Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again - I could try to see if I can add more cardio too and go for a short run on days I don't do strength/HIIT. I work a desk job and worry about not being active enough. However, it's also hard to eek out the time to work out (take turns with my DH who likes to go for a bike ride). Just gotta push myself and mornings would be easiest before the kids are up, but have been exhausted (baby sleeps well, but seasonal allergies have been kicking my butt lately)
Being in the habit of working out gives you more energy to work out. Weird but true.
But even if you gave up workouts entirely, you could still lose just by tightening your calories.
I would not add in more exercise or cardio. Accurately track calories and you will lose.
But OP should still get an HR monitor and see how “H” that supposedly HIIT really is. My mom got one and found out she was never even hitting cardio zone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again - I could try to see if I can add more cardio too and go for a short run on days I don't do strength/HIIT. I work a desk job and worry about not being active enough. However, it's also hard to eek out the time to work out (take turns with my DH who likes to go for a bike ride). Just gotta push myself and mornings would be easiest before the kids are up, but have been exhausted (baby sleeps well, but seasonal allergies have been kicking my butt lately)
Being in the habit of working out gives you more energy to work out. Weird but true.
But even if you gave up workouts entirely, you could still lose just by tightening your calories.
I would not add in more exercise or cardio. Accurately track calories and you will lose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again - I could try to see if I can add more cardio too and go for a short run on days I don't do strength/HIIT. I work a desk job and worry about not being active enough. However, it's also hard to eek out the time to work out (take turns with my DH who likes to go for a bike ride). Just gotta push myself and mornings would be easiest before the kids are up, but have been exhausted (baby sleeps well, but seasonal allergies have been kicking my butt lately)
Being in the habit of working out gives you more energy to work out. Weird but true.
But even if you gave up workouts entirely, you could still lose just by tightening your calories.
I would not add in more exercise or cardio. Accurately track calories and you will lose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again - I could try to see if I can add more cardio too and go for a short run on days I don't do strength/HIIT. I work a desk job and worry about not being active enough. However, it's also hard to eek out the time to work out (take turns with my DH who likes to go for a bike ride). Just gotta push myself and mornings would be easiest before the kids are up, but have been exhausted (baby sleeps well, but seasonal allergies have been kicking my butt lately)
Being in the habit of working out gives you more energy to work out. Weird but true.
But even if you gave up workouts entirely, you could still lose just by tightening your calories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at your food and assuming you’re undercounting by about 20% (which is typically the case for people not using a food scale) you’re not eating weight loss calories.
Do you use an HR monitor to confirm your workouts are getting up to the cardio zone?
I'm not, I don't have one...
Buy a food scale, an accurate HR monitor (I use Apple Watch with Zones app) and find a good calorie counting app like MyFitnessPal. Maybe your metabolism really has changed but first get yourself more accurate information about what you’re eating and doing.
Anonymous wrote:OP again - I could try to see if I can add more cardio too and go for a short run on days I don't do strength/HIIT. I work a desk job and worry about not being active enough. However, it's also hard to eek out the time to work out (take turns with my DH who likes to go for a bike ride). Just gotta push myself and mornings would be easiest before the kids are up, but have been exhausted (baby sleeps well, but seasonal allergies have been kicking my butt lately)
Anonymous wrote:Looking at your food and assuming you’re undercounting by about 20% (which is typically the case for people not using a food scale) you’re not eating weight loss calories.
Do you use an HR monitor to confirm your workouts are getting up to the cardio zone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at your food and assuming you’re undercounting by about 20% (which is typically the case for people not using a food scale) you’re not eating weight loss calories.
Do you use an HR monitor to confirm your workouts are getting up to the cardio zone?
I'm not, I don't have one...
Anonymous wrote:Looking at your food and assuming you’re undercounting by about 20% (which is typically the case for people not using a food scale) you’re not eating weight loss calories.
Do you use an HR monitor to confirm your workouts are getting up to the cardio zone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone? Tell me your stories.
I'm over five months postpartum and know I need to give it more time, but since getting the 6 week ok to start exercising, my weight has. not. budged. I thought when I stopped nursing it would help (I dry up quickly with return to work as pumping just doesn't work for me), but still the same weight as I was a few months ago. With my first, I lost easily after I stopped nursing. I have Hashimoto's thyroiditis, but my thyroid levels have been fine postpartum.
I know my size/shape may have changed again (hips were wider after first baby), but wish I at least could lost the weight, then deal with what I am - I've also been delaying purchasing larger clothes in the hope that I would finally kick some of the weight. I'm exercising, eat three meals a day with a healthy snack, cut out sweets, and rarely have a drink (too tired anyways).
How many calories are you eating? It all comes down to calories. If you are in a calorie deficit you will lose weight. Track what you are eating for a month and see where those number lie.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone? Tell me your stories.
I'm over five months postpartum and know I need to give it more time, but since getting the 6 week ok to start exercising, my weight has. not. budged. I thought when I stopped nursing it would help (I dry up quickly with return to work as pumping just doesn't work for me), but still the same weight as I was a few months ago. With my first, I lost easily after I stopped nursing. I have Hashimoto's thyroiditis, but my thyroid levels have been fine postpartum.
I know my size/shape may have changed again (hips were wider after first baby), but wish I at least could lost the weight, then deal with what I am - I've also been delaying purchasing larger clothes in the hope that I would finally kick some of the weight. I'm exercising, eat three meals a day with a healthy snack, cut out sweets, and rarely have a drink (too tired anyways).