metabolism
Moderators: Boss Man, cassiegose
metabolism
Hi! I am new to this forum. I am 41 years old and weigh approximately 140 pounds. I say approximately because I HATE the scales! I'm 5'6" tall and wear size 5-7. I had a total abdominal hysterectomy about 3 years ago and ever since then it seems like metabolism is nonexistent. I've started working out and watching what I eat and it just doesn't seem to make any difference. It's hard to stay motivated when after a month of complete dedication I am not seeing any results. problem areas are like most women, abs, hips and thighs. Any ideas or suggestions on jump starting the metabolism at age? I usually do 20 minutes of cardio and weight training 3 times a week.
thanks,
Wendy
thanks,
Wendy
Thank you for the advice. I do tend to not eat much throughout the day. I always feel like I'm taking in too many calories. I'll try to eat smaller portions more often. I'm already doing the strength training to build muscle. I know that muscle will burn fat quicker. I just feel like I've hit a plateau and nothing is happening no matter what I try
. Thanks again!!!

Sounds like your diet is playing a part.
Healthy food is okay, but if you eat too little, you affect the Metabolism, stop it working properly, and run the risk of muscle sacrifice, which can lead to something called Crash dieting, and that's when you lose muscle and Fat, instead of just Fat.
As your Metabolism is slowing down after the age of 35, it won't process calories as fast, but you need to make sure you eat enough, and the average for women is about 1,800-2,000 calories a day.
As Swanso says, small frequent meals is the key, and you should look to be having about 6 meals 2.5-3 hours apart.
If you can post the sort of meals you have, it might give an indication if food is playing a part in your stalled results.
The main thing is to feel proud of yourself for this. Especially for starting a lot older than most people do, and the consistancy and dedication you are showing, are big pluses, so try not to worry, and hopefully we can help you to work things out.
Congrats for all you've done, be strong, stick at it, and don't let anything stop you being the woman you want to be yeah
.
You can do this, and at 41, you are plenty capable of so much physically, so don't feel like it might be an uphill struggle, because it doesn't have ot be
.
GOOD LUCK!!!!!!!!!
Healthy food is okay, but if you eat too little, you affect the Metabolism, stop it working properly, and run the risk of muscle sacrifice, which can lead to something called Crash dieting, and that's when you lose muscle and Fat, instead of just Fat.
As your Metabolism is slowing down after the age of 35, it won't process calories as fast, but you need to make sure you eat enough, and the average for women is about 1,800-2,000 calories a day.
As Swanso says, small frequent meals is the key, and you should look to be having about 6 meals 2.5-3 hours apart.
If you can post the sort of meals you have, it might give an indication if food is playing a part in your stalled results.
The main thing is to feel proud of yourself for this. Especially for starting a lot older than most people do, and the consistancy and dedication you are showing, are big pluses, so try not to worry, and hopefully we can help you to work things out.
Congrats for all you've done, be strong, stick at it, and don't let anything stop you being the woman you want to be yeah

You can do this, and at 41, you are plenty capable of so much physically, so don't feel like it might be an uphill struggle, because it doesn't have ot be

GOOD LUCK!!!!!!!!!
Last edited by Boss Man on Fri Mar 16, 2007 8:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
Boss Man... diet varies since I have three children and our lives are very busy. I work full-time. Most mornings I only have coffee and only eat a cup of soup or have a salad or a chicken wrap for lunch. Dinner usually consists of a a portion of meat (chicken, pork, or fish), a vegetable and a carb (noodles, potatoes)....Sometimes a graham cracker snack a few hours after dinner. The frustrating thing is that I'm not a junk food junkie. I don't pig out on chips, ice cream, or cakes. I do need to increase workouts more. I'll try eating more often, but knowing that I must burn more calories than I consume is the thing that bothers me...but, if I need to jump start metabolism, I'll try it. Thanks!
A simple way to sort yourself out is to keep things Simple.
So for Breakfast, try some of these options.
1. Bowl whole-grain Cereal, Skimmed milk, Protein shake, with 1/2 Scoop Protein Powder. You could add a few slices of Cherry or Strawberry if you wanted to to the Cereal. You could mix a bit of Flaxseed Oil in with the shake for Fats. I've heard that done before.
2. 5 Scrambled Egg Whites+1 Yolk, on Wheat Toast, + small Piece of Fruit, and about 1/4 cup of Almonds for some Fats, if you wanted to.
So for Breakfast, try some of these options.
1. Bowl whole-grain Cereal, Skimmed milk, Protein shake, with 1/2 Scoop Protein Powder. You could add a few slices of Cherry or Strawberry if you wanted to to the Cereal. You could mix a bit of Flaxseed Oil in with the shake for Fats. I've heard that done before.
2. 5 Scrambled Egg Whites+1 Yolk, on Wheat Toast, + small Piece of Fruit, and about 1/4 cup of Almonds for some Fats, if you wanted to.
That theory to way of thinking is neither here nor there.
Some people say don't eat 2-3 hours beofre bed, because the Calories store.
Fact is, calories are processed throughout the day, even when you sit down watching TV.
The main reason people get Fat, is often they are sedentary, but eat too much rubbish, therefore eating more negative calories than the body can naturally burn.
So therefore if the caloric burn is happening when you don't exercise, it must happen during sleep too. Unless the body shuts down enough, to trigger a non-responsive burning reaction to calories, effectively stopping any such burn friom happening, which I don't think it would.
As another example, Caloric burn is reduced during normal every day, low impact / sedentary things, as you're not significantly elevating Heart rate, and pumping Blood as much, and obviously if you did 30 minutes Cardio and burned something like 300 calories, for the body to continuously burn 300 calories every 30 minutes, you'd have to eat 14,400 calories a day, to burn as much as you ate, and then you'd need to eat more calories, to get your normal average, so you'd need to eat about 16,000 a day.
Obviously that doesn't happen, so eating absurdly high amounts of Calories isn't necessary, but the body will burn calories anyway, even if you are sitting down.
Proteins, are used to repair, grow and protect muscle.
Carbohydrates convert to Glucose Sugars, which have an effect on Blood Sugar, and are used for energy, if the body is sedentary during sleep, the Carbs would likely go unused. I don't believe the Carbs would then convert to Fats, if you were not increasing your Heart rate, and increasing burn potential, I think the energy would just be largely unused.
Fats might store, but again, if you ate EFA fats before sleep, they would help with the usual things liike memory, Hair, Brain functions, and removal of bad Fats.
This could be argued, is a good thing, as potentially calorie storage during sleep, would be fully or partly counteracted by good Fats, so again, unless any of the three main macronutrients were consumed in large amounts, so as to cause excess calories, or you had negative calories from things like Saturated Fats, Alcohol Sugars etc etc, then caloric storage would probably not happen much at all in opinion.
I also know how I look first thing. A bit dog rough, but not more and more unconditioned every day.
So personally, from own standpoint, storage of Calories during sleep is largely not likely, unless your calories are negative, or too high.
That is opnion, based on fact, and a dash of common sense thinking.
Oatmeal, and Fruit yes, but beware, you would be having a lot of Carbs, and little Protein, so you might want to try and increase your Protein in that meal. You could counteract that, by having perhaps a Low / non-fat Yoghurt, or some Low Salt Nuts, as a means of upping the Protein in your meal.
Though obviously don't put the Nuts on the Cereal
Some people say don't eat 2-3 hours beofre bed, because the Calories store.
Fact is, calories are processed throughout the day, even when you sit down watching TV.
The main reason people get Fat, is often they are sedentary, but eat too much rubbish, therefore eating more negative calories than the body can naturally burn.
So therefore if the caloric burn is happening when you don't exercise, it must happen during sleep too. Unless the body shuts down enough, to trigger a non-responsive burning reaction to calories, effectively stopping any such burn friom happening, which I don't think it would.
As another example, Caloric burn is reduced during normal every day, low impact / sedentary things, as you're not significantly elevating Heart rate, and pumping Blood as much, and obviously if you did 30 minutes Cardio and burned something like 300 calories, for the body to continuously burn 300 calories every 30 minutes, you'd have to eat 14,400 calories a day, to burn as much as you ate, and then you'd need to eat more calories, to get your normal average, so you'd need to eat about 16,000 a day.
Obviously that doesn't happen, so eating absurdly high amounts of Calories isn't necessary, but the body will burn calories anyway, even if you are sitting down.
Proteins, are used to repair, grow and protect muscle.
Carbohydrates convert to Glucose Sugars, which have an effect on Blood Sugar, and are used for energy, if the body is sedentary during sleep, the Carbs would likely go unused. I don't believe the Carbs would then convert to Fats, if you were not increasing your Heart rate, and increasing burn potential, I think the energy would just be largely unused.
Fats might store, but again, if you ate EFA fats before sleep, they would help with the usual things liike memory, Hair, Brain functions, and removal of bad Fats.
This could be argued, is a good thing, as potentially calorie storage during sleep, would be fully or partly counteracted by good Fats, so again, unless any of the three main macronutrients were consumed in large amounts, so as to cause excess calories, or you had negative calories from things like Saturated Fats, Alcohol Sugars etc etc, then caloric storage would probably not happen much at all in opinion.
I also know how I look first thing. A bit dog rough, but not more and more unconditioned every day.
So personally, from own standpoint, storage of Calories during sleep is largely not likely, unless your calories are negative, or too high.
That is opnion, based on fact, and a dash of common sense thinking.
Oatmeal, and Fruit yes, but beware, you would be having a lot of Carbs, and little Protein, so you might want to try and increase your Protein in that meal. You could counteract that, by having perhaps a Low / non-fat Yoghurt, or some Low Salt Nuts, as a means of upping the Protein in your meal.
Though obviously don't put the Nuts on the Cereal

Last edited by Boss Man on Mon Mar 19, 2007 8:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
Plateaus do happen. Usually all it takes is a few tweaks to your exercise and nutrition to get you started with seeing progress again. Since you seem to have some metabolism issues, it will be harder for you to lose fat and being strist will be more important for you. Balancing your meals out well will be important. You may also need to increase the frequency and intensity of your workouts.
Sarah
Sarah