(28-04-2011, 22:29)bunnyday Wrote: So all through high school and even now in college I've been told that I'm too thin (5'3 and 100 lbs) and need to gain weight. I've tried everything I can to gain weight, and it's just not happening. I've been on birth control for a year, in 3 different forms (pill, patch, now ring) but it took me 8 months to gain about 4 lbs and 4 months to lose 7 lbs. yeah. The weight loss is because of stress, but still
Fortunately my breasts didn't shrink, but they're just... small. I've been pretty much the same size all over since I was 13 and I'm 19 now. I've been trying to eat different foods, I heard drinking more milk would help with both my weight and breasts... of course not. I've tried exercising to build appetite so I can eat more and gain weight... didn't work. I'm tired of people thinking I'm sick, and I hate having breasts too small to even fit into a junior XS (let alone look good in one!). I feel pathetic when I look at anyone else, because so few people have a chest like mine. I'm on another forum where I seriously have the smallest chest of any of the females there, and I feel even more insecure. I read about one girl who called her 34b breasts "ridiculous." wtf? I'd love to have 34b breasts. My 17 year old sister is 34b, her breasts are far from small.
I don't really know what to do now. I've heard about fenugreek, but I have no idea where to get that (North Carolina is not known for its abundant supply of fenugreek). I've also heard that it doesn't work. I keep hearing about this "BO" on here, but I have no idea what it is
Is it safe for 19-year-olds, or would I have to wait until I'm in my 20s? Because I really doubt I'll grow much.
Hey Bunnday,
I know how you feel because I have had the same problem as you, if not even worse. at 5'3" and only 100 lbs, your bmi is only 17.7, which is considered underweight. My bmi used to be even less than yours - I am tall and slim, and at 5'8" tall I used to actually weigh only about 115 lbs, which put me at a bmi of 17.5. When I was very ill with the flu my weight plummeted to as low as 107 lbs. People always told me I should model but I was offended by it because truth be told I really really hate the look of most size 0-2 models, and that includes pretty much all of the victoria's secret models.
But don't give up - It is totally possible to gain weight! I did, and now I weight 130 lbs, which means I'm not underweight anymore, and I have 34Cs to boot. The key to weight gain is eating more calories than you burn. Try calculating your basal metabolic rate (search for it on google) and you should be able to find how many calories you burn per day. I burn an insane amount - around 2,400, without even having to excersize. So I have to eat a lot of calories. But that doesn't mean I have to eat a lot of food. I just have to know which ones to eat and which ones to avoid. I try to eat mostly high-calorie foods. I joined the website fitday.com and made a list of what foods I ate each day, and this helped me a lot to find out what worked and what didn't.
Eggs are great for protein, as are nutritional shakes and peanut butter smoothies from Jamba Juice. Try not to eat all junk food. Search for foods that have these three things:
1.The food has a lot of calories
2.You can eat some of it without making yourself sick from over eating
3.You like the food.
Pasta is a great example of this - you can eat a lot of it, it'll make you gain weight, it isn't bad for you, and it's tasty! Try making fresh pasta, with olive oil, grape tomatoes and chicken or shrimp. Yum! Or eat mashed potatoes with butter and garlic. Those are great too!
All this may seem hard to do at first, but be creative and eventually you'll find foods that work for you. Make it a routine to eat these foods whenever you can, and before you know it, you'll gain weight. Believe me, it seemed impossible for me to gain weight at first, but I finally did and now I feel awesome. I am only 20 years old, by the way. I can also excersize now and build up muscle without having to worry about losing weight as a result of living an active life.