Is 1000 calories a day good?
singerisacrook
Posts: 2 Member
So I'm eating about 1000 calories a day, however since I'm working for 8 hours, standing walking and lifting bags, I'm burning all of it off, and probably more. Is that good? I don't feel worn down just yet, this is my third day
6
Replies
-
No. Not good. You're significantly undereating. You shouldn't be in negative calories, which is what you are if you're eating 1000 calories, and then burning those off in exercise and work. Your body burns calories, a reasonable amount of them, simply existing. Purposeful exercise and active lifestyle are burns on top of that. You should be eating a minimum of 1500 calories and the eating some of your exercise/active lifestyle calories back on top of that.9
-
Not at all. You're doing it wrong unless you care nothing about your health and just want to lose weight by any means. Definitely not sustainable.1
-
It's a good way to lose a lot of muscle, hair, mess with your organs...
How old are you?8 -
Absolutely not. 1000 is too low if you're basically lying in bed all day. But you're moving around? Not good.1
-
Unless you are doing this under the supervision of a doctor, then no it really isn't a good thing to do even if you weren't working out that would still be too few calories for any adult or young adult.0
-
singerisacrook wrote: »So I'm eating about 1000 calories a day, however since I'm working for 8 hours, standing walking and lifting bags, I'm burning all of it off, and probably more. Is that good? I don't feel worn down just yet, this is my third day
No. The minimum recommended is 1200, but then you're burning a lot, so you need to eat more than the minimum.1 -
singerisacrook wrote: »So I'm eating about 1000 calories a day, however since I'm working for 8 hours, standing walking and lifting bags, I'm burning all of it off, and probably more. Is that good? I don't feel worn down just yet, this is my third day
No. The minimum recommended is 1200, but then you're burning a lot, so you need to eat more than the minimum.
1500 is minimum as op is a guy3 -
No. Your body needs fuel!!!! With that low of a calorie intake you are probably not getting enough nutrients (vitamins and minerals), let alone calories to fuel your life.0
-
CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »NikkiAnnette11 wrote: »It depends on your situation. If you are being closely supervised by a doctor, nutritionist, and trainer it is ok for a short period of time. I am doing the same thing right now with all of these people guiding me, making sure I am getting the proper percentages of protein/fats/carbs and making sure that I eat 30% of my daily calories both pre and post workout. I am also not staying at this calorie amount for long (about 2 months), just enough to get my metabolism back on track.
why do you think you need to get your metabolism back on track? its always working. not to mention anyone can become a nutritionist and most trainers dont have any degrees in dietary need/nutrition,etc. your dr told you to do this? what?
I would hypothesize that would be more damaging to metabolism than getting it on track...3 -
OP, you're a large man (in another thread you say you are 6'3" and 275 pounds), and you look to be very young, with an active job. All of those factors combined say that you can lose at a steady and fast rate with WAY more than 1000 calories. Starving yourself is a terrible idea and it will lead to some nasty negative outcomes if you keep it up for long. A better plan is to plug your info into MFP and follow its recommendations while tracking accurately.6
-
deannalfisher wrote: »CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »NikkiAnnette11 wrote: »It depends on your situation. If you are being closely supervised by a doctor, nutritionist, and trainer it is ok for a short period of time. I am doing the same thing right now with all of these people guiding me, making sure I am getting the proper percentages of protein/fats/carbs and making sure that I eat 30% of my daily calories both pre and post workout. I am also not staying at this calorie amount for long (about 2 months), just enough to get my metabolism back on track.
why do you think you need to get your metabolism back on track? its always working. not to mention anyone can become a nutritionist and most trainers dont have any degrees in dietary need/nutrition,etc. your dr told you to do this? what?
I would hypothesize that would be more damaging to metabolism than getting it on track...
I agree0 -
heck Im female and ate over 2000 calories when I first started and lost weight. I was sedentary at the time as well. so yeah for a male you should be eating more than 1000 for sure and if you are that tall and weigh 275 then you probably could eat more than 2000 and still lose as well. there is NO reason why anyone has to eat very low calories unless they are under the care of a dr,have a certain health issue or is an outlier. eating that little will have some drastic results down the line that you may or may not see until it hits you like a ton of bricks.0
-
singerisacrook wrote: »So I'm eating about 1000 calories a day, however since I'm working for 8 hours, standing walking and lifting bags, I'm burning all of it off, and probably more. Is that good? I don't feel worn down just yet, this is my third day
You are MALE.....so no, 1000 calories is not good. When you try to lose weight in an aggressive manner, the percentage of lean muscle loss will be rather high.
Your heart, lungs, kidneys, etc. need nourishment everyday. Unless your were bed ridden 1,000 calories wouldn't be enough.1 -
What do YOU think? Do you think the less food you eat, the faster you lose? That's not the whole picture. You need to eat less to lose weight, but you need to eat enough, too, to not lose your health, possibly your life. You can go for a few days without food or with little food, and it will take some time before you feel the effect, but why should you - it's unpleasant, unnecessary, and a few days here and there really has no impact in the long run, if you just go back to how you ate before; but what undereating really does, is make you overeat more afterwards.
Why wouldn't you use MFP as it's designed? If you're new, or if you've been struggling with weight for a long time. what makes you think you know better?0 -
This content has been removed.
-
Yeah 1000 calories is good...for breakfast10
-
singerisacrook wrote: »So I'm eating about 1000 calories a day, however since I'm working for 8 hours, standing walking and lifting bags, I'm burning all of it off, and probably more. Is that good? I don't feel worn down just yet, this is my third day
Nope, not good... completely wrong.0 -
You can keep this up for a few days, sure no harm will get to you if you continue... Sigh...
Please do yourself a favour and google VLC diet side effects. It is not pleasant mate. You love your hair? Good, because soon that beautiful shiny mane of yours will start to fall out.
My hairdresser always knows when someone goes on a VLC diet which is what your zero calories comes under, as they come in to see her, really happy about their weight loss, as pale as can get with the dullest skin and their hair falling out, sometimes 3-6 months after they start eating properly again. Please learn from other people's mistakes and don't take this shortcut. It is really not worth it.1 -
This content has been removed.
-
I'm a 5'4" woman lightly active and I eat 1500 cals to lose weight. He is male and has an active job. How could you even suggest this might be okay???
OP, hopefully your logging is inaccurate and you are actually eating more than that. Regardless, you should NET at least 1500 per day. Please take care of yourself.0 -
I do not see anything wrong with it as long as you are eating right kinds of food (high protein and high fiber). You can look up transformation video clips on YouTube to see how people did it; it's a lot more convincing than asking random people on here. You need to determine your basal metabolic rate (it is determined base on your gender, age, current weight and physical activity) and go from there.
Do you think a 5'4 ft tall guy and a 6'3 ft tall guy should be consuming the same amount of calories?
I'm a 5'4" woman lightly active and I eat 1500 cals to lose weight. He is male and has an active job. How could you even suggest this might be okay???
OP, hopefully your logging is inaccurate and you are actually eating more than that. Regardless, you should NET at least 1500 per day. Please take care of yourself.
If you want to lose weight, you must burn more calories than you consume. As long as OP is taking multi-vitamin, drinking plenty of water, consuming high-fiber or high-protein food then I don't see anything wrong with it. Oh by the way, only eat when you are hungry and not because it's time to eat.2 -
-
I do not see anything wrong with it as long as you are eating right kinds of food (high protein and high fiber). You can look up transformation video clips on YouTube to see how people did it; it's a lot more convincing than asking random people on here. You need to determine your basal metabolic rate (it is determined base on your gender, age, current weight and physical activity) and go from there.
Do you think a 5'4 ft tall guy and a 6'3 ft tall guy should be consuming the same amount of calories?
I'm a 5'4" woman lightly active and I eat 1500 cals to lose weight. He is male and has an active job. How could you even suggest this might be okay???
OP, hopefully your logging is inaccurate and you are actually eating more than that. Regardless, you should NET at least 1500 per day. Please take care of yourself.
If you want to lose weight, you must burn more calories than you consume. As long as OP is taking multi-vitamin, drinking plenty of water, consuming high-fiber or high-protein food then I don't see anything wrong with it. Oh by the way, only eat when you are hungry and not because it's time to eat.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
1
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 422 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions