Have you worked with a dietician to address your metabolism? Your exercise program is the same as mine. I’m also 5’8” and 55. But I’m 125-130 pounds and eat 1700-1800 calories to maintain. My BMR is 1400 calories, and if I eat less than that, I burn muscle, which decreases BMR. Have you had a body composition scan? You may be wasting your muscle by eating so little, which messes with your metabolism. At our age, we can’t afford to waste muscle. |
I’m on 1200 and100+ is doable Low fat skyr for breakfast Protein shake mid morning Salad with grilled fish or chicken and veggies for lunch Fruit and low-fat cheese snack Something like kale, bean and ground turkey soup for dinner or a veggie egg scramble Now, it’s not exciting and I eat the same things over and over. But, Zepbound helps. It makes me want the protein and not the sugar. I’m fine eating boring, bland and repetitive. And I needed to (and have) dropped 95 pounds, but not a lot of muscle, since menopausal woman. So, it’s been worth it. That said, about 20 pounds until maintenance, and adding some rice sounds pretty good. |
Let’s face it, the typically American doesn’t need large amounts of protein because we aren’t doing heavy physical Labor all day everyday. Even lifting weights 2-3 days per week for a hour does not mean you need to eat 120+ grams of protein. Unless you are trying to gain some serious muscle mass, 0.7-1mg/kg body weight (ideal body weight for your height, gender, and frame) is enough to prevent muscle loss and promote health.
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Agree. Processed foods are the #1 problem. |
1.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight to maintain/keep bone density |
I agree about processed foods. Sugar also is poison. |
On my training days I need that 100g, just to recover and not fall asleep at work. |
Lol. Highly unlikely. https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/how-much-protein-does-your-body-need-its-a-bit-complicated-our-guide-can-help-235954440.html |