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mommaoffour
02-28-2005, 08:06 PM
Ok, I just don't understand!! I walk/jog/run on my treadmill at least an hour a day. I just got weighed in today and I gained 8ozs!! I just can't seem to lose any weight. What is going on? Can I really be gaining that much muscle just from the treadmill? I have been doing this for about 1 month now. PLEASE someone explain this to me because I am getting so discouraged here!!!! :confused:

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NPC
02-28-2005, 10:45 PM
How intense is your running/jogging? If your casually walking for the entire 1 hr, then you wont see much results if your not watching what your eating.
You need to maintain 5.5mph for 25-30min to burn a decent amount of calories an then also watch your calorie intake. If you arent getting your heart rate up enough when your running/jogging then your body wont hit optimal fat burning rate. Exercising without sweating/straining your muscles isnt exercising, because you wont see a lot of results like that an I usually see a lot of it when Im at the gym. A lot of people go thru the motions without understanding that.
Diet can account for almost 70% of your results. :nono:

phillydude
02-28-2005, 10:52 PM
It's not the exercise, it's the diet. You say you walk / jog / run on the treadmill for an hour a day. Let's break that into three 20 minute segments to give an example of how much that really means.

Walking (3mph) burns around 6 calories per minute.
120 calories burned in that 20 minute segment.
You would be covering about 1 mile in that time.

Jogging (4mph) burns around 8 calories per minute.
160 calories burned in that 20 minute segment.
You would be covering about 1.33 miles in that time.

Running (5mph) burns around 10 calories per minute.
200 calories burned in that 20 minute segment.
You would be covering about 1.66 miles in that time.

All told, given this example, you would be burning 480 calories per hour.
And you would be covering a distance of about 4 miles in that time.

I'm not sure what kind of readouts your treadmill has, but you can probably check these figures to see how close my guesstimates actually are.

If you did that seven days a week, you would have a deficit of 3360 calories per week, which would equal a little less than one pound of weight loss IF your nutritional intake met your body's needs EXACTLY.

That's assuming you do it SEVEN days a week (which most people don't) and that you have your diet tuned very carefully (which most people don't).

Let's say you take two days a week off from exercising. After all, working out five days a week is reasonable, isn't it? That removes 960 calories a week from your deficit, leaving you with total weight loss of only three-quarters of a pound per week. Or in other words, you've cancelled out the effects of the jogging portion of your workouts.

Now let's say you allow yourself to have two cookies per day as a "treat" for sticking with your "diet." I'm just estimating again, but according to the box of cookies on top of my fridge, one cookie is about 60 calories. Basically, by eating those two cookies, you've also cancelled out the 20 minutes of walking. And of course, you are going to have those two cookies even on the days you don't work out. So now you are at a total weekly deficit of 1700 calories, which is less than half a pound of weight loss per week.

And finally, let's say that twice per week, you allow yourself to have a typical fast food meal. Let's make it a "healthy" one... say a grilled chicken combo from Wendy's. That combo is 860 calories (based on a sandwich, fries, and iced tea). So forget about all the running you did this week too, and then some. And now you are looking at a net weight GAIN, not loss, for the week. See how quickly that turned from a good thing to a bad one?

Remember, this is assuming that the rest of your nutritional intake is "spot on" for the rest of the week. This means you are eating the right number of calories to equal your BMR (basal metabolic rate), or the amount of food energy your body needs to function without exercise or additional efforts. And that doesn't even begin to consider what happens to your body when you dip BELOW your BMR by restricting your food intake (or "dieting").

I'm not trying to come down on you, and I certainly don't know what you are eating, or how intensely you are exercising, or even what your current height, weight, age, or activity level might be. I'm just trying to show you that exercise is only a small part of the overall plan. And that even little things can add up over the course of a week to negate all the hard work you put in on the treadmill.

mommaoffour
02-28-2005, 11:18 PM
Thank you for replying, your info was very helpful. I have been going to "LA Weightloss" since the middle of December, so they are helping me with my food diary. I do believe that I am eating correctly or at least according to them. I started working out so much on the treadmill because I was not seeing the results from just the "diet" they put me on. Yes, I do break a sweat when I am on there about 15 min. into my workout. By the time I am done the sweat is dripping off me. I do take Sundays off. I also nurse my baby which should be burning calories also. The only thing that I can think of that I have not mentioned is my thyroid. I do have a problem with it. I understand that it can affect weight loss but as much as I am putting into my workouts and eating changes, somethings gotta give here. Maybe I am wrong, I don't know.

Naxis
02-28-2005, 11:31 PM
Mind if I ask what kind of diet they have you on? Do they have a strict plan or just basic guidelines? Do they have you check calories, protein, fat, carbs?

mommaoffour
03-01-2005, 09:21 AM
I don't mind at all. Here is what they have me doing. This is what my guidlines are for the day.

Proteins (2 1/2)
Fruit (4)
Veggies (4)
Carbs (4)
Dairy (2)
Fat (1)

I am suppose to have 8 glasses of water but I drink at least 12 to 14 because of my exercising and nursing my baby.

 
 
 




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