Kilogs Official

What’s your biggest struggle with tracking kilos? Ever had a week where you gained but looked leaner? Drop your story below. 👇 If this helped, save it for the next time the scale messes with your head.

When you see the number go up, ask yourself: Did I actually overeat by 7,700 calories since yesterday? The answer is almost always no. One kilo on the scale is rarely one kilo of real tissue. It’s a snapshot of a moment—hydrated, inflamed, digesting, hormonal.

But here’s where it gets tricky.

We’ve all been there. You step on the scale, hold your breath, and peek down at the number. Up a kilo. Down half a kilo. Stuck at the same damn kilo for three weeks. If you’ve been chasing kilograms (or "kilos" as most of the world calls them) up and down the bathroom floor, this post is for you.

Kilos are a tool, not a judge. Use them like a compass—a general direction, not a GPS telling you every turn. If you drive yourself crazy chasing a specific kilogram number, you’ll miss the real wins: strength, freedom from binge-restrict cycles, and liking what you see in the mirror even when the scale is being a jerk. kilogs

The Truth About Those Stubborn Kilos: Why the Scale Doesn't Tell the Whole Story

So step off the scale. Take a deep breath. Drink some water, eat some protein, go for a walk. Those stubborn kilos will move when they’re ready. And in the meantime, you’ve got a life to live. What’s your biggest struggle with tracking kilos

One kilogram is roughly 2.2 pounds. It’s the mass of a liter of water, a small laptop, or a bag of sugar. In body weight, one kilo of pure fat stores about 7,700 calories. That means to lose one real kilo of fat, you need a deficit of 7,700 calories. To gain a kilo of muscle, you need consistent training, protein, and time.