@Scandichic - not sure you're going to like this, but here goes...........
In your shoes, I'd be doing one of a couple of things. I think I know which I would choose. So, I would either:
- Option one: Put the scales away for a month. Not weigh for a month. Not measure for a month. Reading here, you appear to be becoming almost tortured and fixated by your weight, and that's not healthy. If, and I have no reason to challenge your integrity, you are sticking to your eating plan, with no sneaky carb or calorie-feasts, the weight will shift. In "healthy", "normal" people, weight varies on a day to day basis, and that's often slightly accentuated in women because of the impact of cyclical hormonal activity. Ignore it for a while. It will even out.
- Option two: invest some time in updating a food diary with your current activity and review your calorie intake. I really don't care what anybody says, if someone is eating 5000 carb-free calories, and sitting around all day, they will gain weight. I'm absolutely not suggesting this is you, but it am sometimes astonished how many calories I have troughs my way through in an busy, active, hungry day. Yesterday being a case in point. Ahem. Something like myfitnesspal on the iPhone or better still ipad only takes moments to update, once your foods are in there and I find it a great tool, if I find myself with an unexpected reading, or a weight anomaly. But, back to the point. Maybe you have reached a point where your consumption is about right for the weight you have achieved? I seem to recall @Andy12345 talking about this at some stage. Sorry if I mis-remembered Andy.
- Option three: Adopt a short period of dietary change; either increase or decrease your consumption. In your shoes, I might go really hard core for a couple of weeks - especially as you are now on holiday, so are not having to rush meals in school breaks, and so on. Maybe the Atkins Induction (I think @Debmcgee did something like this recently?) could give some useful pointers? I'm not suggesting a long term change in eating pattern, just something to nudge your body out of it's apparently comfortable state.
It's a mixed blessing this is happening at school holidays, but at least you probably have a bit more thinking time to plan your next assault.
I don't want to seem preachy Scandi; especially as for me the weight loss just happened. One thing I will mention in my own journey was that I didn't weight myself at all for the first 4 months after diagnosis. This wasn't really a deliberate decision. I just didn't have scales here, and I never encountered any pay scales when out and about. When people commented I'd lost weight and enquired how much, I could only confirm my clothes were looser, but I had no idea what the scores on the doors were. I look back now and think that was a bit of a lucky break, as it allowed me to fully focus on my blood scores, and I find one fixation at a time works best for me.
Good luck with it all Scandi, but maybe it's time to think through that old adage that goes something like, "if you always do the same thing, your always see the same results".