Quick question.

RoyBeck
Posts: 947 Member
If your MFP goals are set to include no exercise and you have a calorie allowance of 2000 MFP is set up so as you lose a certain amount of lbs yes? Say 2lb for example.
If you then burnt 500 calories 7x per week would you not lose another 2lb of fat totalling 4 lbs per week?
Just wondering?
If you then burnt 500 calories 7x per week would you not lose another 2lb of fat totalling 4 lbs per week?
Just wondering?
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Replies
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If your MFP goals are set to include no exercise and you have a calorie allowance of 2000 MFP is set up so as you lose a certain amount of lbs yes? Say 2lb for example.
If you then burnt 500 calories 7x per week would you not lose another 2lb of fat totalling 4 lbs per week?
Just wondering?
Technically I believe the math supports 3 lbs per week. To get the original 2 lbs your deficit is 1,000 calories per day. Adding 500 more would get another pound lost in theory. I suppose it really depends on how much weight a person has to lose though. A morbidly obese person can sustain a higher deficit than someone with 20-30 lbs to lose.0 -
You wouldn't lose another 2 pounds. 500 x 7= 3500 (1 Pound). Also, just because you lose weight on the scale, it doesn't mean that it is automatically fat.0
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Right. I'm currently 238 and my goal weight is 195. I'm still on 2lb per week right now but will reduce to 1lb in a few weeks.0
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You wouldn't lose another 2 pounds. 500 x 7= 3500 (1 Pound). Also, just because you lose weight on the scale, it doesn't mean that it is automatically fat.
What I meant was that MFP sets you to lose 2lb per week. So scheduling another 3500 calories lost (What I meant originally sorry) would result in a 3lb loss?0 -
Mathematically yes, in the real world maybe, maybe not. Weight loss just doesn't conform that way. There's way too many variables to be able to predict that you ate exactly X and burned exactly Y plus factoring in that your body will do whatever if wants.0
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Here is what the math doesn't tell you - the breakdown of fat loss vs lean body mass (muscle, water, tissue, bone density, etc). Slow weight loss + high protein + heavy lifting = minimized muscle loss. Fast weight loss = more lean body mass loss + fast loss. If you want to be lean and fat, minimizing muscle loss is key. Otherwise it could take you much longer to hit your ideal body.0
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I see. Thanks for the replies. I'm not looking to lose weight quickly I'm just thinking of a million and one things about a million and one things0
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