Eating back exercise calories
chnkysoup
Posts: 79 Member
Do you guys eat back the calories you burn through exercise? I have been. Not all but some. It makes me really nervous to do that though....I've just started counting calories again (for the past 5 days) so I haven't been able to fully see how it may affect me. Also, I use my iPhone to count my daily steps which automatically raises my calorie goal due to calories burned (these are the calories I am somewhat eating back). While I do go on walks specifically for exercise the rest of my steps come from just going about my day and if I didn't have a step counter I wouldn't count this as exercise but MFP does. In my settings I put that I am sedentary and I guess I sort of consider most of these steps part of my lifestyle. Yesterday I got up to 10,000 around 6:30 p.m. What do you guys suggest I do with those calories burned? Hope this makes sense...;)
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Replies
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Yes, I eat back my exercise calories. If you find that you aren't losing weight, you may want to adjust back how many you're eating. But MFP is designed to eat back those calories.0
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If it makes you nervous, maybe consider doing a TDEE approach where you factor exercise in up front but then don't log it here. But I'd wait and see how it goes with the MFP approach.0
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Most people I've seen eat half of them back since calorie burns are typically overestimated...0
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I eat back 100% but am careful to estimate properly.0
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i haven't been this week, but usually I eat back 75% - all of them. BUT you have to be 100% on point with your logging (both your food and exercise) because if you're under counting your calories or overestimating your exercise...0
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I eat back some of them. It really depends on the day.0
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I eat back some, sometimes all of them. You need to do some trial and error to see what works for you. If i didn't eat back my exercise calories I'd be netting 500-1000 cals most days.0
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I've kind of gone back and forth. If you have a consistent excercise schedule, I find the TDEE method to be easier to just have a daily calorie goal and adjust from there. If your excercise is kind of erratic eating back exercise calories may be the way to go.0
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when you start to look at is as fueling your fitness, it makes sense...
with MFP, your calorie target includes your weight loss deficit without any exercise whatsoever...meaning if you just ate to your target and logged accurately, you would lose weight without lifting a finger in exercise. exercise is not accounted for in your activity level with MFP...you account for that activity by logging it. exercise activity increases your body's energy (calorie) requirements and thus should be accounted for appropriately.
where many go wrong is that they tend to be inaccurate in logging their intake...they pick generic entries from the data base like "homemade lasagna" or they pick entries that are just plain wrong and don't verify things...then on top of that they overestimate their calorie burns from exercise and don't verify those either.
this also becomes more important as the intensity of your exercise increases. exercise is very good for you, but doing a lot of vigorous exercise is also a huge stress on the body and the body requires nutrients and energy (calories) to repair itself. failure to provide those nutrients and that energy will eventually result in recovery issues and your risk of injury increases substantially. many overtrain issues aren't actually a matter of overtraining, but rather they are an issue of underfeeding their activity.0 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »when you start to look at is as fueling your fitness, it makes sense...
with MFP, your calorie target includes your weight loss deficit without any exercise whatsoever...meaning if you just ate to your target and logged accurately, you would lose weight without lifting a finger in exercise. exercise is not accounted for in your activity level with MFP...you account for that activity by logging it. exercise activity increases your body's energy (calorie) requirements and thus should be accounted for appropriately.
where many go wrong is that they tend to be inaccurate in logging their intake...they pick generic entries from the data base like "homemade lasagna" or they pick entries that are just plain wrong and don't verify things...then on top of that they overestimate their calorie burns from exercise and don't verify those either.
this also becomes more important as the intensity of your exercise increases. exercise is very good for you, but doing a lot of vigorous exercise is also a huge stress on the body and the body requires nutrients and energy (calories) to repair itself. failure to provide those nutrients and that energy will eventually result in recovery issues and your risk of injury increases substantially. many overtrain issues aren't actually a matter of overtraining, but rather they are an issue of underfeeding their activity.
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cwolfman13 wrote: »when you start to look at is as fueling your fitness, it makes sense...
with MFP, your calorie target includes your weight loss deficit without any exercise whatsoever...meaning if you just ate to your target and logged accurately, you would lose weight without lifting a finger in exercise. exercise is not accounted for in your activity level with MFP...you account for that activity by logging it. exercise activity increases your body's energy (calorie) requirements and thus should be accounted for appropriately.
where many go wrong is that they tend to be inaccurate in logging their intake...they pick generic entries from the data base like "homemade lasagna" or they pick entries that are just plain wrong and don't verify things...then on top of that they overestimate their calorie burns from exercise and don't verify those either.
this also becomes more important as the intensity of your exercise increases. exercise is very good for you, but doing a lot of vigorous exercise is also a huge stress on the body and the body requires nutrients and energy (calories) to repair itself. failure to provide those nutrients and that energy will eventually result in recovery issues and your risk of injury increases substantially. many overtrain issues aren't actually a matter of overtraining, but rather they are an issue of underfeeding their activity.
Agreed, this is a great response. Should be cut and pasted often.0
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