Should not losing weight on a low carb diet, work like not losing weight on any other kind of diet. Calories in - calories out. Calculate your Basal Metabolic Rate + your activity level and then you have the total calories you burn for a day. Don't eat at a calorie deficit and you won't loose weight. I use the chronometer app to calculate and track everything, but my goal is to loose weight, but you can easily adapt how you use the app to maintain weight.
Thanks for the replyAs you have been actively losing weight this may affect (skew) your lipid values temporarily.
You seem to be a comparatively fit young man so resistance training will build/maintain muscle mass and help to stabilise your weight. Think of fats as fuel that you are topping up so that your body does not have to raid it's stores (body fat).
One last thing, I lost far more weight than I intended or wanted and became quite concerned at the time but it seems that the size and weight I am now is as it should be for me personally so I had to just get used to being thinner than my mirror shows me.
Maybe time to time My diet is more like ketogenic. I find really helpful getting less and less carb for decreasing my glucose level.Should not losing weight on a low carb diet, work like not losing weight on any other kind of diet. Calories in - calories out. Calculate your Basal Metabolic Rate + your activity level and then you have the total calories you burn for a day. Don't eat at a calorie deficit and you won't loose weight. I use the chronometer app to calculate and track everything, but my goal is to loose weight, but you can easily adapt how you use the app to maintain weight.
Thanks for the reply
So if I understand right. Need to take more fat as well as more protein while I go gym (extra light weight lifting after cardio ) so I can maintain my body weight increasing muscle while both losing body fat and having more fat.
I try to take coconut oil, butter, and olive oil as much as possible. Probably Turkey different than UKIt can be problematic at first to halt the weight loss. It requires a fine balancing act. Trust me, I know.
I added more fats, mostly but not exclusively from protein sources. I doubled my consumption of eggs, started eating cheese again, more cream, extra mayo. I also reduced my carbs at the same time because I wanted lower blood sugar levels, so the fats and protein had to increase quite a bit. I used my bathroom scales and my blood glucose meter alongside a food diary. It took a fair while to find the right balance, but once I did, all was well. That was in late 2014. Since then I have maintained an ideal weight with no more losses and no more gains.
I'm afraid I don't understand your cholesterol and lipid results. We have different measurement units in the UK.
So far as is possible being guided by hunger is a good way to ensure you get the right balance. It’s trial and error.
I'll admit that I ended up losing a LOT of my hunger signals lately especially with a bit more of a shift towards focusing on protein whilst training. However I still have a lot of fat to lose so it's advantageous but I know precisely what you mean.If I were guided by hunger I would fail because I am so rarely hungry. I agree it is all trial and error, and getting the balance right takes time and effort. This is why, when someone is overweight and losing, they need to plan well ahead as soon as they can before they reach the target weight.
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