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The trickiest kind of stuck in weight loss is the maintenance limbo after success, and almost nobody warns you about it.
There are many ways to feel stuck in weight loss, and I've experienced most of them. The one I want to talk about is the trickiest, because from the outside it doesn't look like being stuck at all. It looks like you're doing fine. You lost the weight. You're holding. What's the problem?
The problem is that holding has a cost, and almost nobody warns you about it.
After losing a fair amount, I entered a Calorie intake equal to energy expenditure, resulting in stable weight.Full definition → phase. The idea was to see what it took to stabilize at this weight before going down another significant chunk. This turns out to be a difficult period, and difficult in a way the initial cut isn't.
During the cut, the rules are clear and the drive is strong. In maintenance, you start reintroducing the foods you'd said no to. For me that was mostly the carb space: bread, potatoes, noodles. You moved out of the discipline that made you successful, on purpose, to see what living looks like with these back in.
When you experiment with those foods, two things happen at once. You confirm that yes, you actually like them and don't want to give them up forever. And you notice you put weight on almost immediately, because they're calorie-dense and you tend to eat a lot of them.
They're hard to manage by quantity. Certain amounts aren't worth cooking. Certain units aren't sold small. So you make more than you need and you overeat. The first plate is a lot of fun. By the third time, it's a staple you stuff yourself with, and it's become about the stomach volume and the automatic hunger these foods produce. You're just refilling, and you're always refilling a bit too much. Your pants start to fit tighter, then tighter again. The longer you wait, the further you The gradual, invisible loosening of structure that erodes progress — more dangerous than any single bad day.Full definition → from your minimum weight, and it stops feeling comfortable.
Fruit deserves a specific mention here, because it hides behind a healthy label. It's refreshing and mildly addictive thanks to the fructose, and it carries that "well, it's fruit" permission slip. Those are the ones that stick around for me longest.
When you're stuck like this, you're living somewhere between disciplined and compromising, and it costs you effort and willpower every day. Here's the cruel mechanism. You're putting in real work, and you can see plainly that you can't win, because mathematically you're maintaining or even eating slightly over. But you're not actually trying to win. To win you'd have to go in and significantly adjust, get the numbers right, run a deficit. And you've lost the edge a bit. You don't quite know what to do. So you keep paying willpower for a result that, by design, goes nowhere.
The reason it's hard to break is that you don't have the drive you had at the very start. Back then you were running away from a weight you couldn't stand. That fear was fuel. Now you've already succeeded, so there's a real sense of pride and satisfaction sitting in the tank. You've regained a little, but not enough to panic that you've lost all your progress. You want things back under control. Just not today. That sentence, repeated, is the entire limbo.
What works for me now is holding one fact steady: another cut is coming, and it's part of the plan. The objective still stands. It just doesn't have to be today. That single reframe changes the job.
The job, in the limbo, isn't to win. It's to not lose ground while I wait for the window. So I stay engaged with the topic instead of looking away. I get more careful that I don't gain from here on. I stabilize, I spend some deliberate time at this level, and I let my identity rebuild around these foods so the carb-overeating drops out of my short-term habit. Then I wait until the stars align and the mood genuinely returns to say: this is a brilliant moment to start producing a serious deficit again. I trust that day will come, because for me it always has.
It's a fair worry. "Wait for the right moment" is exactly what someone avoiding the work would say, and if you use it that way it's a trap. The difference is in what you do while you wait. Coasting means you stop tracking, stop paying attention, and let the drift run. Holding the line means you stay in the topic, watch the number, and refuse to climb back to an old weight. One is a plan with a pause built in. The other is just quitting with better PR. If your low point next time is meaningfully better than last time, you were holding. If it's worse, you were coasting and calling it patience.
This is the period where most tools abandon you, because most tools are built for the active cut and have nothing to say about the in-between. The useful thing during the limbo is unglamorous: stay in contact with the numbers so the drift can't hide, and keep one or two parts of the routine running so you're not starting from zero when the window opens. That's what FastNow is for in this phase. Not a heroic push. A place to keep watching, keep logging, and hold.
Weight is a lifelong project for a lot of people who've struggled with it. You'll do this adjustment more than once in your life. The thing that matters is not to act out of guilt, shame, fear, or avoidance, but to be honest and transparent with yourself. Track. Stay careful. If you fall back, fall back to a higher new floor than before. It isn't a straight line, it fluctuates, and your lowest point next time should be better than the one before. Over a long enough run, you win. You're not failing right now. You're between rounds.