Runners Forum
Home Info Search Members Contact Events Clubs
Register     Today's Posts     User Map     Socials     Training Blog
Go Back
 
Reload this Page Help!! Loosing to much weight! :(
Password

Notices



Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old 15th Jan 08, 04:04 PM
SCOOB_81 SCOOB_81 is offline
 
Help!! Loosing to much weight! :(

Hi All!

Although not new to running, I’m new on here and thought I’d say Hi and ask some much needed advice if I may? My problem seems to be the opposite of most runners who do it to loose weight - mine is that I’m loosing too much! I’m a 6’ fella, who’s weight has now dropped below 11 stone. I eat quite a lot for my weight, plenty of fruit, a good cereal for breakie and something big for lunch and dinner. But am I missing anything in particular or would any of these protein shakes be recommended? I don’t eat a lot of meats if that’s the key to my problem?? I do attend circuit training three times a week, which is mainly cardio, and run about 5 miles on average twice a week to go with it. Any help would be greatly appreciated as I don’t want to give up, but I might be forced to cut back. If anyone else has this ’problem’ it would be great to hear from you or any ideas!

Cheers and great site!!
Scoob.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 15th Jan 08, 04:22 PM
LEECE's Avatar
LEECE LEECE is offline
Real Name: Billy No Mates !!!!!!!   Age: 33   Gender: Female  
 
Location: Norfolk (just about)
Posts: 1,062
0.00 miles this week
50.70 miles this year
you know roughly your calorie intake a day and how much you burn when you work out and run ??
__________________
Are we there Yet
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 15th Jan 08, 04:59 PM
JBBury JBBury is offline
Age: 34   Gender: Male  
 
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Posts: 1,209
Depending on your build, dipping below 11 stone may not be so bad. As long as you are eating properly,your body will reach its natural weight eventually. It doesn't seem like you are exercising excessively. I'm 6ft 1inch and my weight stabilised at 11 and a half stone, which I think is its natural weight. I'm medium build, so I guess men of my height with a skinny build would naturally be around 10 and a half stone. If you have not significantly changed your diet and/or exercise regime and are still losing weight quite rapidly, you should go see a doctor and make sure there isn't a medical condition messing with your weight.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 15th Jan 08, 05:35 PM
richardsimkiss's Avatar
richardsimkiss richardsimkiss is online now
Age: 24   Gender: Male  
Co-admin
 
Location: Warwickshire
Posts: 4,641
Send a message via MSN to richardsimkiss
8.00 miles this week
1,254.42 miles this year
Along the lines of what JBBury has said... unless your weight is causing you health problems I honestly wouldn't get caught up in the numbers. You seem to be eating sensibly/regularly so I would imagine you're just reaching your natural weight! Enjoy it you lucky lucky man

Besides, 11st is a healthy weight for a 6' bloke? You wouldn't be medically classed as being underweight until you dropped below 9st 10st!! (based on BMI rtings)
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 15th Jan 08, 05:45 PM
almost_no_specifics's Avatar
almost_no_specifics almost_no_specifics is offline
Age: 22   Gender: Female  
 
Location: Sheffield, UK
Posts: 629
Send a message via MSN to almost_no_specifics
Yeah, I think unless you feel tired constantly, then loosing a bit of weight is no biggy! You're doing quite a lot of cardiovascular exercise, and that specifically does burn fat, so unless you keep on going until you are feeling ill or your BMI is very low (and remember you should shift the scale a bit because you have a modified lifestyle, ie you probably have more lean mass than the average joe) you should be OK, but y'know... if you're still really worried, it wouldn't hurt to book a 5 min appointment with your GP to chat about it and get all your basic vitals checked
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 16th Jan 08, 09:16 AM
richardsimkiss's Avatar
richardsimkiss richardsimkiss is online now
Age: 24   Gender: Male  
Co-admin
 
Location: Warwickshire
Posts: 4,641
Send a message via MSN to richardsimkiss
8.00 miles this week
1,254.42 miles this year
I meant 9st 10lbs by the way
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 17th Jan 08, 12:50 PM
SCOOB_81 SCOOB_81 is offline
 
Cheers for that folks, it’s much appreciated! I don’t think it’s a medical issue, just as I fine most of the time. I must just be burning slightly more than I’m consuming. I’ll just eat a little more to try and iron it out – damn my bad luck! I guess I was worried as a cousin I’d not seen in a while said I’d lost a lot of weight and on weighing myself I’d lost over a stone, but this is over a the best part of a year or so, not over night. It just seemed not a lot of weight for my height and I panicked! I’d like if anything though to put a little weight on, and so does anyone have any recommendations?? I eat over 2000 calories a day, but would any of these protein shakes work, or are there health implications with them? Again, any help would be great!

Thanks again, you’ve put my mind at rest

Scoob.
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 17th Jan 08, 01:05 PM
Jason's Avatar
Jason Jason is offline
Gender: Male  
 
Location: Hampshire
Posts: 143
0.00 miles this week
0.00 miles this year
Jelly spiders, kebabs, custard creams and lager seem to work fine for me.
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 17th Jan 08, 01:28 PM
Granty's Avatar
Granty Granty is offline
Age: 38   Gender: Male  
 
Location: Bristol
Posts: 1,721
0.00 miles this week
292.10 miles this year
Custard creams - YUM !
__________________
Premiership by the end of the 2009 :D
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 17th Jan 08, 01:29 PM
richardsimkiss's Avatar
richardsimkiss richardsimkiss is online now
Age: 24   Gender: Male  
Co-admin
 
Location: Warwickshire
Posts: 4,641
Send a message via MSN to richardsimkiss
8.00 miles this week
1,254.42 miles this year
Protein shakes will help build muscle when weight training, as you know, muscle being heavier than fat it will inherently make you weigh a bit more. Of course the theory falls flat on it's face if you're not weight training as you may as well just consume excessive calories to gain your weight....

Running's great for burning calories and losing weight, not so great if you're trying to bulk up though!
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 17th Jan 08, 03:38 PM
hayley1977's Avatar
hayley1977 hayley1977 is offline
Age: 31   Gender: Female  
 
Location: brightlingsea essex
Posts: 420
have a look at this website in case you do want to look into protein shakes.
Its cheaper than your highstreet shops, as an example a prolab n-large would be better than the pure protein supplements as this will help gain a little weight if thats what you wanted.www.bodyactive-online.co.uk
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 17th Jan 08, 05:20 PM
Katten's Avatar
Katten Katten is offline
Age: 28   Gender: Male  
 
Location: Sopot
Posts: 970
0.00 miles this week
0.00 miles this year
Cakes, chocolate, beer-flavoured rehydration drinks; all come highly recommended by medical experts



(well... she SAID she was a doctor...)
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Best way to run and lose weight flabs Ladies 81 4th Apr 08 05:27 PM
Weight training whilst running mr2nut Beginners 3 10th Feb 08 08:05 PM
Mixing weight training with running George General Training Discussion 4 24th Apr 07 05:59 PM
Weight Training Sharal General Running Chat 8 31st Aug 06 09:42 PM
Can't lose weight! liz01 Nutrition 7 4th May 06 08:25 PM

 
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:41 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0
runners forum