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EllaKereru
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Topic: Weight gain Posted: 17 January 2012 at 4:20pm |
Hi there,
I am just wanting a little bit of a vent and perhaps some reassurance. I have always eaten really well and made sure during this pregnancy I have eaten especially all the right things and not too much etc, milk, cheese, fruit, nuts etc. I have been continuing exercise too. I was 55kg when I had my first weigh in and now at 38 weeks I have jumped up to 76kg (21kg!). From what I have read the average weight gain should be only 10-15 kg so I am really worried about not being able to shed this baby weight. Especially since on some site I read that excess weight gain in pregnancy can mean continued weight problems afterwards. I know my priorities are definitely to have a healthy happy baby and I am probably being a little hormonal about it, but I have always been quite small (and short) and just wonder what other people's experiences are with the weight gain and loss. Sorry, hope I don't sound vane or anything!
Thanks,
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Herewegoagain
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Joined: 10 October 2011
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Posted: 17 January 2012 at 4:44pm |
No, you don't sound vain. I have the same worry with this pregnancy, it's hard to be gaining weight healthily and adjusting to it. Especially when you are doing all the right things.
I gained alot 20 plus kgs with my son, though I didn't exercise or eat as well as I should of.It took a good year to get back to my pre-pregnancy weight.
Though, as you have continued on with exercising you will bounce back quicker, be proud of the fact that you have kept up with exercise and good eating habits for a strong and healthy bub.
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MamaT
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Posted: 17 January 2012 at 8:15pm |
Try not to stress about it. With DS I went from 50kg to 75+kg (I stopped weighing myself after that). I got married at 6 weeks after baby and was only 10kg heavier than my pre-pregnancy weight and by about 3months I was back to my normal weight.
I figured that my body needed the extra weight to feed DS both during the pregnancy and afterwards with breastfeeding.
My SIL put on a lot of weight in her pregnancy too and went back to her pre-pregnancy weight very quickly.
The guidelines are just guidelines and you sound like you are a healthy and active woman, which of course is the main thing
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Dot2012
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 1:17pm |
This is my first pregnancy so I can't tell you if it is easy / hard to lose weight afterwards, but didn't want to just read and run! As long as your MW is happy with your gain then try not to worry about it. If you have always been small you might have been underweight when you conceived and hence your body needed to put on more?
Just one word of warning - do not google it! I was wondering if my gain to date was 'normal' and found a pregancy calculator online that, in not very gentle words, told me that I am over what I should be. Made me feel like rubbish and really, it wasn't helpful at all!
If you are eating a healthy, balanced diet and are active without overdoing it, you should be fine. And I don't think anyone here would think you are vain, its hard watching your body change so much and having very little control over it!
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Lizze
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 1:36pm |
i put on 18kg with my first pregnancy before i stopped weighing myself, lost 14kg in the first week - most of it was fluid! especially being a summer baby, my legs sweated for days afterwards
was only 4kg up on my pre pregnancy weight after the first week
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EllaKereru
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 1:46pm |
Thanks for the reassurance ladies. I figure it could also be due to my increase in calcium consumption - all that cheese, milk, yoghurt - will make for a healthy boned baby I hope!
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ArielAngel
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 3:06pm |
I was just over 70kgs when I got pregnant and stopped weighing myself at about 38 weeks when I got over 90kgs! I was lucky and the weight dropped off pretty quick and was down to 70kgs after about three months.
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After 16 months TTC, surprise BFP July 10 DD1 Mar 11 After 9 months TTC, BFP on 4th Clomid cycle Feb 13 DD2 Oct 13
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Hopes
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 3:46pm |
Also, the smaller you are to start with, the more you gain. 55kgs sounds very slim, so you have probably put on a bit more than average just because you were smaller to begin with. It's totally normal to care, too, BTW!
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GuestGuest
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 3:53pm |
I'm 55kgs and my MW has told me in no uncertain terms that I should only put on 10kgs. Talk about pressure!
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pumpkino
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 4:28pm |
LuckyRed wrote:
I'm 55kgs and my MW has told me in no uncertain terms that I should only put on 10kgs. Talk about pressure!  |
Well that's helpful...not. (Meaning your midwife in saying that to you, not you for posting!!)
Of course there will always be "averages" and "guidelines" but as others have said, as long as you are eating healthily (aside from the odd craving which must be indulged, lol) I totally wouldn't worry about it.
First time round I found that the baby weight pretty much came off on its own - most in the first 3-6 months, the last few kgs proba took a bit longer - without me going to the gym or anything, maybe because I was always going for long walks with the pram etc. So if I had really wanted to I'm sure I could have shifted it a lot quicker. Breastfeeding definitely helps!!
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AandCsmum
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 5:01pm |
I've put on a heap for me this pregnancy, BUT I did start way lower than what I was with my other pregnancies.
Lucky Red....only 10 kg??? I'm picking that you are really short for her to say that? I've put on 10kg so far & I've still got 10 weeks to go  And there is no way I've put on much "fat" either.
I think EllaKereru, that if you're eating well & exercising well, you'll bounce back after bubs is born & if you continue to eat well & exercise when you can the weight will come off. You'll automatically loose a huge amount straight after the birth due to baby (obviously) but also the placenta, fluids & the sheer effort that your body goes through to push a baby out. Depending on how long your labour is, you could equate that to continuous exercise.
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k8harris
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 7:46pm |
I was walking 7km every day and going to the gym right up until 2 weeks before DS was born and I put on over 20kg (was 65kg to start). Took me 9 months to get right back to my pre-birth weight but my body is just one of those bodies! Oh and all the antenatal coffee and cakes probably didn't help!!
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Buntingsmum
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Posted: 19 January 2012 at 8:06pm |
I was 51 kg to start - stopped weighing myself at 72 kg with a few weeks to go. Had LOADS of fluid. 2 weeks post partum was only 7 kg heavier and by three months was 1 kg lighter than when I started - I put it down to BF (was only going for walks with the stroller). I worried about it, but next time I'll just not weigh myself! Interesting I still can't fit my wedding ring - I think my finger joints enlarged as there certainly aint any fluid left!
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GuestGuest
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Posted: 20 January 2012 at 12:56pm |
AandCsmum wrote:
Lucky Red....only 10 kg??? I'm picking that you are really short for her to say that? I've put on 10kg so far & I've still got 10 weeks to go And there is no way I've put on much "fat" either.
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I'm shortish - 5 foot 4. Sounds pretty unrealistic to me. She said that there are too many women having bigger babies nowadays which leads to complications during the birth.
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Hopes
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Posted: 20 January 2012 at 1:37pm |
That just sounds... unusual. I mean, I think they say 12kg is a very normal gain, and I'd imagine most ladies of a 'standard' weight gain that or a bit more. If you're smaller, and have a tendancy to gain more anyway, that's basically setting you up to either stress out lots or starve yourself...
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Dot2012
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Posted: 20 January 2012 at 1:42pm |
Thats interesting LR - was she saying that the reason women were having bigger babies was because of excess weight gain then? I thought it might have more to do with us now knowing what the best nutrients were and targeting diets because of it, meaning the baby is able to grow more.
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GuestGuest
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Posted: 20 January 2012 at 2:10pm |
Don't worry, I'm not going to stress myself out over it! I'm going to try to eat healthily and exercise once I get past the ms and just see how I go. I doubt I would even monitor my weight gain, I'm not a scales kinda gal.
Yes, she was basically insinuating that women were gaining too much weight which means a bigger baby.
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Hopes
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Posted: 20 January 2012 at 2:20pm |
Well, sheep can do that - if they eat too much early on, you get trouble with lambing... so I guess humans can. On the other hand, I wouldn't have thought it was *that* much of an issue for us, it's the first I've heard of it.
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babygiraffe
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Posted: 25 January 2012 at 1:09pm |
LR I am baffled your midwife would say that to you! I've put on 20kg (give or take) and the only thing my midwife said to me was 'be careful, its you that has to lose it all'. Everyone keeps telling me how lucky I am that I haven't put on any weight during my pregnancy. Haha... If only they knew!
I know short girls that haven't put on much weight and they have had big babies, over 9lbs. I know tall girls who have stacked on the beef and their babies were only little. So who knows - just eat what you want. I did, was fun
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Kellz
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Posted: 25 January 2012 at 1:32pm |
Im 5ft 3, was 54 kg pre- both pregnancies,..stopped weighing myself at 70kg with #1 and refused to get on the scales with #2 preferring to guage me health on many other factors reather than what the scales are showing, and wont weigh myself this pregnancy either- I just refuse at the midwves and we dont own scales here!
Both times I was smaller than pre-preg weight by 3 months post-partum due to demand breastfeeding on a diet restricted due to the baby's allergys/reflux etc. Didnt excercise at all.
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