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why have i only lost ONE bl**dy lb ???

It is totally normal to have stalls and plateauxs with any kind of WLS or diet....so don't panic, it will start coming off again soon. Also you are early days and this is also common.

You may need to step up the exercise to push it through this but it will start to come off again, you are doing brilliant and keep the faith...

Remember, in a years time....
 
WHOA!! Put the brakes on sister, pull that panic car over and take a deep breath. At 2 weeks post-op many people have no loss at all due to limited nutrition & swollen tummy. You have done really great, 35lbs is so fantastic, that is half of what I have lost and I am at 3 months now. :):):)

Please don't punish yourself with your scales. Do yourself a favor and weigh once a week, the changes are more impressive and the slow days won't have the power to make you cry!! You just need to eat and rest up at 2 weeks, the weight will come off and you did not waste your money, promise!

And remember, bypass weight loss can be slow one week and quick the next but it is always forever gone unlike any diet you have ever done. Deep breaths, you are going to be thin in a blink but the first month is always emotionally hard.

Take care and be kind to yourself,
Nic;)
 
at 2 weeks post op your body is reacting to the limited amount of food as energy and your body is in starvtion mode, as it resrves energy to aid its healing process. It will quickly realise that it needs to start using your reserved energy supply and then the weight will start to come off once again.

As everyone has said don't panic you are not alone, look at all the other threads that contain something similar. You will do it it just takes time. We're all here to support and encourage you.
 
thankyou minimins 'lovelies', helped me put things in perspective as ever!!! i must admit i am not doing much exercise as i am still so knackered...i am trying to do my house wrok and go for about a mile walk each day but dont make it every day. i have also been quite sick the last couple days (nothing to do with bypass...a 24hr bug) so was not keeping anything down. i trapped myself into thinking no food=huge weight loss...but ofcourse i know better than that when i have my rational head on!!! Anyway, today is a new day...so chin(s) up and look forward!xxx
 
Hey i am also having to recondition my body out of starvation mode, that started last night in fact time for my mid morning meal... yummy yoghurt time lol. And i finally got a half weetabix this morning that was not swimming in milk, just moist soft and easy to go down.

Everyone else has covered the points so i wont labour them, just give your body time to adapt
 
Hope you feel better soon from the bug and very happy to see you feel more positive today.

Here is a big (((((((HUG)))))))

We are all on this journey and its great to have support from everyone on this site.:)
 
Why does a very low calorie intake slow down weight loss?

Quite simply, your body goes into 'starvation mode'. This mechanism, which is thought to have evolved as a defence against starvation, means the body becomes super efficient at making the most of the calories it does get from food and drink. The main way it does this is to protect its fat stores and instead use lean tissue or muscle to provide it with some of the calories it needs to keep functioning. This directly leads to a loss of muscle, which in turn lowers metabolic rate so that the body needs fewer calories to keep ticking over and weight loss slows down. Of course, this is the perfect solution if you're in a famine situation. But if you're trying to lose weight, it's going to do little to help you shift those unwanted pounds.
So how many calories should I have to prevent starvation mode?

Unfortunately, there's no single answer to this question. As everyone's metabolism varies in the first place, so too will the point when the body starts to use muscle to provide it with calories in a 'famine-type' situation.
As a general rule though, most nutrition experts recommend never going below 1,000-1,200 calories a day if you're dieting on your own. It's also worth bearing in mind that the body doesn't suddenly 'enter' and 'leave' starvation mode, like crossing the border from Devon into Cornwall. It's a gradual process - so you don't need to panic if you do go below your calorie intake very occasionally.
What's the link between muscle and metabolism?

The metabolic rate - the rate at which the body burns calories - is partly determined by the amount of muscle we have. In general, the more muscle we have, the higher our metabolic rate; the less muscle we have, the lower our metabolic rate. This explains why men, who have a high proportion of muscle, have a faster metabolism than women, and why a 20-year-old has a higher metabolism than a 70-year-old - again, they have more muscle.

Ultimately, muscle burns a lot more calories than fat so when we lose muscle, our metabolic rate drops and we burn fewer calories. In fact, research shows that the body loses a proportionately high amount of muscle with a very low calorie intake and this may considerably suppress metabolism by up to 45 percent.

This explains why it's crucial to do as much as you can to protect your metabolic rate, especially when you're dieting. And this means dieting sensibly with a suitable, rather than a very low calorie intake so that you lose fat rather than muscle.
Is there anything else I can do to stop losing muscle when I'm dieting?

As well as making sure you have sufficient calories to burn fat rather than muscle, it's also possible to build muscle, which in turn boosts metabolism. And the way to do this is, of course, to increase the amount of exercise you do. While activities such as jogging, swimming, fast walking and aerobic classes help to tone muscle and burn fat, strength or resistance training in particular will increase the amount of muscle you have in your body. And this is good news because for every extra 1lb of muscle you have, your body uses around an extra 50 calories a day! This means an extra 10lb of muscle will burn roughly an extra 500 calories a day without you doing anything - and that's a sufficient amount to lose 1lb in a week.
But doesn't your metabolism drop when you lose weight anyway?

Yes, your metabolic rate naturally slows down a little when you lose weight, but this isn't automatically because you've lost muscle. It's because when your body has less weight to carry around, it needs fewer calories. This means if you weighed 13st to start with and now weigh 9st, you need fewer calories to maintain your new weight than you did when you were heavier. Simply put, there's 4st less of you to carry up and down the stairs, into the bath, around the supermarket and to the bus stop - and because your body doesn't have to work as hard as it did in the past, it can survive on fewer calories! This is why you should regularly update your Goals and Results - as your weight drops, Weight Loss Resources will recalculate how many calories you need to keep losing weight at your chosen rate.
Will yo-yo dieting have damaged my metabolism permanently?

Fortunately not! The idea that yo-yo dieting permanently lowers your metabolism has been relegated to the archives. However, if you've frequently crash dieted and severely restricted your calorie intake without exercising, it's likely you'll have a lot less muscle now compared with the very first time you dieted. As a consequence, it's likely your metabolism will also be lower so that you need fewer calories to maintain your current weight. This is because when you follow a very low calorie diet, you lose muscle as well as fat (see above). But when the weight goes back on, you usually only regain fat. This means, your metabolic rate is likely to have dropped a little every time you've dieted, making it slightly harder each time for you to lose weight. The good news is you can increase the amount of muscle you have by increasing the amount of exercise you do. This in turn will rev up your metabolism so that you can lose weight one final time on a slightly higher calorie intake than you've perhaps been used to.
 
You eat 500 - 700 calories lower than your maintenance and you workout 3 times a week (not walking, a proper jog), you eat the right foods, you limit carb intake and sugar intake, and you will lose weight.

Sorry Wotwot but this is not appropriate advice for someone who has just had weight loss surgery.
 
:nono: nice narrow mind you got there mate.

:feedtroll:
 
i KNOW its starvation mode i was lucky to get 500 cals in hospital so believe me there is no onther reason for me not having lost weight. My body did not have the energy to convert food it was all going into helping heal me.
 
Cazbandy, I am commenting from personal experience, not some comments from some guy or some scientists who thinks he knows it all.

I know what works, what doesn't, what exists, and what's a myth. It's utter rubbish. I looked at things like that for 3 years before I was successful, and how did I become successful? I did my own thing, and I have so much knowledge on this I can write anyone a weight loss plan or a bulking plan, male or female, tall or short, thin or fat.

I lost 5 1/2+ stone in 10 months, lost no muscle what so ever and I gained muscle in my legs from all the running I did. I am now bulking up and have put on nearly a stone and a half of muscle and fat, in 8 weeks I will be cutting and when I get to 10% Bodyfat or lower I will be bulking up again all the way till September, then I will cut and start bulking at Xmas.

Please, stop reading and start running, you're doing a "r", just not the right "r".

What I don't understand is this.



That's 100% correct! That is the so called "Starvation Mode" right there. I even think Weight Watchers USA proved starvation mode a myth, google it and find out.
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Like you say you know that works for you from personal experiance. 51/2 stone is fantastic if that is all you have to loose. But like lots of us on this surgical weight loss section we have been on the low cal, low carb, increased exercise programms without sucess.
POW although in appauling conditions their bodies wernt recovering from major surgery.
And to even surgest jogging to someone as a form of exercise let alone someone who is 2 weeks post op. Sure am glad yr not doing a fitness programm for me.
 
To compare the starvation mode we go through with the one that POW's went through is ridiculous. They had sustained food starvation and were too weak to overcome the slightest illness and were kept in appauling conditions. They were captured for years so to say none came out fat is extremely stupid. Stick to what you THINK you know best and leave the rest of us alone. It is well documentated that the body stops loosing weight and adjusts.
 
Hiya

ive not read through all that peole have said as im on my way out but...

When you lower you intake alot your bosy shuts down to keep you alive and doesnt eat the fat as much as it thinks your not going to eat for a while.

but after about a week it will start to use the fat as reserves again and you will start losing again

the body is a remerkable thing how it tried to keep you alive , but in the end it has to get energy from somewhere and it will use fat reserves.


The odd thing is i saw a tv program the other day and it said we were in for a ice age again and only the fatter people will survive well.

Sods law how we are just born in the wrong age :p
 
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