Do you eat back your exercise calories?
Replies
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I haven't been. I lost 17.6 pounds in 30 days. Depends on how quickly you want to lose. If you are still hungry after your required calories, I would eat the additional they give back to you.0
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Yep I eat back roughly 85% of my calories burned through exercise leaving 15% for error in calculations and lost weight... I am a firm believer that you must fuel your body for the workout you are demanding of it to do....... Best of Luck
^^^ Hmm.. ok, thinking aloud here.. If I eat back most of my calories, I won't have much of a calorie deficit. So, how will my body experience a weight loss? Wouldn't what you suggested be more relevant closer to the maintenance period? I am just wondering how it works..
My calorie deficit has already been established in to daily caloric intake so any calories burned through exercise have nothing to do with my weight loss but as more to do with refueling my body for the exercise that I am asking it to do.... If your using the MFP approach than this is they way you should be doing it unless you are doing TDEE if that is the case then your exercise calories are already calculated in.....0 -
I haven't been. I lost 17.6 pounds in 30 days. Depends on how quickly you want to lose. If you are still hungry after your required calories, I would eat the additional they give back to you.
Wait...You've been losing an average of 5 lbs a week? That's ridiculously unhealthy.
Not being hungry =/= eating enough0 -
I don't but I also eat 2350 a day, every day, whether I exercise or not. Through trial and error, I've determined my TDEE and eat a stagnant amount. If you pick an aggressive deficit, definitely eat back those calories. You need to fuel yourself. Losing weight doesn't mean starving0
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To most questions people pose like this, I say do what works for you. You have to have a plan that you can live with and sustain. I don't eat my exercise calories back, but if I was hungry and needed to, I would eat a small portion of them. As long as you're energy levels and health is good, do what works for you.0
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I eat back some. On an occasion, I'll eat all.0
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Wait...You've been losing an average of 5 lbs a week? That's ridiculously unhealthy.
With all due respect, this made me laugh. Being morbidly obese is ridiculously unhealthy. If I can get all the food, nutrients, cardio, and weight training I need and lose 5 lbs. a week, there's nothing wrong with that whatsoever.0 -
I usually don't but most people that I have seen on here do or a portion of them. I would suggest, do what your body is telling you. If you're hungry eat something small to help. If you're exercising and or being active you're going to need to eat to fuel your body.0
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Wait...You've been losing an average of 5 lbs a week? That's ridiculously unhealthy.
With all due respect, this made me laugh. Being morbidly obese is ridiculously unhealthy. If I can get all the food, nutrients, cardio, and weight training I need and lose 5 lbs. a week, there's nothing wrong with that whatsoever.
This person has 23 lbs left to lose. I am under the assumption they are neither morbidly obese or under a doctor's supervision. So yes, I stand by unhealthy.
Getting a proper caloric amount to fuel your body is a necessity. While someone with more weight to lose can take it a bit more aggressively, it isn't the standard for everyone to do so.
Less weight means less fat. Less fat means the body is more likely to use muscle as well as fat for energy. I don't think most people who get so fixated on the scale realize that if they forget that muscle is important, they are likely to end up skinny fat and unhappy with the end results. It's why I gave up a goal weight and focused on fueling myself l properly focusing on mirror and measurements over all else0 -
Yep I eat back roughly 85% of my calories burned through exercise leaving 15% for error in calculations and lost weight... I am a firm believer that you must fuel your body for the workout you are demanding of it to do....... Best of Luck
^^^ Hmm.. ok, thinking aloud here.. If I eat back most of my calories, I won't have much of a calorie deficit. So, how will my body experience a weight loss? Wouldn't what you suggested be more relevant closer to the maintenance period? I am just wondering how it works..
So, if on a given day you eat exactly 1900 calories, but then go for a run and burn 500 calories, you have now netted only 1400 calories for the day because you just burned 500 calories you had not previously accounted for in your calculations (BMR + sedentary, nowhere in there is a 500 calorie burn figured in).
Given that, if you eat back that 500 calories, you are still on target to lose 1 pound per week, because that puts you back to your 1900 "net calories/day" goal.
For me, why this is important is that I am targeting 2 pounds per week of weight loss, which is about as high of a safe recommended level that any sane long term weight loss is good for. That means a net reduction of 1000 calories per day. If I do a long run burning 800 calories, plus that 1000 calorie deficit, I have a total deficit of 1800 calories that day, roughly a 3.5 pound per week calorie reduction. That is not sustainable long term, my body will run out of energy or start storing extra energy as fat to compensate for not taking in enough.
That's the theory.
All I know is that I am still losing 2 pounds per week after several weeks of eating back my calories. I'm happy with that. It works. Keep in mind that my target daily calories is a 1000 calorie reduction to begin with, so I am only eating back calories to that point, so that in total I have a 1000 calorie per day reduction even after eating back the exercise calories. If I don't exercise, I don't eat anything back.
Ok, that was beautifully explained! Thanks for taking the time to give me such an elaborate answer. Appreciate it
But I still have a question for you.
You said that MFP calculates my calorie deficit using my original input of "sedentary" lifestyle.
But, now that I have incorporated exercise into my daily life, I am no longer sedentary. So, does this mean that the calorie calculation MFP did for me is no longer relevant?
Do I need to change my settings to update my new lifestyle which includes exercise?
Thanks again !0 -
For the most part, yes. Today I only ate back a tiny bit because my Fitbit activity wasn't as great as I wanted.0
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Yep I eat back roughly 85% of my calories burned through exercise leaving 15% for error in calculations and lost weight... I am a firm believer that you must fuel your body for the workout you are demanding of it to do....... Best of Luck
^^^ Hmm.. ok, thinking aloud here.. If I eat back most of my calories, I won't have much of a calorie deficit. So, how will my body experience a weight loss? Wouldn't what you suggested be more relevant closer to the maintenance period? I am just wondering how it works..
My calorie deficit has already been established in to daily caloric intake so any calories burned through exercise have nothing to do with my weight loss but as more to do with refueling my body for the exercise that I am asking it to do.... If your using the MFP approach than this is they way you should be doing it unless you are doing TDEE if that is the case then your exercise calories are already calculated in.....
Ok, this reply really puts things in perspective for me.
I realize now that I was probably having the wrong idea of weight loss when I started using MFP. I thought the goal was to have a huge deficit in calories at the end of each day.
I am starting to understand that is the wrong way to go about a sustainable weight loss. Really appreciate your reply. Thanks so much !!0 -
I eat back 1/2 of my exercise cals and have my profile set on active with 1lb a week to lose. I think I might burn more than 1/2 but so far I lose at that rate so not changing things. I also do an excel chart of calories and weight lost to get a better idea of my maintenance intake.
Check out both links
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1080242-a-guide-to-get-you-started-on-your-path-to-sexypants
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1235566-so-you-re-new-here0 -
I just eat if I'm hungry or need something. If I'm fine and I don't, then I just take the extra calories as a big win. If I am hungry, I eat the calories and make sure I don't go over. if I do, even by a little bit, I may walk around the block once or twice.0
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When I do,it's only half of burned calories. MFP and other electronic devices have a history of overestimating calories burned, henceforth if you eat them all back, you could end up overeating your workouts.0
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Yes I eat back my exercise calories. I'm trying to avoid having an excessively large calorie deficit on any given day so as to preserve as much lean mass as possible.
If you have your goals set to lose 1 or 2 lbs a week, your calories (including your exercise calories) will have the necessary 500 or 1000 calorie/day deficit included. So yes, eat those bad boys!0 -
Yep. Just about every single one of them, too I use a Fitbit, and am very confident in the calorie number it gives me, and set MFP to lose 1/2 lb/wk (1lb/week for the first month I was here). It's worked brilliantly for me so far.
Even before I had the Fitbit, I chose to take the time to calculate my calorie burns from exercise (mostly steady-state cardio like running, walking, aerobic video, etc.) using my heart rate, rather than the "sometimes" inflated numbers MFP gives (in quotes, since YMMV). I still ate back those calories. Same thing, lost weight at roughly the rate MFP forecasted. I'm never over hungry, nor have the need to have a "cheat" day, since I've decided to trust the system and go with it.0 -
Thanks for all the replies! Appreciate it0
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Ok, that was beautifully explained! Thanks for taking the time to give me such an elaborate answer. Appreciate it
But I still have a question for you.
You said that MFP calculates my calorie deficit using my original input of "sedentary" lifestyle.
But, now that I have incorporated exercise into my daily life, I am no longer sedentary. So, does this mean that the calorie calculation MFP did for me is no longer relevant?
Do I need to change my settings to update my new lifestyle which includes exercise?
Thanks again !
I exercise at least every other day now, but that is on top of all that. So that is why I eat back those exercise calories, because those activities are not done every day at a set level.
You get to pick what activity level you have in your normal every day life that does not change, and if that means you exercise some every day, then calculate it in. If you have a job that has you on your feet all day, or a physically demanding job, then definitely also pick something higher than sedentary.
For me, and I think this is how the site was designed to work with the whole "eating back calories" thing, is to set that baseline of what calories you need just to survive you normal every day life at your current weight. Any activities you add on top of that are extra activities that burn calories you eat back since you can not account for those every day.
Hope that helps.
I'm sure there are many ways to work this, as there are a lot of variables. This is just how I do it, and how I understood the MFP program to work.0 -
I eat back every single one of my exercise calories and have been losing weight at a steady pace. I figure once I plateau I'll make adjustments to eat less of them (or in some cases just eat more) in order to continue losing. I do however understand why some people will not eat them back. Personally I (mainly) exercise so I can eat more :laugh:0
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I use to eat them but I stopped just this week because I'm not losing any weight eating them. But if I have a day of wanting more food then I will have something to fall back on.0
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every.single.one. its the only reason i run.
eta the why in ever.0 -
I try to eat every last one. And I still lose....0
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I don't ever eat my calories back.
I see calories burned as creating the deficit I need in order to lose weight. IMO, if I ate them back, I might as well have not even worked out. I know there are other reasons for working out and that MFP already sets our calories/macros at a deficit, but this is what works for me.0 -
I have 1 1500 calorie goal too. I am very rarely hungry, even on days I burn 500 calories exercising. But I take a medication that has a side effect of decreased appetite.0
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Sometimes I will eat them back, but if I do I make sure its from fruits and vegetables or something healthy and not cake lol0
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Hi all,
Do you regularly eat back a portion of your exercise calories?
If yes, then how much can you eat back and still achieve weight loss?
Thanks !
I use a heart rate monitor and eat back all of them most of the time.It hasn't effected my weight loss in any way
Ditto, my polar hem seems pretty accurate and actually was stalling from not eating enough of my calories, i started eating the net amount mfp told me and bam 1.2 pound drop after no loss for a week and a half.0 -
I don't ever eat my calories back.
I see calories burned as creating the deficit I need in order to lose weight. IMO, if I ate them back, I might as well have not even worked out. I know there are other reasons for working out and that MFP already sets our calories/macros at a deficit, but this is what works for me.
If you are using MFP as designed you got a calorie deficit BEFORE exercise. That's because some people can't/won't do any exercise at all.
Yes - by eating back zero calories you are creating a larger deficit. But is that larger deficit healthy? Depends............obese people can carry large deficits without lean muscle loss....people closer to goal cannot.
As you get closer to goal eating calories back (subject to inflation).....will become more important if you want to lose fat (just fat). I strength train to KEEP lean muscle.....not eating enough defeats that.0 -
Yep I eat back roughly 85% of my calories burned through exercise leaving 15% for error in calculations and lost weight... I am a firm believer that you must fuel your body for the workout you are demanding of it to do....... Best of Luck
^^^ Hmm.. ok, thinking aloud here.. If I eat back most of my calories, I won't have much of a calorie deficit. So, how will my body experience a weight loss? Wouldn't what you suggested be more relevant closer to the maintenance period? I am just wondering how it works..
So, if on a given day you eat exactly 1900 calories, but then go for a run and burn 500 calories, you have now netted only 1400 calories for the day because you just burned 500 calories you had not previously accounted for in your calculations (BMR + sedentary, nowhere in there is a 500 calorie burn figured in).
Given that, if you eat back that 500 calories, you are still on target to lose 1 pound per week, because that puts you back to your 1900 "net calories/day" goal.
For me, why this is important is that I am targeting 2 pounds per week of weight loss, which is about as high of a safe recommended level that any sane long term weight loss is good for. That means a net reduction of 1000 calories per day. If I do a long run burning 800 calories, plus that 1000 calorie deficit, I have a total deficit of 1800 calories that day, roughly a 3.5 pound per week calorie reduction. That is not sustainable long term, my body will run out of energy or start storing extra energy as fat to compensate for not taking in enough.
That's the theory.
All I know is that I am still losing 2 pounds per week after several weeks of eating back my calories. I'm happy with that. It works. Keep in mind that my target daily calories is a 1000 calorie reduction to begin with, so I am only eating back calories to that point, so that in total I have a 1000 calorie per day reduction even after eating back the exercise calories. If I don't exercise, I don't eat anything back.
Good explanation.
OP, just make sure you are not including exercise in your activity level when you do your MFP settings. Even though I work out 6 days a week I set MFP to sedentary, because for the rest of my day, that is how I would describe my activity. And then I eat back exercise calories. Some people prefer to include exercise in their initial settings. In that case you would not eat back your calories.0 -
I have been eating back all my calories, or nearly so, and losing 2 pounds a week. I know it's tempting to make it lower, but this is literally like the fifth time I will be losing this weight, and I would really like to keep it off this time. I also am hoping to discover some muscle under my blubber as I have been working out all along. :laugh:0
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