calories in/out

luvbug1995
luvbug1995 Posts: 9 Member
edited November 20 in Health and Weight Loss
I just calculated my resting calorie need per day. Turns out to be 1344. my daily calorie goal here is 1200. I know 3500 calories is = to a pound lost. With these numbers, how am i going to lose weight? If i need a 500 calorie deficit that's eating only 844 calories a day. I do walk 30-40 mins on treadmill 5 days a week and take 1-2 yoga classes a week. I know these do not add up to a 500 calorie burn per session. I'm 4'11" and weight 142. My goal is 129. Looking for some suggestions to help think I'm not going to be stuck at this weight forever

Replies

  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    People with lower calorie needs can lose weight, they're just going to lose it more slowly and accurate logging will be important. You don't need a 500 calorie deficit to lose weight, you just need a deficit.

    If you are exercising regularly, your calorie needs are higher than your resting calorie needs -- this is another factor to consider when determining your deficit.

    Smaller people often have a deficit that is smaller than 500, like 250. A pound a week likely isn't a realistic goal for you, but that doesn't mean that you can't lose weight.
  • jemhh
    jemhh Posts: 14,261 Member
    If you set up your MFP profile noting that you'd like to lose a pound a week, your deficit is already built into the goal you've been given. You are supposed to eat 1200 PLUS your exercise calories. Do that for a month and then tweak calories up/down based on results.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    edited August 2017
    Using scoobysworkshop.com, I got this for you - assuming you are lightly active, 22 years old and female.

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    That is not eating back exercise calories. So if you eat the 1344 + exercise calories, you should end up around that 1584.

    Trust the process. Log accurately. Use a food scale. Give it 6-8 weeks. If you aren't losing approximately 1 pound per week (any more than that is too much for you at your current weight), adjust from there.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    luvbug1995 wrote: »
    I just calculated my resting calorie need per day. Turns out to be 1344. my daily calorie goal here is 1200. I know 3500 calories is = to a pound lost. With these numbers, how am i going to lose weight? If i need a 500 calorie deficit that's eating only 844 calories a day. I do walk 30-40 mins on treadmill 5 days a week and take 1-2 yoga classes a week. I know these do not add up to a 500 calorie burn per session. I'm 4'11" and weight 142. My goal is 129. Looking for some suggestions to help think I'm not going to be stuck at this weight forever

    That 1344 number is just the calories you burn by merely existing...I'm sure you do more than exist. Everything you do burns calories beyond your BMR.

    My BMR is somewhere between 1700-1800...I lost weight eating around 2300 total calories daily...because I do more than just exist.
  • kommodevaran
    kommodevaran Posts: 17,890 Member
    Your resting calorie need per day might well be 1344, but do you rest all day? Or do you sit up, walk the dog, go to the bathroom, drive to work, do the dishes? Google TDEE. When you set up MFP, did you enter your stats and put weight loss as a goal? Why didn't the calorie goal it gave you back, look trustworthy?
  • luvbug1995
    luvbug1995 Posts: 9 Member
    Should have mentioned my age 44, premenopasal but refusing to show my age. ;)
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    edited August 2017
    Changed the age to 44...

    tkwoe5aisknq.jpg

    Again, this is counting exercise calories, which MFP does not do.
  • luvbug1995
    luvbug1995 Posts: 9 Member
    Thanks for the calculation!!
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,258 Member
    luvbug1995 wrote: »
    Should have mentioned my age 44, premenopasal but refusing to show my age. ;)

    You initial post sounds like you're just getting started. That suggests to me that you're despairing based on a theory about what will happen. Frankly, that's a waste of time.

    First, your theory, considered as such, is incorrect. I plugged your stats into a standard multi-formula Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) and Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) calculator. Your stated BMR (RMR), 1344, is in the range that the calculator estimates. But, as others have said, your BMR is what you'd burn in a coma.

    According to the calculator I used (sailrabbit), if you have a normal office job kind of life (i.e., sedentary) your TDEE would be more like 1400-1600. Add your exercise, it's more like 1700-1900.

    So, 1200 calories would have you losing .5-1 pound a week. You don't want to be losing faster than that, anyway, with so little to lose. (Part of resisting aging is hanging onto as much existing muscle as possible; losing weight too fast risks that.)

    But all of the above is still a theory . What do with theories? We test them.

    So, set up your MFP profile, and put in that you want to lose 0.5 pounds/week (youth-protecting choice ;) ). Log your eating accurately. On days you exercise, log that and eat 50-100% of those calories, too (picking the percent based in how confident you are that the exercise estimate is accurate). Do this for a full menstrual cycle, plus a little.

    Then you'll have something better than a theory: You'll have data. If you're losing too fast, eat more. If you're losing too slowly, eat less, eat back a smaller percent of exercise, exercise more, or some conbination.

    Don't worry about theories. Go by results. At age 61, 5'5", weight in the 120s, the calculator says my BMR should be 1000-1100, and sedentary TDEE 1300-1400 (1700-2000 with exercise). Gloomy theory, right? Trouble is, it's false. I actually lose slowly at 1800 (before exercise) and maintain my weight closer to 2100, plus eat 200-300 exercise calories most days on top of that.

    Who knows, maybe you'll be lucky, too. Either way, you don't know until you test it out. The calculators just give you a starting point estimate, not a true-gospel answer.
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