daily calories needed
cscheiern
Posts: 45
When I started here, I was out of shape, no muscle tone and weak. I entered my weight, height, etc. and got my daily calories for my goals. Now I have been working out, much more active and I can see some muscles now. My height and weight have not changed, but I see a difference. Now the question-- wouldnt I need a different amount of calories to maintain muscle than no muscle? I thought (from what Ive read) I would burn more calories overall after I started building muscle. But on this chart there is no allowance for this, am I wrong?
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When I started here, I was out of shape, no muscle tone and weak. I entered my weight, height, etc. and got my daily calories for my goals. Now I have been working out, much more active and I can see some muscles now. My height and weight have not changed, but I see a difference. Now the question-- wouldnt I need a different amount of calories to maintain muscle than no muscle? I thought (from what Ive read) I would burn more calories overall after I started building muscle. But on this chart there is no allowance for this, am I wrong?
Yes. But this is a generic model. You need to change it depending on specifics to your life.0 -
Seems like u getting rid of fat and putting muscle on - if no weight difference then keep calories as is - maybe play with your macros to better maintain your gains!0
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I think it prompts you to reset goals after every 10 pounds lost. Even if it doesnt. you should.0
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Yes, if you have a low bf% and a lot of muscle, you will need more calories to maintain than another person your same weight with a higher bf%. I find that mfp underestimates my maintenance calories for this reason.0
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thanks everyone who replied. I will look into this further...0
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From a psychological perspective, upping calories as you reduce fat mass will make the transition towards maintenance easier since you'd only be anticipating increasing calories by a very small amount compared to sustaining a static intake throughout.0
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When I started here, I was out of shape, no muscle tone and weak. I entered my weight, height, etc. and got my daily calories for my goals. Now I have been working out, much more active and I can see some muscles now. My height and weight have not changed, but I see a difference. Now the question-- wouldnt I need a different amount of calories to maintain muscle than no muscle? I thought (from what Ive read) I would burn more calories overall after I started building muscle. But on this chart there is no allowance for this, am I wrong?
as someone else says, the calculator is fairly generic...
MFP has my maintenance as 1600 cals, plus exercise, but i actually maintain at 2000 cals plus exercise.0 -
When I started here, I was out of shape, no muscle tone and weak. I entered my weight, height, etc. and got my daily calories for my goals. Now I have been working out, much more active and I can see some muscles now. My height and weight have not changed, but I see a difference. Now the question-- wouldnt I need a different amount of calories to maintain muscle than no muscle? I thought (from what Ive read) I would burn more calories overall after I started building muscle. But on this chart there is no allowance for this, am I wrong?
Although people waffle on about "adding muscle to make yourself a calorie burning machine" it's either hyperbole or misunderstanding.
Off the top of my head I think the difference between maintaining a pound of fat and a pound of muscle is only about 6 cals a day. (From memory: 3 cals/day to maintain 1lb fat, 9 cals/day to maintain 1lb muscle.)
Just changing your daily activity / exercise is going to make more of a significant difference to your maintenance calories.0 -
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The number of calories burned by resting muscles isn't really large enough to make much of a difference just by adding a few pounds of muscle.
Although people waffle on about "adding muscle to make yourself a calorie burning machine" it's either hyperbole or misunderstanding.
Off the top of my head I think the difference between maintaining a pound of fat and a pound of muscle is only about 6 cals a day. (From memory: 3 cals/day to maintain 1lb fat, 9 cals/day to maintain 1lb muscle.)
Just changing your daily activity / exercise is going to make more of a significant difference to your maintenance calories.
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ok, this sounds reasonable, I didnt know the numbers would be so close.0 -
ok, this sounds reasonable, I didnt know the numbers would be so close.
My numbers from memory were slightly off (that's old age for you....) but not that far.
Have a read of this.....
http://www.bodyrecomposition.com/research-review/dissecting-the-energy-needs-of-the-body-research-review.html0
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