If you’ve ever
experienced a weight-loss plateau, you know the disappointment of
stepping on the scale after another week of eating well and exercising
only to see the same exact number as the week before and the scale not budging. For days, or
sometimes even weeks at a time, your weight may not budge, which can
make your efforts to eat well and move more seem, well, like a waste of
time.
The truth is,
weight-loss plateaus happen to almost everyone trying to lose
weight–even those go-getters with plateau prevention plans. In order to
overcome one, it’s important first to understand why they occur. Here
are three contributing factors that can lead to a stalemate with the
scale:
1. Water weight loss returns. A
rapid drop in weight is normal during the first few weeks of weight
loss, but what you may not realize is that a fair amount of this initial
weight decrease comes from water lost as the body uses up carbohydrate
stores in the form of glycogen (sugar). As carbohydrate intake
fluctuates day-to-day, it’s not uncommon for some, if not all, of that
water weight to return, which can offset fat loss and cause a plateau.
2. Your body doesn’t just burn fat. The
downside to losing weight is that your body doesn’t just burn fat for
energy–it breaks down muscle too. Unlike fat, muscles burn calories, so
losing muscle will slow the rate at which you use up energy from food.
This of course impacts weight loss, and is part of the reason why
cutting too many calories can work against you because your body will
break down muscle at a faster rate.
3. When you weigh less, you burn less. As
a smaller person, you expend less energy moving around than you did at
your heavier weight. Thus, the same number of calories that produced an
initial loss may now just maintain your current weight. To continue
losing, you’ll have to increase the calories you burn through physical
activity and/or reduce the number of calories you eat. For up-to-date
calorie need estimates, be sure to update your nutrition goals in
MyFitnessPal every 5-10 pounds or so.
Remember, it’s
completely normal for weight loss to slow or even stall on occasion, so
don’t get discouraged. Now that you understand the main causes of
weight-loss plateaus, you’ll be able to devise a plan of attack if and
when the number on the scale stops dropping.
Culled from MyFitnessPal
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