Tracking Your Weight to Guarantee Weight Loss

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By janderson99

As the saying goes - 'There is nothing like a picture to tell the real story' This certainly applies to losing weight. To guarantee that you will lose weight you need a 'scare graph' - that is a graph of your weight each day compared with the target weight you have set yourself. If you see that you have stopped losing weight, the graph will scare you into doing something to get back on your schedule. It is astonishing that many weight loss programs, online tools and software systems do not include charts, and some of them are totally against displaying charts. Also many programs that have charts only have rudimentary ones that simply record your weight each day, or your total calorie intake, or your total calories burnt each day, but on separate graphs or displays, not simultaneously. What you really need is a system that graphs that tracks your weight each day compared with your target weight, so that you can instantly see how you are going and instantly see the key aspects of your weight loss program. With this information you can make adjustments to keep on track and guarantee you will meet your targets.

What things should be displayed on your chart?

There are a host of options - your daily weight, calorie intake via food, total calories expended by activity and your basal metabolism, workout and exercise details, food consumed, BMI, etc. But you will not want it to be too hard to get the information, nor produce graphs that are too complicated. So what are the high priorities and essential things to include on your graph? I would suggest that your graph should include your daily weight measured each morning when you wake up, your target weight for that day and what is referred to as you calorie deficit for the previous day. The easiest way to record this information is using an online database system. Ideally the program you use should calculate the following items automatically for you and plot them on a graph as shown in the figure. The elements are:

  • Your daily target weight - You should be able to enter your starting weight and your target weight loss rate into the program. For example, let's say you specify a weight loss goal of 2 pounds or one kilogram per week. The online program you use should calculate your target weight for each day based on this loss rate and your initial weight.
  • Your measured weight each day
  • Your calorie deficit - this is a very simple and basic concept. It is your calories burnt or expended less the calories eaten in food. If you eat less calories in food than you burnt or work off through exercise and basic metabolism each day, your body will have to break down fat (hopefully) to make up the difference. It is very simple - in order to lose weight you must have a calorie deficit - that is you must burn more calories than you take in through food. If you have a positive deficit you will lose weight. If you have a negative deficit your weight will increase. This is what you really need to know, especially in relation to your weight compared with your target weight. Your weight loss monitoring program should calculate and plot this for you. The information you need is the firstly the calories consumed by your body at rest.This is referred to as your Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR), which is the energy expended in maintaining your body temperature, keep your heart beating and blood circulating, respiring, digestion, tissue maintenance, etc. Your RMR is thus you rudimentary energy expended for your normal way of life when you are at rest (not exercising, walking etc.). You can find this information easily and it generally relates you your daily weight. The second part of your calorie expenditure is the extra calories consumed through a diverse range of activities, such as a walking, jogging, bike riding, running, aerobics, swimming, working out in the gym, etc. Your weight loss program should allow you to enter the exercise you have undertaken each day and calculate the total calories consumed. The best way to display your calorie deficit on a graph is as a percentage of your RMR (as shown on the graph above). Usually you should aim for a calorie shortfall of about 10-20% of your RMR.

Looking at the figure shown above, you can see the benefits of displaying the three charts as an overlay. It shows your weight loss progress compared with your target and it relates your loss rate to your calorie deficit. If your weight tends to plateau, to level out, the response is obvious - your will have to eat less, exercise more and increase your calorie deficit to get your loss program back on track.

This relationship will tend to be an individual thing – something unique to your metabolism, lifestyle and exercise regime. You can also monitor what is working and not working in terms of calorie intake and consumption.

But you need to note that there will be a lag in weight change through both increased exercise and reduced food intake. This is why the chart display is so useful.

Conclusion

So to keep your weight loss program on track find a program that simultaneously displays your weight, your daily target weight and your net calorie deficit, as shown on the figure. Stick to it and you will be guaranteed to lose weight.

Comments

daisyjae profile image

daisyjae Level 3 Commenter 21 months ago

This sounds like it could be very useful. Thank you for writing about this. Rated up!

janesmooch 16 months ago

truly valued your hub and it has given various good ideas with what to do with my website

hobsdv profile image

hobsdv 15 months ago

Thank you for posting a fantastic useful hub, i certainly enjoyed reading it.

Derrick Snider 11 months ago

"

A weight loss meal plan should not just tell you what to eat, but should also advise what foods should be avoided. This way you understand what keeps you from losing weight.

more info at: http://goo.gl/joQJJ

and thanks for the informative hub

"

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