Only if you are the right weight and that weight is stable. If you want it to remain under control and not go up, or if you need to lose a substantial amount of weight, then you need to watch closely what is happening. Believe me the 'weigh yourself just once in a while and you will find your weight has gone quietly down' approach just doesn't work for some of us. I'm definitely one of those.Surely a daily weigh is pointless.......
In my mind this is key.. without information about ourselves we are in the dark.I would say information helps me make informed choices.
Those examples are misleading. Weight increases in my experience are not of the order you suggest but then as you say for you weight is not a concern. It is for me. A few incremental increases of a few hundred grammes for a week can be very hard to shake off, believe me. The best way to keep control is never to take your eye off the ball.Why are you weighing yourself at all?
I do not own any scales and only get weighed at my annual diabetes review.
However, my weight is not a concern - I think the weighing at the review is a tick-box exercise.
If you are trying to lose (or gain weight), I can understand why you would want to keep an eye on it but agree with the other respondents to track trends rather than being concerned that you weigh 2kg more today than you did yesterday but 4kg less than a week ago.
Only if you are the right weight and that weight is stable. If you want it to remain under control and not go up, or if you need to lose a substantial amount of weight, then you need to watch closely what is happening. Believe me the 'weigh yourself just once in a while and you will find your weight has gone quietly down' approach just doesn't work for some of us. I'm definitely one of those.
But yes, you shouldn't allow the sometimes depressing daily news from the scales to cause you to give up.
Agreed! But "what is actually happening" is (in my experience) always a mystery. The science isn't there -- so far as I have been able to discover. If you wanted a reliable figure, an average weight over (say) a week or even a month might be the best guide. But I look for encouragement and warning signals, so the daily fluctuation matters for me. A month would be too long for a dieter since you would hope your 'real' body weight would reduce during a period like that.When I have weighed in on a daily basis it goes up and down.....so its not telling me what is actually happening.......that was the logic behind my comment......but that doesn't mean you shouldn't weigh daily if that's what you want to do.....
Hi all I'mI don't have scales at home I couldn't see the numbers for my belly so I just get weighed every month at the Dr's
interesting. Do you measure the edema also at night before retiring?
People with heart failure do daily weigh ins, so its not pointless, depends on your circumstances.Agreed
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