Kind of discouraged

mcreynolds99
on 10/21/09 10:58 pm
Ok yesterday was my one month post op. At the 12 day mark I had lost 20.5 pounds. I was feeling great. I figured it would not keep gooing like that but I did not expect it to drop to 2 pounds the next week, another 2 pounds the next week and then 2 pounds again. Just does not seem right. I was wanting to know the first month no matter what you weight loss was. Did you get the big drop and then it slowed down before picking back up. I thought after the first 2 pound loss my body was fighting it and trying to adjust. I just do not know now. I am loosing inches the weight just does not seem to be going.
NNicholas
on 10/21/09 11:13 pm - Oxford, MI
OK, one more time, I will say this to all the newbies. Early out, STAY OFF THE SCALE. In the beginning it will be your worse enemy. You will fluctuate up and down a bit from day to day or week to week so it will get you discouraged. Weigh yourself at your Doctors appointments, every three months or so. You will know, in between appointments, that you are losing, by the size of your clothing and how they fit. In the beginning you are actually starving and your body goes into starvation mode. It does burn up fat but it tries to hold on to weight at the same time, (as in excess fluids, etc). It can appear that one day you lost then the next day you gained. Wait until maintenance to weigh daily or weekly. I still only weigh myself every other month.  
 "I refuse to measure success in pounds lost, but rather in life gained!"
Nick
mcreynolds99
on 10/21/09 11:18 pm
Thought I was doing good only getting on the scale once a week.
NNicholas
on 10/21/09 11:23 pm - Oxford, MI
Put that thing away! You will do better. I learned it the hard way. Read my profile about when I tried to race the weight loss in January. I spent a week in intensive care because of it. Nothing like making it possible to have tubes shoved into all of your orifices! I wanted that extra pound a week or a day. Let it happen the right way and don't either temp yourself to rush the loss or let it cause you to get discouraged.
 "I refuse to measure success in pounds lost, but rather in life gained!"
Nick
panhead58fl
on 10/22/09 12:26 am - Barboursville, WV
Nick is right on this one. My Doc said to weigh once a month or just on follow up visits. I was like you though, I was on the scale at least once a week. It is easy to get obsessed with the numbers. I was like you, my loss slowed just after surgery. I think it was because I had lost so much prior to surgery that afterward my body went into starvation mode real quick. If you do what they have told you to do it will happen. There were times where the scale wouldn't move at all but I was dropping inches like crazy. No reason to get discouraged, just hang there and follow the plan and it will all work out.

pan head
Don 1962
on 10/22/09 6:03 am
Dittos to Nick and Panhead!

Mac, remember this is a marathon you are on - not a sprint.

Never, and I mean NEVER, trust a fart!! 


Seht
on 10/22/09 6:24 am
I was a daily weigher.  Heck twice a day on most days.  In the morning after the S,S,S and in the evening before bed.
Evening weights were alway 3-5 pounds heavier.

If you do have to weigh yourself each day, make sure you do it under the sam conditions each time.  With daily weight fluctuation you can drive yourself crazy thinking you aren't losing any weight.

You are doing great, just give yourself a chance.  You will succeed!

Best wishes.

Scott

The first time you do something - It's going to be a personal record!

casperjeff
on 10/22/09 7:17 am
Well..here's a scenario for you.
I lost 21 pounds my first week of liquid diet.
That's with no exercise.
21 pounds.

There is no eartly way that I burned enough calories in 7 days to lose 21 pounds.

But...I was a HUGE saltaholic prior...stupid amounts of salts added to everything PLUS all the high sodium processed foods.

There was NO DOUBT that the first week's weight loss was mostly water from sodium induced retention.

Even better....a few weeks post surgery....started eating foods with sodium in them (some processed stuff) and lo and behold a stall.  Some of tha****er weight came back. 
I was not worried...I knew that eventually it would stabalize and the REAL calorie induced weight loss would continue (and added exercise loss as well).

Hang in there.

cabin111
on 10/22/09 8:11 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

NNicholas
on 10/22/09 6:18 pm, edited 10/22/09 6:19 pm - Oxford, MI
Hey cabin who is DX? I don't think I ever met him. The name "DX" makes me curious.
 "I refuse to measure success in pounds lost, but rather in life gained!"
Nick
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