junk food. In the past week, I changed it to carefully eating under 1500 calories everyday. I changed all the foods I am eating, my typically day consists of fruit and a weight loss shake at breakfast, a salad at lunch, a meal bar at dinner, an ice cream bar for dessert, and various healthy snacks during the day. My starting weight was 176, and in just a few days, I am 169 pounds. I weigh myself every morning. Is it normal to lose this much weight in just a few days when changing your diet? I haven't even exercised, I am always sitting at my work desk most of the day.


Hi @anniebae . I tend to agree with @anniebae 's excellent post, at least for the most part.

 

Personally, I would aim for daily deficit of 500 calories and do away to weight loss shakes and the like and replace all these with real foods. Doing away with junk foods is easy if you set your mind to do so. To replace junk foods with food substitutes like those diet shakes and bars is a recipe for failure in the long run; unless you resolve yourself to eat those items for the rest of your life. So for me, a balanced daily food intake, made up of real foods, real proteins, real good carbs, and good fats, tailored to your engergy burn requirements (occupation, physical activities ...) are the ingredients necessary to instill a permanent lifestyle change (both in terms of eating habits and physical fitness) that stands a much better chance to succeed in the long run.

 

Drinking 8-10 glasses of water will also help with weight loss and hunger pangs. Drinking this much water is a healthy habit to adopt, regardless of your weigth loss objective. But drinking a lot of water is especially effective when on a weight loss program.

 

My wife and I both went on one of those weight loss programs years ago; and indeed we loss a ton of weight. Only to gain it all back once we got off the (real) food substitutes. It didn't happen over night of course; and yes, we could have reacted sooner to the gradual weight gain. But it's very hard to restrict your food intake and become physically more active if you haven't gradually trained to do so.

 

That's what Fitbit did for us. We didn't start with 10000 steps a day. We started slowly and sure enough, bit by bit, in tandem with gradual changes in our diet make-up, fitbit provided us with the information and tools necessary to make permanent lifestyle changes. If good health prevails, we know that we will never gain  the combined 80 pounds we lost - NEVER. Why? Because we made dietary choices that are not based on food substitutes that cannnot be sustained for very long but on real foods; and because we're now more active than ever. This was a hard-learned but well-learned lesson.

 

 

Smiley Happy     TW     Smiley Wink

 

View best answer in original post

Best Answer
5 REPLIES 5

More than likely you have lost a lot of water weight.

 

You seem to be eating very little, though. I'd recommend eating more whole foods (not diet shakes, or meal bars, but REAL food)

Competitive Crossfitter
Novice Runner
Getting Better EVERY Day
Best Answer

Yes. At the start of the diet your body loses fluids quickly so you lose weight fast in the beginning.

Best Answer

A healthy amount of weight to lose per week is about 1-2 lbs.

 

It sounds like you cut down on your calories A LOT. That's probably why you have the amount of weight loss that you have. However, from what you say you eat in a typical day, that doesn't sound like something you can or should keep up with, especially if you decide to become more active. Since you have essentially replaced two meals a day with a weight loss shake and a meal bar, if you start eating actual meals at those times, you'll probably be likely to gain weight back.

 

Even keeping up with this eating plan, you are likely to gain weight back because your body will become used to the reduced amount of calories and streamline how it burns calories. Also, just based on the information in this post and your profile and looking up a simple BMR calculator, you should be eating at least 1600 calories a day just for your body's normal functions.

 

Also, expect 1-2 pounds of fluctuation when weighing yourself everyday. Based on your numbers, you've actually lost some weight but weight can vary day to day.

Best Answer

It's not about dieting, but changing food habits, becoming healthier, fitter, leaner..

 

Diets don't work in the long run, they work temporary and as soon as eating back the way before, some or all weight can come back if falling into 'old habits' (eating when not hungry, eating foods which have been restricted..).

 

By changing food habits,.. and honoring the body when it has enough. Lots of Weigh gain is less likely to come back, new habits take over the 'old habits'.

 

Reaching to be at a healthy weight range and body fat percentage, getting leaner (exercising when desired) is the most important. Changing body composition, rather than being at a fixed number. This fluctuates anyway 'cause of natural fluctuations, gaining muscle.. look at the body fat percentage and not the weight itself.

 

Allow yourself to have any food regardless good or bad food. Anything you'd fancy. Don't restrict a certain food, it leads eventually to crave so much for to at a certain point going to eat it anyway but eating much more from it.


Eat everything but in moderation. It's about changing food habits, one thing at a time so the body can adjust and easier to change habits over time.

 

When wanting something to eat out the planned meal now, allow yourself to have it at the next opportunity when going to eat something (plan it in the plan).

 

Eat what you desire, when eating something else first but actually *really* wanting to have that certain food, it leads to eating that certain food eventually and eating more calories in the long run.

 

When desired, try aiming to eat nutritient rich food (don't change your food habits to dramatically, but making smaller changes over time):

 

Fruits such as banana's, apples..

Whole Grains (bread)

Protein (yoghurt, eggs, cheese, lean meat (chicken/fish..)


These foods contain plenty of nutritients which the body needs while being low in calories, keep feeling satisfied for longer. These foods are easier for the body to process, improve digestion, boost immunity..

 

Aim to have 50% raw (cooked) vegetables at dinner.

 

Try eating those foods first before eating other food which lack in nutritients (pizza, prepackaged food which contains ingredients not being able to read).

 

Eating nutritient lacking food first which are higher in calories, the body still craves to have more cause of asking to eat more food to ensure it gets the nutritients it requires, automatically cutting back on 'extra unneeded' calories when eating the nutritient rich food first.

 

It's ok to have some pizza, piece of chocolate, prepackaged foods, a piece of cake, your favourite food. Eat everything in moderation.

 

Never skip breakfast or the body can stop sending hunger / appetite signals.

 

Protein is used to repair muscles, don't go for a to large deficit, rather have a lower calorie deficit otherwise the body starts using muscle as energy for survival instead of wanting to use body fat.

 

It can take longer for weight loss, but it ensures that most weight loss would come from body fat, and allows the body to adjust to changing food habits and the weight loss. It also limits the possibility that the body is going to fight back by when being at a natural weight range, and regardless how much food is eaten, it can go back to a higher weight, adding in a few pounds more since there's been a shortage of food and does want to survive.

 

When being at a healthier weight and body fat range, it's possible that the body can be at it's happy weight range, this weight can be higher than your desired goal but being in a healthy weight range.

 

No matter if overeating a bit, or undereating when being at the natural weight range. When only eating to nourish the body, and only when hungry (eat anything you'd like but stop eating more when satisfied) the body will stay at it's natural weight range. It defends this range regardless of having eaten a bit under or more, it always reverts back to the weight where its the most happy at (without counting calories and not restricting or forbidding any food). It does this by sending appetite / hunger signals, lowering or increasing metabolism, sending out a craving for a certain food,..

 

The weight range is determined by genetics, activity, food choices.

 

Try honoring your body, when feeling satisfied but not stuffed and not being hungry, try not to eat more. Regardless if allowed to eat x hundred calories more.

Calories to eat are a guidance, when your body has all nutritients it needs, it can be perfectly happy with less.

 

Try listening to your wonderful body what it needs (can be tricky at first) rather than the mind.. your mind would like a pizza, but would it nourish the body now or would the body be more satisfied with a salad, piece of fruit or something else instead?

 

Looking at a certain food you'd like first, but then actually getting a feeling to 'not really want to eat that now' since the other food looks more appealing at the moment and the body actually wanting to have that other food instead.

 

When some food taste bad, don't eat more of it (even if it would be a healthier food option), it's a sign that your body doesn't like that certain food. While for others it may taste great, the body doesn't like it and gives a signal to not wanting any of that food instead have something else.

 

When possible and desired eat smaller portions throughout the day instead of having 3 larger meals, when being truly hungry and having 3 larger meals, it can lead to overeating cause of being so hungry and making less 'healthy' food choices.

 

When eating smaller portions throughout the day, the body keeps feeling satisfied and not to hungry at for example dinner, choosing to take less food overall at dinner 'cause of not feeling so hungry, leading to eating less calories overall. :smileywink:

 

Make peace with yourself, your body and food.

 

Try eating with your non dominant hand, to automaticly eat slower and enjoy the food while sitting down at the table. Notice the taste, notice what you are eating (try not to eat to quickly). Recognize the love that got into the food before being available to yourself (don't need to do always) but think about that banana for example has been available by nature, growed by a farmer in another country, it got taken aboard on a ship to get to here, taken from aboard, delivered by a truck driver to a store nearby, the people from the store put on the shelves.. and you or a beloved one got the food from the store to your home so you can enjoy that piece of fruit now to nourish your body.

 

Thanks to everyone involved including nature, that piece of fruit got to you. It's amazing how much :heart: got into it. :smileyhappy:

 

Make smaller steps at a day, keep believing, don't give up when hitting a plateau (weight remains the same for a while..) (can be due a increase in muscles when exercising for example, but body fat can have been lower) so keep a eye that body fat decreases rather than weight itself. It means getting leaner and that's a great sign.

 

Enjoy!

 

Baby Goal

Best Answer
0 Votes

@anniebae wrote:

I normally used to eat 2500+ calories during the day, most of it being junk food. In the past week, I changed it to carefully eating under 1500 calories everyday. I changed all the foods I am eating, my typically day consists of fruit and a weight loss shake at breakfast, a salad at lunch, a meal bar at dinner, an ice cream bar for dessert, and various healthy snacks during the day. My starting weight was 176, and in just a few days, I am 169 pounds. I weigh myself every morning. Is it normal to lose this much weight in just a few days when changing your diet? I haven't even exercised, I am always sitting at my work desk most of the day.


Hi @anniebae . I tend to agree with @anniebae 's excellent post, at least for the most part.

 

Personally, I would aim for daily deficit of 500 calories and do away to weight loss shakes and the like and replace all these with real foods. Doing away with junk foods is easy if you set your mind to do so. To replace junk foods with food substitutes like those diet shakes and bars is a recipe for failure in the long run; unless you resolve yourself to eat those items for the rest of your life. So for me, a balanced daily food intake, made up of real foods, real proteins, real good carbs, and good fats, tailored to your engergy burn requirements (occupation, physical activities ...) are the ingredients necessary to instill a permanent lifestyle change (both in terms of eating habits and physical fitness) that stands a much better chance to succeed in the long run.

 

Drinking 8-10 glasses of water will also help with weight loss and hunger pangs. Drinking this much water is a healthy habit to adopt, regardless of your weigth loss objective. But drinking a lot of water is especially effective when on a weight loss program.

 

My wife and I both went on one of those weight loss programs years ago; and indeed we loss a ton of weight. Only to gain it all back once we got off the (real) food substitutes. It didn't happen over night of course; and yes, we could have reacted sooner to the gradual weight gain. But it's very hard to restrict your food intake and become physically more active if you haven't gradually trained to do so.

 

That's what Fitbit did for us. We didn't start with 10000 steps a day. We started slowly and sure enough, bit by bit, in tandem with gradual changes in our diet make-up, fitbit provided us with the information and tools necessary to make permanent lifestyle changes. If good health prevails, we know that we will never gain  the combined 80 pounds we lost - NEVER. Why? Because we made dietary choices that are not based on food substitutes that cannnot be sustained for very long but on real foods; and because we're now more active than ever. This was a hard-learned but well-learned lesson.

 

 

Smiley Happy     TW     Smiley Wink

 

Best Answer