You’re eating healthy. You’re exercising. But the scale isn’t moving. What gives?
Weight loss is rarely a straight line, but sometimes we unknowingly sabotage our own progress. Here are 5 common weight loss mistakes and how to fix them.
1. Focusing Only on the Scale
The scale measures everything: muscle, bone, water, and fat. If you are lifting weights, you might be gaining muscle while losing fat. The scale might stay the same, but your body composition is changing.
- The Fix: Use other metrics. Take progress photos, measure your waist, and pay attention to how your clothes fit.
- The Fix: Be mindful of portion sizes, especially with fats. “Healthy” doesn’t mean “calorie-free.”
- The Fix: Aim to include a source of protein (eggs, meat, fish, beans, yogurt) in every single meal.
- The Fix: Stick to water, black coffee, or tea. If you drink alcohol, choose low-calorie options like vodka soda or light beer, and drink in moderation.
- The Fix: Don’t eat back your exercise calories. Consider exercise a bonus for your health, not a license to eat more.
2. Eating Too Many “Healthy” Calories
Nuts, avocados, olive oil, and dark chocolate are healthy, but they are also calorie-dense. A handful of almonds can easily be 200 calories.
3. Not Eating Enough Protein
Protein is the most important nutrient for weight loss. It boosts metabolism, reduces appetite, and preserves muscle mass.
4. Drinking Your Calories
Fruit juice, soda, fancy coffees, and alcohol are packed with sugar and calories but don’t make you feel full.
5. Overestimating Calorie Burn
Fitness trackers are great, but they often overestimate how many calories you burn during exercise. If your watch says you burned 500 calories and you “eat back” those 500 calories, you might actually be in a surplus.
Conclusion
Weight loss is a learning process. If you hit a plateau, check if you are making one of these mistakes. Small adjustments can get the scale moving again.
Leave a Reply