Anonymous wrote:OP back again. I’ve been tracking macros and calories for about 2.5 weeks - eating more to satisfy the app and changing up what I eat to be even cleaner and to add more protein. I AM LOSING WEIGHT, but more importantly, my body feels tight and healthy in a way it didn’t before.
Anonymous wrote:Undereating does NOT lead to weight gain. I would suspect that either what you posted as your general menu is offset by occasional 5000 calorie binges or you are not accounting for some higher calorie snacks. If you were eating as you describe 100% of the time you would be underweight. And yes, your metabolism adjusts on low calories to try to live of the little you eat, but not to the point that you start gaining. If that was true famines would be a non-issue.
Anonymous wrote:I recently started tracking macros (and nutrients). I’m not necessarily trying to lose weight, just generally tracking to make sure my diet is balanced and nutritious. I love the app I’m using, and find it very helpful… I realized pretty quickly that my diet was kind of out of whack, so the tracking is helping me to achieve better balance.
But the app is looking for substantially more caloric intake than I am currently getting. I work out every day, so that adds leeway, but even with my settings set for a weight loss calorie deficit, I’m still not really hungry enough to achieve the minimum calories the app wants.
Has anyone else experienced this? Any tips?
Anonymous wrote:Are you weighing your food? I don't bother closely tracking, say, lettuce, but it is so easy to eat 4 TB of almond butter and assume it is 2 TB.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been in this boat, OP. When I under eat relative to my needs, my metabolism slows way, way down. I may still be exercising the same amount of time, but the same level of effort isn’t there and I move less throughout the day. I feel like my body is under stress and exhausted - it’s like even my brain is cutting back. I hold onto water because I crave carbs.
It can become a viscous cycle if you cut calories further to try to stop gaining.
Try eating what the tracker advises for a few weeks and see how you feel and how it impacts your workouts and weight gain. I’d recommend some nuts and avocado or full fat dairy.