Egull1's Journal, 26 Jan 19

~Maintenance Practiced~

The first time I was introduced to the concept of a maintenance break, I was about a quarter of the way through my weight loss journey. It was before the 60 day plateau to be sure. I "think" I heard it through one of the HSM podcasts, and my coach (who was not my coach then), had done more than a few recordings regarding "Maintenance Breaks".

The concept thoroughly intrigued me. So, of course I had to google it! lol.

I was only able to find one article about "Maintenance Breaks" at the time, but it was encouraging! It was a small study done on a small group of people. For every pound they lost, they had them eat at maintenance cals for 1 week before they were allowed to eat at a deficit. The results were stellar. They found all of subjects adhered to their maintenance cals and had a much less challenging time reverting to deficit cals at the end of their break. They also found the subjects were able to keep their weight loss off over a specified period of time. I can't find the article now, but of course these days there are more than a few articles about Maintenance breaks or "diet breaks" as some refer to them.

I like how my Coach refers to a Maintenance Break. She calls it "parking the car" and it is an essential part of learning how to maintain for life. She once made an excellent point.

"Look at it this way. If your goal is to keep the weight off for the rest of your life then technically you will be spending more time in maintenance than you will losing the weight. It stands to reason you want to know how to actually do it."

I can attest to the reality that maintenance is a skill and not as easy as one thinks when they're on the other side of their goal weight. The point of maintenance is not to gain, but the point of maintenance is not to lose, either. It literally is about finding a sustainable weight range, and maintaining within that range for the duration.

It means, regardless of the WOE (way of eating), someone better darn well know what their maintenance macros, cals, LCHF portions, or vegan/vegetarian/plant based portions are in order to maintain a weight range at ANY given point.

Statistically speaking, waiting to reach maintenance in order to learn how to do it has a VERY low success rate and contributes why 90% re-gain their weight back.

For this girl, hitting maintenance without having practiced it first was on par with throwing me out on a stage in front of 1000 people to perform a monologue after reading the script one time.

Albeit, what I might do to improvise is an amusing thought, but the scenario paints a recipe for disaster. When it comes to understanding how weight maintenance works, improvisation doesn't cut it.

Like any other refined skill, it requires practice. And, practice is acquired through action - not words or ideology.

However, after I joined the HSM community and had access to the resources and webinars. It quickly became clear to me there were a whole lot of other benefits to maintenance breaks. Notwithstanding,

-a metabolism boost
- prevention of diet/deficit burn out
- building self efficacy regarding eating habits
- preventing weight re-gain
- Learning delayed gratification and how to plan for fun foods rather than binge or cheat

I mean, think about it - if one knows how to consciously maintain their weight at ANY point in this process, then hitting goal and shifting into maintenance really presents little issue.

I can say on the logistical end of things, the challenge was minimal. Food still gets weighed and measured, logged, and tracked. Weigh-ins still happen weekly and exercise still happens 4-5 days a week.

However, part of the reason the challenge of maintaining has been minimal is in part due to the fact that I PRACTICED before I hit goal.

I followed my coach's suggested format. I took 2 maintenance days per week. That's right, you read correctly. TWO whole maintenance days. So, instead of a pound - I lost on average about .7lb per week. And, every 10 weeks - I took a 1 week maintenance break.

Ya want to know what's funny.?!

When I hit the week long maintenance breaks during my journey, I was petrified! But, it wasn't because I was afraid of gaining. Oh, no - I was actually afraid to lose. I mean the whole point is to maintain NOT to lose. LOL. It's not as easy as one thinks to jump up from deficit cals to maintenance cals. It's one thing to do it for one day, but to do it for a full week? Feeling bloated doesn't even scratch the surface people!

Who knows, maybe it's easier jumping from weight loss macros and or vegan/plant based portions to maintenance portions. It's hard to say, I've never actually seen a single person maintain a specified weight range for any extended period of time on those WOE's. Not to say it doesn't happen, I just haven't seen it.

For us, CICO folks - we definitely feel the extra cal increase for sure. After my maintenance breaks, I frankly felt thankful to go back into deficit cals by the end of the week, lol. I also felt relieved that I did it and self assured that weight maintenance is not only possible, but doable.

My coach lost her 170 lbs over a 5 year period with 3 children in between. She has no problem confessing if she hadn't learned to take maintenance breaks, hitting that goal was likely impossible.

But, really choosing to have a maintenance day, week, month and oh yes, even year is totally okay. It can often mean the difference between merely parking the car until one is ready to drive again or taking out a knife and slashing all the tires. Or, better yet - that point (and, we've all been there) where you pull out the gasoline and just torche it all!

What I have definitely learned is that folks have some funny delusions about what "Maintenance Breaks" actually are.

I can say from 2 years of experience what they are NOT:

-a maintenance break is NOT a reason to eat above or beyond the cals/and or portions that maintain the weight one is currently sitting at.
-eating maintenance cals, and or portions/macros is not a binge. Binging is eating beyond the amount that allows one to sit at a current weight range.
-maintenance does not mean one has quit. Quitting happens when one stops being diligent about their health, lets go of their healthy habits and ceases to focus on eating those cals/macros/portion sizes that allows them to maintain a current weight.

We celebrate folks that take maintenance breaks in the HSM groups. Even if they spent a year in that zone, because life threw curve balls. Each and everyone of those members have confessed if they had not consciously focused on maintaining their weight range for that period of time, they would have gained back what they lost, because that is exactly what they did in the past. The beauty is, the individual gets to decide when they're ready to take a deficit and even then, they get to decide what deficit to start with. It doesn't have to be -500, it can be -250. Or, perhaps like I did where there are 2 maintenance days couched in the week.

I mean really, there are so many ways to approach all of this even if one is not using CICO - but, knowing the maintenance cals/portions/macros for whatever eating plan one is on is key. And, the weight regain stats are a good enough reason to entertain the concept of practicing it. At least it was for this girl.

Oh, and I did totally freak out when I hit goal. LOL. But, it had nothing to do with how to maintain the loss. Honestly, it was adjusting to a whole new identity. I might pass a mirror and literally not recognize the girl staring back at me. I've had to replace every single article of clothing I owned including underwear and bras. Everything was so unfamiliar to this mind that had always identified with being "the fat girl". It was jarring to be sure. I practice a lot of self love and self care, especially during those first few weeks after hitting goal and really make the effort to learn who this girl is now. I can honestly say, I am less anxious and truly loving what this heart, body, and mind are becoming. But, emotionally it's been adjustment.

That being stated, while I was getting through those freak out moments, it was comforting to know the maintenance piece was one less thing I had to worry about. This skill had already been practiced many times.

- As the Zen Masters say "Before enlightenment, chop wood carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood carry water." How one wants to chop the wood or fetch their water is up to each individual, but it doesn't change the truth that one way or another it's gotta get done.

25 Supporters    Support   

1 to 20 of 25
Comments 
Exactly— so many people do alternative dieting to loose the weight but once they hit goal, they don’t know how to stay there Several good examples here on FS. One being the Hollidays we just went through. Many people here, including myself, urged people to concentrate on maintaining their current weight, enjoy the events in moderation and not fret over trying to loose. A maintenance break in your words. Or, another member who was traveling for a family member’s medical issues and was worried about trying to loose during this stressful time. Again she was urged to concentrate on maintaining her current weight till this medical related crisis passed.. people also need to understand that even in maintenance your weight is going to fluctuate up and down according to life events, vacations etc. that is ok. Once you can master portion control/moderation/better choices not perfect, you just resume what is now your normal WOE and Get back on track. You can all do this Constant deprivation breeds unhappiness, depression and failure. Those of you who have a chosen WOE because you have a medical issue have to do whatever is required to keep as healthy as you can. For people who have fought a weight loss battle forever and repeatedly given up it is time to understand that you can’t expect to keep practicing failed behaviors expecting a different result. Practice makes not perfect— it makes it doable. No dieting—- LONG TERM, SENSIBLE LIFESTYLE CHANGE.  
26 Jan 19 by member: Kenna Morton
OMG! I loved this, thank you for sharing, I just started my maintenance again, I failed the first time.  
27 Jan 19 by member: Keilin_4
Holy S*** this is SO eye opening... I'll research about this right now. Wow. This might actually help me a lot. THANK YOU for sharing your knowledge! 
27 Jan 19 by member: immort777
I was already thinking on just doing some maintenance because of some stress in my life ATM, but knowing that this can have a structure will definitely help me. 
27 Jan 19 by member: immort777
Thanks for this article it has really made me think. I am on holidays from mid Feb to March and will use the maintenance diet while I am there. 
27 Jan 19 by member: ferapist
thank you. I am a huge HSM fan and have listened to all of the podcasts ( even the old ones!) I am still learning how to hard wire my healthy habits. Maintenance is the hardest part, and it is life long.  
27 Jan 19 by member: Revaudrey
I’m giving this a try... might need your help?!?! 😊 
27 Jan 19 by member: wifey9707
This makes a great deal of sense to me. One part doesn't though. I don't know if I want to try a new skill when I am in a stressful situation. I am thinking that doing maintenance when I am on vacation, holiday time, family stress time may mean that I am going to crash and burn. I think I will need to try this out when it is 'ordinary' days so I can mindfully learn how. I think that is what you did by embedding two days a week into your schedule. I don't want to learn a new skill in the midst of chaos whether happy or sad. I have some extremely stressful days a head of me starting next Monday and going for sure to the following Monday. After Feb 11 many things may happen and most is likely to not be good. I think I want to hang onto what is comfortable and known for that time which is moving towards weight loss. Am I going to freak if I am not perfect? God no! Too much happening to make that my focus. But the habits and skills that are in place at this moment will be a touchstone. When I come out the other side of this, and things hopefully return to normal probably by March 1 I want to revisit this idea. 
27 Jan 19 by member: 59Carol
It looks like a few of enjoyed this - I'm glad it is helpful. @immort777 and wifey9707 - I'll post another entry later on today providing some helpful tips if you want to give it a try. I haven't seen a single person do a maintenance break and regret. It really opens up a whole new way of looking at weight loss and sustaining/practicing healthy habits. Not mention, the metabolism really does like it, too. @Revaudrey - I'm so glad you enjoy the HSM podcasts! BTW - I'm interview 353 ;-) @ Keilin - keep practicing those healthy habits. Us shorties we'll keep each other in check {{hugs}}. @ Chris and Kenna - keep preaching the gospel my friends! 
27 Jan 19 by member: Egull1
@59Carol - that is your own personal preference. If eating at a deficit during stressful times is calming, then go for it. The more important point of a maintenance break is the "practice" component. You are not going to stop having stressful times when you hit goal. Just like a new job doesn't care what mayhem is going on in the home life - the skills still need to be learned and applied, either way. However, you are piloting this plane - no one else and if it less stressful to start a maintenance break at a calm time in your life, that's perfectly okay. 
27 Jan 19 by member: Egull1
Thank you for sharing. I literally just joined and this is the first post I have read. Very inspiring and informative.  
27 Jan 19 by member: UnoDani
Your body will adjust to the calories you consume the more you put in the more you will burn the less you put in the less you will burn. It will set a weight and you will stay there until you reset that weight hopefully in the other direction. In my twenty’s I was 180 in my thirty I was 190 all the way to 60 I got up to 240. We have to reset our weight down. We do that through intermediate fasting. Is it really that simple? According to Jason Fung it is read his book Obesityn Code. I went home for Christmas and everyone told me how great I looked. I told them I found the secret. 
27 Jan 19 by member: Nana Ellen
Nana - "resetting your weight down" is about weight loss. I am talking about "weight maintenance". The amount of cals one needs to consume to "maintain" a weight at ANY given moment. Our lives are not lived in Jason Fung's vacuum. When one reaches their "reset weight" there are essential habits that MUST continue to be practiced if a person is going to maintain that weight. A 90% regain statistic proves that bodies won't maintain all on their own. 
27 Jan 19 by member: Egull1
Great read here. I’m staying tuned!! But my...checked my Maintenance and it’s a lot more cals of course. How do we add 500 in one week each day without feeling sick??? Lol. Is it ok just to add maybe 250/day for the week? Or add the 500 each day for two days? How’d you do it?  
27 Jan 19 by member: wifey9707
Wifey - do you know I came across the same issue, LOL. No joke. My metabolism may have loved it, but my indigestion didn't. Do the best you can. Out of the week long maintenance breaks I took during the journey, I technically flunked 2 of them and lost weight because the tummy just didn't want it. Don't force feed yourself. If you hit a point where you just can't eat something you planned for because thought of eating one more thing nauseates you, then don't eat it. Look at this way, if you can't eat all the maintenance cals, and you lose weight in that week - even the fail is a win. The point is to practice. And, if you want to start with adding 250/day for good measure, that is absolutely okay. 
27 Jan 19 by member: Egull1
So all 7 days? What about 2 a week to try? I could possibly do two dats with 500 extra as I’d choose my two busiest dats? Is that ok? 
27 Jan 19 by member: wifey9707
*days. I’m a terrible editor! Lol. Sorry  
27 Jan 19 by member: wifey9707
You can totally do that! Part of the reason my coach suggests having 2 maintenance days per week throughout the whole journey is 1) It's good practice 2) It's good for the metabolism 3) Most importantly, it allows you to still have fun and learn how to PLAN for that fun like going to a restaurant, planning for your favorite dessert or fun food, have a couple of drinks. Ya still have to stay within those maintenance cals, but at least you can still enjoy some of things you love that you can't always do in a deficit. The young ones really like the 2 maintenance days per week because they like to party with friends on the weekend and this allows them a social life, without blowing their habits. 
27 Jan 19 by member: Egull1
I don’t drink, I’m a born again Christian. And my social life is very much church related which can mean some marvelous food at times so I’ll be taking advantage. Next week, starting Feb.3 I’ll be doing some maintenance that week, our daughter turns 20 so it’s a perfect week since there’ll be cake etc. 😁 I’m excited to incorporate this. I believe it’s very beneficial. One more thing...even though I’m not at or really near goal, it’s never too early to do this, is it? 
27 Jan 19 by member: wifey9707
Want to say THANK YOU for your time answering me, and very quickly I might add. That’s very kind!! I’m off for church time now. Chat more later I hope!! 👍🏻 
27 Jan 19 by member: wifey9707

     
 

Submit a Comment


You must sign in to submit a comment. Click here to sign in.
 


Egull1's Weight History


Get the app
    
© 2024 FatSecret. All rights reserved.