This is another piece of advice that's never worked for me, though for other people, it works like magic. Oh, how I wish.
I've been working out for 6 months, 2-4 times a week, 1-2 1/2 hours at a time (my typical routine is an hour on the treadmill, half an hour to an hour on the exercise bike, and then half an hour of weights), and haven't increased my food intake. If anything, I'm eating less, and have cut down restaurant/fried food to maybe twice a month (closer to once a month.) I've had a fairly healthy routine all my life, as well as regular activity (walking 30-60 minutes 4 times a week used to be my workout of choice, and I am constantly on the move at work, often carrying large stacks of boxes.)
And I've lost maybe 3 pounds on the scale. I've been like that my whole life. No matter how active I am, my weight doesn't drop much. When I was younger, I went on one of those diets where you substitute 2 shakes a day for meals and then eat one of the plan's prepackaged meal. After 4 months of adhering to their strict regimen, I hadn't lost anything significant and couldn't stand it anymore so I gave up. I tried numerous experiments over the years but nothing budged.
I can tell a difference in body composition and tone when I work out, but my size/shape has almost always been constant.
On the doctor's scales, I qualify as obese for my height (I've always weighed heavier than I look), but I wear a size 6, and the people at the CC meetup I went to last year thought I weighed about 30 pounds less than I actually do. Heh heh... one person even threatened to dead lift me on a scale in order to prove my weight.
I do think that some people have a body type or set point that can't be altered all that much, and I've just accepted that I'll never be a rail.
I've been working out for 6 months, 2-4 times a week, 1-2 1/2 hours at a time (my typical routine is an hour on the treadmill, half an hour to an hour on the exercise bike, and then half an hour of weights), and haven't increased my food intake. If anything, I'm eating less, and have cut down restaurant/fried food to maybe twice a month (closer to once a month.) I've had a fairly healthy routine all my life, as well as regular activity (walking 30-60 minutes 4 times a week used to be my workout of choice, and I am constantly on the move at work, often carrying large stacks of boxes.)
And I've lost maybe 3 pounds on the scale. I've been like that my whole life. No matter how active I am, my weight doesn't drop much. When I was younger, I went on one of those diets where you substitute 2 shakes a day for meals and then eat one of the plan's prepackaged meal. After 4 months of adhering to their strict regimen, I hadn't lost anything significant and couldn't stand it anymore so I gave up. I tried numerous experiments over the years but nothing budged.
I can tell a difference in body composition and tone when I work out, but my size/shape has almost always been constant.
On the doctor's scales, I qualify as obese for my height (I've always weighed heavier than I look), but I wear a size 6, and the people at the CC meetup I went to last year thought I weighed about 30 pounds less than I actually do. Heh heh... one person even threatened to dead lift me on a scale in order to prove my weight.
I do think that some people have a body type or set point that can't be altered all that much, and I've just accepted that I'll never be a rail.
Kim, The lack of results you're describing could be attributed to one or more of these..
not enough sleep or recovery time
not enough protein
hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid), could be caused by an iodine deficiency
zinc deficiency
not enough water throughout the day
not enough fiber
too much sodium (water retention)