Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dietary changes to fight inflammation:
https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/foods-that-fight-inflammation
Also, drink water, drink water, drink more water.
And also, some inflammation is normal, especially if you are doing things like strength training. Eat protein and drink water and and water weight you gain after a workout will be gone in a day or two. You certainly don’t stop moving because ou might temporarily put on a few ounces of water weight.
OP here. I drink lots of water though, over 100 oz a day and don’t do strength training but walking…even then I am getting “inflamed”. I also eat 1g of protein per lb so that’s not the issue here
How on earth are you eating 1g protein per pound on 800 calories a day? I call BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dietary changes to fight inflammation:
https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/foods-that-fight-inflammation
Also, drink water, drink water, drink more water.
And also, some inflammation is normal, especially if you are doing things like strength training. Eat protein and drink water and and water weight you gain after a workout will be gone in a day or two. You certainly don’t stop moving because ou might temporarily put on a few ounces of water weight.
OP here. I drink lots of water though, over 100 oz a day and don’t do strength training but walking…even then I am getting “inflamed”. I also eat 1g of protein per lb so that’s not the issue here
Anonymous wrote:Dietary changes to fight inflammation:
https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/foods-that-fight-inflammation
Also, drink water, drink water, drink more water.
And also, some inflammation is normal, especially if you are doing things like strength training. Eat protein and drink water and and water weight you gain after a workout will be gone in a day or two. You certainly don’t stop moving because ou might temporarily put on a few ounces of water weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP— first, move! More than 200 steps a day. Second, Eat! Below 1200 calories and don’t move, there is almost no way you are maintaining muscle mass. That might be fine now. But, you’ll regret it at 40-50 as a woman. Plus, muscle burns fat. You should have some weight training/strength training in your routine. And some basic yoga or maintain flexibility and balance never hurts.
See a registered dietitian and get a healthy, realistic, science based eating plan based on your specific caloric needs.
I’ve lost 95 pounds on Wegovy then Zepbound in 14 months. I use a reputable, hospital based diet center. If I went below 1200 calories consistently and wasn’t eating the protein and drinking the water and doing the strength training to maintain muscle mass, they would pull me off the meds. Because the damage caused by muscle loss would outweigh the benefits— I’d just go from being fat to skinny fat. Even with more than 1/3 of my body weight to lose (since I am not a healthy weight like you), below 1200 calories is a hard no go from every reputable dietician I know.
And weight fluctuates. I weigh in my underwear after I pee every morning for a consistent result. And it is a jagged line, up and down. Lost 4 pounds this week. Then up two pounds over two days, then lose three. You have to look at trends. My apple health does just that. It shows me my average weight over the last 30 days vs my average weight the 30 Days before that. And makes it easy to see that I’m losing desipite some ups and downs. That’s what you need to be looking at— trends over weeks or a month, not a single day and a few ounces. Now, if your average 30 day weight goes up by more than a pound or two, it’s time to reconsider your diet and exercise— with a registered dietician. Until then, stop making yourself crazy.
And start moving. 200 steps to 10000 steps is a lot harder on your body and is likely to cause a lot or inflammation that hitting 10000 steps each day.
How can you beat inflammation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP— first, move! More than 200 steps a day. Second, Eat! Below 1200 calories and don’t move, there is almost no way you are maintaining muscle mass. That might be fine now. But, you’ll regret it at 40-50 as a woman. Plus, muscle burns fat. You should have some weight training/strength training in your routine. And some basic yoga or maintain flexibility and balance never hurts.
See a registered dietitian and get a healthy, realistic, science based eating plan based on your specific caloric needs.
I’ve lost 95 pounds on Wegovy then Zepbound in 14 months. I use a reputable, hospital based diet center. If I went below 1200 calories consistently and wasn’t eating the protein and drinking the water and doing the strength training to maintain muscle mass, they would pull me off the meds. Because the damage caused by muscle loss would outweigh the benefits— I’d just go from being fat to skinny fat. Even with more than 1/3 of my body weight to lose (since I am not a healthy weight like you), below 1200 calories is a hard no go from every reputable dietician I know.
And weight fluctuates. I weigh in my underwear after I pee every morning for a consistent result. And it is a jagged line, up and down. Lost 4 pounds this week. Then up two pounds over two days, then lose three. You have to look at trends. My apple health does just that. It shows me my average weight over the last 30 days vs my average weight the 30 Days before that. And makes it easy to see that I’m losing desipite some ups and downs. That’s what you need to be looking at— trends over weeks or a month, not a single day and a few ounces. Now, if your average 30 day weight goes up by more than a pound or two, it’s time to reconsider your diet and exercise— with a registered dietician. Until then, stop making yourself crazy.
And start moving. 200 steps to 10000 steps is a lot harder on your body and is likely to cause a lot or inflammation that hitting 10000 steps each day.
How can you beat inflammation [/quote
Also how should I balance my remote days with in person days in terms of inflammation and “water weight”
Anonymous wrote:OP— first, move! More than 200 steps a day. Second, Eat! Below 1200 calories and don’t move, there is almost no way you are maintaining muscle mass. That might be fine now. But, you’ll regret it at 40-50 as a woman. Plus, muscle burns fat. You should have some weight training/strength training in your routine. And some basic yoga or maintain flexibility and balance never hurts.
See a registered dietitian and get a healthy, realistic, science based eating plan based on your specific caloric needs.
I’ve lost 95 pounds on Wegovy then Zepbound in 14 months. I use a reputable, hospital based diet center. If I went below 1200 calories consistently and wasn’t eating the protein and drinking the water and doing the strength training to maintain muscle mass, they would pull me off the meds. Because the damage caused by muscle loss would outweigh the benefits— I’d just go from being fat to skinny fat. Even with more than 1/3 of my body weight to lose (since I am not a healthy weight like you), below 1200 calories is a hard no go from every reputable dietician I know.
And weight fluctuates. I weigh in my underwear after I pee every morning for a consistent result. And it is a jagged line, up and down. Lost 4 pounds this week. Then up two pounds over two days, then lose three. You have to look at trends. My apple health does just that. It shows me my average weight over the last 30 days vs my average weight the 30 Days before that. And makes it easy to see that I’m losing desipite some ups and downs. That’s what you need to be looking at— trends over weeks or a month, not a single day and a few ounces. Now, if your average 30 day weight goes up by more than a pound or two, it’s time to reconsider your diet and exercise— with a registered dietician. Until then, stop making yourself crazy.
And start moving. 200 steps to 10000 steps is a lot harder on your body and is likely to cause a lot or inflammation that hitting 10000 steps each day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone notice a change on the scale on days when you are sedentary or do more walking than usual
Yes. It can go either way. It is unrelented, on a day to day basis. Some days I can walk 10K and still be "up" a pound in the morning. Other times, I'll be down half a pound. I'm not obsessive about tracking/recording every bite of food I take; but unless I had a particularly larger or "bad" meal, my eating is generally consistent each day.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone notice a change on the scale on days when you are sedentary or do more walking than usual
Anonymous wrote:[twitter]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.
Imagine the inflammation running rampant in our recently qualified Olympic marathon team. It’s a wonder those athletes are huge with all that inflammation.