Supersweetums 1,164 Posted July 9, 2012 So, before surgery, I never even weight myself to see if my weight fluctuated throughout a month due to hormones or not. Now that I am at goal and fairly stable, I am more in tune with my body then I ever was before. And it is driving me CRAZY! I have weight fluctuations throughout my cycle that leave me scratching my head...what is my real weight!? Ovulation = 2-4 lbs weight gain plus bloating for about a week. Then I go back down to normal for less than a week, and then back up 2-4 lbs during PMS until the tail end of my period, then BOOM, back down 2-4 lbs overnight. Then I will stay there for 2 weeks until ovulation starts again. I am a logically person and know that this is probably pretty normal, but none-the-less, it is driving me CRAZY!!!! Anyone else have this experience?? Any confirmation that this is normal and I am not alone would be great!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CdnExpat 49 Posted July 10, 2012 So' date=' before surgery, I never even weight myself to see if my weight fluctuated throughout a month due to hormones or not. Now that I am at goal and fairly stable, I am more in tune with my body then I ever was before. And it is driving me CRAZY! I have weight fluctuations throughout my cycle that leave me scratching my head...what is my real weight!? Ovulation = 2-4 lbs weight gain plus bloating for about a week. Then I go back down to normal for less than a week, and then back up 2-4 lbs during PMS until the tail end of my period, then BOOM, back down 2-4 lbs overnight. Then I will stay there for 2 weeks until ovulation starts again. I am a logically person and know that this is probably pretty normal, but none-the-less, it is driving me CRAZY!!!! Anyone else have this experience?? Any confirmation that this is normal and I am not alone would be great!![/quote'] Yup. This is normal. Some women fluctuate 8-10 pds (!!) during their cycle. 2-4 pounds at "overweight" isn't a big deal, but that same 2-4 pounds at "skinny" is a much different matter. We usually try to get women to weigh at the same times in their cycle for three months so they have an accurate graph of the hormone-induced fluctuation. Almost always, the gain/loss has a net value of zero over the whole month, which means a) it's really hormones and not weight gain and it's not anything to get excited about. HTH. CE Share this post Link to post Share on other sites