Thread: Turtle?
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Old Sat, Nov-16-02, 08:06
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tofi tofi is offline
Posts: 6,204
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 244/220/170 Female 65.4inches
BF:
Progress: 32%
Location: Ontario
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I wanted to post an answer because this message looked as though it had been ignored.

Check out lindagayle's current stats. As of Nov., she is down about 20 pounds with about that left to go to get to her goal. At 5'3", 120 is a reasonable target weight, although she may find that she looks great and is smaller at a higher weight than that. See #4 below.

1. The closer you get to your goal, the slower the loss will be. And that is good, because it gives you time to really learn and get used to the LC way of eating. The more that you realize LC is a way of eating for the rest of your life, the LESS likely you are to ever allow yourself to regain.

2. The less you have to lose in the beginning, the less you are likely to lose on Induction. A reasonable expectation is 10% of the excess pounds to target. (Start at 225, target is 150 - expect to lose 10% or the 75 pounds = 7.5 pounds. More than that and you are certainly not a turtle.)

3. You are likely to sit still after Induction, ESPECIALLY if you have lost the 10% or more. The body has changed its chemistry from "carb burning & fat storage" to "burning stored fat" for fuel. It has lost water from cells and intestines and needs time to adjust its electrolyte balance and literally 'catch its breath.' Your fat cells may be grabbing and holding onto water because they don't like to lose bulk. Be patient, go on to the next level and just wait.

4. Be prepared to adjust your goal weight. Write down your measurements as you begin (or as soon as you read this). Keep a tight piece of clothing so you can feel the change in size. These are MUCH better ideas than just weighing. You may find that you are smaller (but weigh more) on the way down, because of losing fluffy fat and gaining sleek muscle which is heavier for its size. And muscle looks GREAT! Muscle gained takes up less room than the fat did. (I know I am 2 sizes smaller at my Nov. weight than I was on the way up - gaining 'fluffy' fat).

5. A stall or plateau is not "a week when you don't lose a pound". That is a period of adjustment. It is 4 -6 weeks when you lose neither pounds NOR inches. That's why the measurements are so important. Believe the clothes that are getting looser, not the scale that isn't all that accurate.

If you KNOW about the "laws" above, you will have more patience with your body. And be willing to wait until it is ready to let go of more weight.

Hope this helps anyone who fears they are a turtle.
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