Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone used the body composition scales? My gym has one but I’m not sure how reliable it is. Maybe it’s okay for monitoring relative progress.
OP here and I just had a 4-week scan. I’ve lost a total of 2.5 pounds, including 1 pound of water (meh), 1 pound of fat (yay), and .5 pounds of muscle (boo). Apparently I’m not getting enough calories or protein so I’ve upped those, decreased weekly cardio from 60 to 40 minutes (mostly as a warm up for weight lifting), and increased lifting days from 3 to 4. We’ll see what happens this month.
I’m digging this data driven approach, but of course it’s only as reliable as the composition scale. I’m still hoping to see and feel a difference in how my clothes fit, but that hasn’t happened yet.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone used the body composition scales? My gym has one but I’m not sure how reliable it is. Maybe it’s okay for monitoring relative progress.
Anonymous wrote:My doc said the scale is just one measurement and instead you should have a pair of pants/skirt/shirt that you try on every few weeks. I do and take pics and put them in my "hidden" folder so no one sees them and thinks I'm a weirdo. It's been nice to see how some pants have gotten looser. I'm sure it will happen for you--just give it time. More muscle-building can't NOT have an effect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - this happened to me. I gained 5 lbs when I started doing heavy lifting over a period of six months. I could maybe assume that is muscle but it was definitely not because as you said I could feel my clothes tighter and knew I was getting fluffier. Nothing changed about my diet. I quit and took back up yoga and walking and am already down the weight I gained lifting.
I’m disappointed to hear this. I’m really enjoying lifting, and I know I need weights for my bone health, but I’m bummed about feeling puffy. I’m still holding out hope I’ll get ripped and svelte eventually. I’ll reevaluate in three months and then try to refine my program.
Anonymous wrote:Your muscles are storing glycogen and are inflamed.
Anonymous wrote:OP - this happened to me. I gained 5 lbs when I started doing heavy lifting over a period of six months. I could maybe assume that is muscle but it was definitely not because as you said I could feel my clothes tighter and knew I was getting fluffier. Nothing changed about my diet. I quit and took back up yoga and walking and am already down the weight I gained lifting.
Anonymous wrote:My doc said the scale is just one measurement and instead you should have a pair of pants/skirt/shirt that you try on every few weeks. I do and take pics and put them in my "hidden" folder so no one sees them and thinks I'm a weirdo. It's been nice to see how some pants have gotten looser. I'm sure it will happen for you--just give it time. More muscle-building can't NOT have an effect.
Anonymous wrote:Retaining water.