healthy

StS Challenge – Day 25 – Weekly Report

Progress!
June 23 - June 29

WI – 161.0 lbs, Down a pound!  Yeah!  Finally.  As you can see, I made a very concerted effort to eat my daily points and then some.  I also didn’t exercise as much this week, only 46 AP’s earned, and I swapped 24 of those for food points!  It’s so nice to see that number shrink, despite all my going on about how “the number isn’t as important as the person” to several folks in Blog Land.  Does that make me a hypocrite?

I’ve published the followup PSA – Plateaus and How to Break Them. You can read it here.  You’re welcome.

Recap of the weekly goals:

  • Tracking food and exercise consistently and honestly – Done!
  • Stay within my daily point allowance – Done  – actually ate them over the whole week!  I’m keeping up with this; apparently my body needs more fuel that I was feeding it.
  • Earn a minimum of 50 activity points a week – 46 APs is pretty darned close, especially considering that every day last week was over 100 degrees.  Ugh.  Welcome to summer in Texas.
  • Blogging – Running late this week, and post dating, but I did get it done!
  • No quitting?  Nope.  Still moving forward.
  • Supporting fellow challengers – I continue to pray daily for our entire group. You are being lifted up by a total stranger in Texas!  I didn’t do a lot of blog hopping this week – loads of extra stuff going on at work that required my attention.  It comes first because I’m getting paid for that!

EMail Anglea Pea

healthy

PSA #3 – Plateaus and What Causes Them

image courtesy cnn-health-parenting

I loathe the frustration of being stuck on a plateau.  I dislike frustration in general, but when it involves my weight loss journey, it escalates to the point that I want to throw myself on the floor and scream like an irate toddler.

How do I handle it?  Research to educate myself and to figure out how to fix it. Because I’m a natural born fixer of all things broken.

When I first started losing weight, it came off fast.  Lightning fast, as in 4-6 pounds a week.  I lost the first thirty pounds in about three months.  Then the weight loss slowed down. I was still losing, but at a slower pace.  Then next twenty pounds came off over the next year or so. Then…it stopped.  Some of the stalling is due to injury (broken ankle!)  and bad luck (stroke!).  I gained some weight back, lost it again and hit a brick wall.  I was keeping to my points, exercising like a demon and not losing a single ounce, week after week.  The weeks have stretched into months and I’m getting pretty desperate.  Those brick walls in weight loss? Experts call them ”plateaus”.

When you first start losing weight, rapid loss is normal.  When you reduce your calorie intake, the body gets the energy it needs by releasing its stores of glycogen, a type of carbohydrate found in the muscles and liver. Glycogen is bonded to water, so when glycogen is burned for energy, it releases that water—about 4 grams of water for every gram of glycogen—resulting in substantial weight loss that’s, well, mostly water.

Once your body uses up its glycogen stores, it starts to burn fat for energy.  Fat isn’t bonded to water the way glycogen is, and it gives off twice as much energy as glycogen when it’s burned by your body.  The result is that weight loss slows down a lot when you start to burn fat.

After the slowdown comes a complete stop in weight loss – you’re on a plateau.  A plateau is inevitable, and they last several weeks for some, several months for others.  So what happens when you get to a plateau?  Experts aren’t completely sure why they happen, but they have a few working theories.

One area of current research involves a possible link to reduced levels of leptin, a hormone produced by fat cells that is involved in the regulation of appetite. Research has shown that weight loss causes a marked decrease in serum leptin levels, which may, in turn, increase appetite.  Yes!!  This is exactly what happened to me. When I was on a plateau, I felt like I was starving all the time, no matter how much I ate.  As I said, those experts aren’t completely sure about this leptin theory, and they need to do some more research on leptin’s role in human weight regulation.

Another thought on the how and why of plateaus happen concerns metabolism.  Losing weight can lower metabolism since a smaller body carries less lean muscle mass and burns fewer calories to move it around. Additionally, lower calorie consumption means it takes fewer calories to digest and absorb food. Taken together, a state of energy equilibrium could result, with weight remaining steady for a period of time

Then there’s what I.T. folks like to call the ‘User Error’ theory to explain plateaus.   We get familiar with a weight-loss plan, we get relaxed in sticking to the plan, not paying attention to what – or how much – is going into our mouths.  We also get a little bit lazy with our exercise regimens. Of course a plateau is going to happen!

There you have it…leptin, metabolism and good old user error…three contributors to a weight loss plateau.  It’s hard to say exactly which one makes a plateau happen in any given body.

I’m betting it’s a combination of all three.

I have a little more reading to do and ‘professionals’ to talk to.  Stay tuned for PSA#4 – Plateaus and How to Beat Them

EMail Anglea Pea

healthy

StS Challenge – Day 19 – Weekly Report

June 16 - June 22

Here are the stats.

WI – 162.2 lbs, up another pound. I splurged on one day eating over my points, exercised every day (see those smiley faces?), didn’t consume a single activity point and I still gained weight!  May I throw something now?  Yes?

Okay.  [shoes fly across room]  I feel better now.

I think it may be time to publish a Public Service Announcement about Plateaus and Why they Happen.  You can read it here.

Recap of the weekly goals:

  • Tracking food and exercise consistently and honestly – Done!
  • Stay within my daily point allowance – Over Done, still.  Last week I pledged to make more of an effort to eat my full allotment of points every day.  I missed again on this, so will refocus on this for the coming week.
  • Earn a minimum of 50 activity points a week – Done; I earned 57 APs this week, logged about 100 miles on Lady Penelope and WorkBike, went kayaking with the kids, P90X TWICE (oh lordy!) plus a few rounds on the weight machines.
  • Blogging – done!  I’m checking in right now even though I want to crawl under a rock and hide my frustration.
  • No quitting?  No brainer.  I haven’t quit yet!  She says through gritted teeth. If Sister Madonna can do it, I can, too.
  • Supporting fellow challengers – I continue to pray daily for our entire group. You are being lifted up by a total stranger in Texas! I helped out a fellow weight loss Diva, Charlie Hester from Operation Shrink Charlie’s Big Butt this week.  She’s not signed into this challenge, but many of you know her from FitBloggin and from her long time blog. I did something for her this week just because I can. Charlie wants to be a published author.  She’s very, very funny, and has an amazing story to tell. I took her first manuscript, My Thinking Cap Has Run Out of Batteries, edited it (call me the Grammar Queen) and then converted it to a secure pdf document and into an epub book that can be read on nooks and Kindles and sent it on its way.  Just because I can.

EMail Anglea Pea