Depends on your goals and what exercises you plan to take up. Jogging thin, regardless of -fitness-, is a -hell- of a lot easier than jogging fat. It’s also less likely to cause you injury, speaking from personal experience.
If you’re severely overweight to begin from that’s unlikely to be much of an issue. See Desrtopa.
(ISTR someone—was it Beeminder’s blog? The Hacker’s Diet? [EDIT: here it is] -- recommending tracking body weight because it’s so readily quantifiable until you’re in the ballpark of your ideal weight, but to switch to something better if you want to keep on improving afterwards.)
Weight is more trackable, Losing weight may be less effective, but sometimes, one needs to see the numbers.
Another number is ‘length of measuring tape wrapped around my stomach’. That’s a better number to track. A measuring tape costs under $2 including postage on ebay so it seems to qualify as plenty trackable.
IME breathing in or breathing out, changing posture, pulling the tape tighter or less tight, etc. can easily change the number by a few per cent, so if anything that’s more noisy than the total body weight (provided you always weigh yourself right after out of bed in the morning). (Maybe I’m doing it wrong?)
(I was also under the impression that the very same pair of trousers that fit me tightly the day before yesterday fit me loosely yesterday. No idea what the hell was going on there.)
(I was also under the impression that the very same pair of trousers that fit me tightly the day before yesterday fit me loosely yesterday. No idea what the hell was going on there.)
Changes in what you eat from day to day will alter the amount of water your body is retaining. The water bloat can have surprisingly big day-to-day effects.
I know that the amount of water in my body varies from day to day, so… how comes I was surprised that that water actually occupies space, rather than being stored in the fifth dimension but somehow still detected by my bathroom scale? :-/
(I was also under the impression that the very same pair of trousers that fit me tightly the day before yesterday fit me loosely yesterday. No idea what the hell was going on there.)
Some cotton fabrics shrink in the wash and stretch when worn. I have a pair of jeans that is quite uncomfortably tight immediately after washing, somewhat tight the day after, and fits reasonably until the next wash. Your body may not be what is changing here.
Weight is more trackable, Losing weight may be less effective, but sometimes, one needs to see the numbers.
I don’t think prioritizing losing weight to the point where you try to avoid muscle gain is A) healthy or B) effective.
Depends on your goals and what exercises you plan to take up. Jogging thin, regardless of -fitness-, is a -hell- of a lot easier than jogging fat. It’s also less likely to cause you injury, speaking from personal experience.
If you’re severely overweight to begin from that’s unlikely to be much of an issue. See Desrtopa.
(ISTR someone—was it Beeminder’s blog? The Hacker’s Diet? [EDIT: here it is] -- recommending tracking body weight because it’s so readily quantifiable until you’re in the ballpark of your ideal weight, but to switch to something better if you want to keep on improving afterwards.)
Another number is ‘length of measuring tape wrapped around my stomach’. That’s a better number to track. A measuring tape costs under $2 including postage on ebay so it seems to qualify as plenty trackable.
IME breathing in or breathing out, changing posture, pulling the tape tighter or less tight, etc. can easily change the number by a few per cent, so if anything that’s more noisy than the total body weight (provided you always weigh yourself right after out of bed in the morning). (Maybe I’m doing it wrong?)
(I was also under the impression that the very same pair of trousers that fit me tightly the day before yesterday fit me loosely yesterday. No idea what the hell was going on there.)
Changes in what you eat from day to day will alter the amount of water your body is retaining. The water bloat can have surprisingly big day-to-day effects.
I know that the amount of water in my body varies from day to day, so… how comes I was surprised that that water actually occupies space, rather than being stored in the fifth dimension but somehow still detected by my bathroom scale? :-/
FWIW, I’ve also experienced the same thing.
Some cotton fabrics shrink in the wash and stretch when worn. I have a pair of jeans that is quite uncomfortably tight immediately after washing, somewhat tight the day after, and fits reasonably until the next wash. Your body may not be what is changing here.