Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone notice a change on the scale on days when you are sedentary or do more walking than usual
No, but eating sodium and/or not drinking enough water is a great way for me to gain a pound. And lose it over the next few days. Also at point in my cycle. OP isn’t talking about fat and muscle gained or lost. It’s water weight. But, she’s going from super sedentary (200 steps!) to moving a lot, so my vote is water weight due to inflammation. Anyway, it doesn’t matter, because if OP’s average weight is holding steady, it’s just normal fluctuations.
Agree that what’s not normal is to on 800 to 1000 calories a day and so obsessed about a few ounces of water weight (that you will lose over the next day or two) that you refuse to move. Not normal. Not healthy. OP— eating disorder clinic, stat.
Why would someone get inflammation from just simple walking? I thought inflammation is caused by intense exercise like long distance running and heavy weights
A gazillion things can cause inflammation -- every body is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone notice a change on the scale on days when you are sedentary or do more walking than usual
No, but eating sodium and/or not drinking enough water is a great way for me to gain a pound. And lose it over the next few days. Also at point in my cycle. OP isn’t talking about fat and muscle gained or lost. It’s water weight. But, she’s going from super sedentary (200 steps!) to moving a lot, so my vote is water weight due to inflammation. Anyway, it doesn’t matter, because if OP’s average weight is holding steady, it’s just normal fluctuations.
Agree that what’s not normal is to on 800 to 1000 calories a day and so obsessed about a few ounces of water weight (that you will lose over the next day or two) that you refuse to move. Not normal. Not healthy. OP— eating disorder clinic, stat.
Why would someone get inflammation from just simple walking? I thought inflammation is caused by intense exercise like long distance running and heavy weights
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No the obvious conclusion is that the op has some serious issues she needs to work through. And education about body weight fluctuations to gain.
I agree she does need help. However, the bigger question she is asking is why does she gain more weight on scale on days she is active and is eating less. For the majority of us, we lose weight on days we are active and eat less
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone notice a change on the scale on days when you are sedentary or do more walking than usual
No, but eating sodium and/or not drinking enough water is a great way for me to gain a pound. And lose it over the next few days. Also at point in my cycle. OP isn’t talking about fat and muscle gained or lost. It’s water weight. But, she’s going from super sedentary (200 steps!) to moving a lot, so my vote is water weight due to inflammation. Anyway, it doesn’t matter, because if OP’s average weight is holding steady, it’s just normal fluctuations.
Agree that what’s not normal is to on 800 to 1000 calories a day and so obsessed about a few ounces of water weight (that you will lose over the next day or two) that you refuse to move. Not normal. Not healthy. OP— eating disorder clinic, stat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what do you weigh on days when you have not moved and days when. you have moved? How tall are you?
OP here. I am about 5’4, girl in her 20s. When I don’t move around getting about 200 steps working remote and eat my maintenance I end up weighing around 124.5-125 the next morning on scale. But for example, when I went into the office this week and was walking 10ksteps a day and ate about 850 cals,I weighed 125.5 on the scale the next morning.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone notice a change on the scale on days when you are sedentary or do more walking than usual
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what do you weigh on days when you have not moved and days when. you have moved? How tall are you?
OP here. I am about 5’4, girl in her 20s. When I don’t move around getting about 200 steps working remote and eat my maintenance I end up weighing around 124.5-125 the next morning on scale. But for example, when I went into the office this week and was walking 10ksteps a day and ate about 850 cals,I weighed 125.5 on the scale the next morning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No the obvious conclusion is that the op has some serious issues she needs to work through. And education about body weight fluctuations to gain.
I agree she does need help. However, the bigger question she is asking is why does she gain more weight on scale on days she is active and is eating less. For the majority of us, we lose weight on days we are active and eat less
Anonymous wrote:No the obvious conclusion is that the op has some serious issues she needs to work through. And education about body weight fluctuations to gain.