Ep 90 | My Fat Loss Journey End of Week 1 Check In


One week in, and I'm already learning things — some expected, some genuinely surprising. Here's my full Week 2 end-of-week reflection from my six-month fat loss journey.

If you missed the first episode, you can catch up here. And if you're ready to start your own fat loss journey, my Fat Loss Transformation Program is open — sign up here!

What Week 1 Was Actually About

The first week of my Fat Loss Transformation Program isn't about restriction or dramatic changes. It's about gathering data. The two main tasks: track everything you eat and drink, and do daily weigh-ins. Together, these give you a real picture of what your body is used to getting — and how it's responding.

I use the ABC Trainerize app for tracking, and I step on the scale at the same time every day, wearing roughly the same thing. Here's why that matters: body weight can fluctuate 3–5 pounds in a single day based on water retention, sodium, carb intake, and more. Weighing in once a week gives you a snapshot that might not reflect reality. Daily weigh-ins give you a trend — and that's what actually tells the story.

The goal of this first week was to find my maintenance calories — the amount I need to eat for my weight to hold steady. From there, I can calculate what a sustainable deficit looks like.

The Surprising Thing I Discovered

I suspected I was undereating before I started tracking. One look at the data confirmed it.

Day two was the clearest example: I got distracted by work, didn't plan my meals, and ended up going to bed without eating dinner. I woke up in the middle of the night hungry, overheated, and wide awake — a really familiar pattern for a lot of people.

Here's what I want you to understand about chronic undereating: it doesn't automatically mean fat loss. When your body doesn't know when its next meal is coming, it adapts by slowing your metabolism down. It holds onto fat as a protective measure. So irregular eating or massively undershooting your calories over time can actually work against fat loss goals — not for them.

By day two or three, I decided to get intentional. Even though the goal of week one is just to observe, I started planning three to four meals a day and making sure I actually ate them — especially since I was adding more exercise to my routine. Training on an empty tank feels awful, and recovery suffers too.

What the Numbers Showed

After a week of daily weigh-ins alongside tracking, my average weight moved from 141 lbs down to about 140.5 lbs. Slow, steady, exactly what I'm aiming for — about a half pound per week.

And here's the thing: I was eating more than I was before I started tracking.

This is something I see with clients constantly. When you're undereating irregularly, your body holds. When you start fueling consistently, your metabolism wakes back up — and fat loss follows. Cool to experience it firsthand again.

My meals were already pretty solid: each one hitting around 25g of protein, plenty of vegetables (lots of beans, lentils, chickpeas), and 500–700 calories per meal. I added an egg or two here and there to bump protein, but nothing dramatic.

At this point, I don't think I need to change much. I'm going to stay at ~1,800 calories/day and keep the same structure.

The one lever I'm keeping in my back pocket: I drink three to four coffees a day, each with a tablespoon of hot chocolate mix. That's about 260 extra calories per day. If I want to accelerate from half a pound to a pound per week, swapping that for cocoa powder and a zero-calorie sweetener like monk fruit would get me there. I'm not making that change yet — that coffee ritual is genuinely important to me — but it's there if I need it.

How Training Went

My exercise routine as an advanced lifter looks a little different from where I'd start a beginner. I'm doing a 4-day upper/lower split rather than full-body days, which gives my muscles the stimulus they need to stay strong during a deficit.

Upper Body Day 1 (Push/Press): Started with Arnold presses to open up my shoulders — essential for me since sitting at a desk rounds my shoulders forward. Moved into a 5x5 bench press at 95 lbs, then reverse flies (for external shoulder rotation), and tricep dips. I underestimated how much I'd regressed on dips — had to extend my legs mid-set to add enough resistance to actually feel the burn.

Leg Day: I made a classic mistake: skipped my dynamic warm-up. I knew my hip was tight, thought it would loosen up, kept going anyway. It didn't loosen up. By that night, the inflammation had worked its way from my hip down through my quad and into my knee. Nothing serious, but it was tight for a couple of days.

Lesson relearned: always do your dynamic stretches. Especially hip swings on squat days. This is non-negotiable for me because of how I sit while working. I tell my clients this. I should have listened to myself.

The workout itself was solid — heel-elevated Smith machine squats for deep quad activation, Bulgarian split squats for overall leg development, and hip abduction work. But I paid for skipping the warm-up.

Back Day (Pull): Pendlay rows, Romanian deadlifts (added a deficit on my last set and loved it — I'll be doing all of them from a deficit going forward), and assisted pull-ups on the machine. One note for my fellow shorter women: I'm 5'3" and most gym machines are built for average-height men. I need to add a thick folded mat to the knee pad on the pull-up machine to get my elbows fully down at the top. Don't be afraid to modify the equipment to fit your body.

Finished with cable reverse flies and bicep curls — and okay, I also practiced some bodybuilding posing because I had a great pump and I was feeling myself. No regrets.

What's Next for Week 2

  • Continue tracking at ~1,800 calories/day

  • Keep daily weigh-ins

  • Match last week's training, aiming to push one or two more reps per set

  • Do my dynamic warm-up every single time

That's it for Week 2. The big takeaway so far: eating more consistently is what's moving the needle, not eating less. Data over assumptions, always.

If you're working on your own fat loss goals and want a coach in your corner, my Fat Loss Transformation Program is linked below. Come join me:

 

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Ep 91 | My Fat Loss Journey End of Week 2 Check In

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Ep 89 | Start Here: The Only 5 Pieces of Equipment You Need to Build a Home Gym