Do you eat your calories earned by exercising?
brendabryden
Posts: 40 Member
Do you all eat your extra calories you earn exercising or just your goal calories? I have been eating my extra 300 or 400 exercise calories - so then I can eat 1500 calories - is this how most of you do it?
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Replies
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Yes, I eat most or all of them.0
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In my experience, MFP tends to over calculate calories burned, so I usually set mine to 50 minutes if I was exercising for an hour. After that, I usually eat back 75% of it. I'd be a bit cautious about it if you were eating 1600+ calorie intake, but if you're 1200ish calorie intake, I would definitely eat them back.0
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I eat nearly all probably leave maybe 100 just in case of over estimating what i have burnt off0
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Yes, but I try to leave some of the calories.0
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I eat all of my exercise calories but don't rely on the apparently over generous MFP calculator to tell me how many. Back when I did, I ate 2/3rds of them.0
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I use them as "bonus" calories for days when I want something extra or if I am hungry and already at my limit.0
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I don't always eat them all, but I usually make sure to at least eat up to 1300 calories gross.0
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I usually eat about 1/2 back.0
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YES! Or else I would be starving.
Like others though, I think MFP over estimates the calories burned. So, if I run for 40 minuets at a 9MPH pace, I put it in MFP at a 10MPH pace, so that calories burned are lower.0 -
Yes, I eat them. ALL OF THEM. ALL THE TIME.0
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I give myself "permission" to do it, but I eat back only part of them the majority of the time. But always enough to net to at least 1200 calories.0
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Yes, but I use other sources to determine calories burned because MFP overestimates.0
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I allow for a small buffer in case there's a margin of error calculating my exercise or food. But generally, you should eat them. There's also other threads on this very topic with some good insights from people. Worth a gander. :-)0
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I eat them. I use a heart rate monitor to get a more accurate number than MFP--usually have to put in a lower number of minutes than I actually ran to make the entry match what my HRM shows.0
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I have a lot of weight to lose, so NO I don't. At goal weight I plan to :-)0
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Nope. I know the numbers are higher than I burn, but, I have fun recording them anyways (I sometimes try to "net" negative calories).
But, I personally work out as much as I do to increase my fitness levels to burn extra calories, not to eat more. That's my goals, I'm happy with the outcome for far.0 -
I do not eat back mine. It is what works for me.0
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You betcha! In fact, if I know I'm going to be eating more calories for whatever reason (eating out, or a particular dinner that is higher in calories than usual) I make it a point the exercise enough to cover those calories0
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I haven't yet..........but it's nice to know they are there.0
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Yes, I eat them. I try not to always eat ALL of them, in case MFP has overestimated.0
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For me it depends. If I burn over 500, I don't eat all of that. If I burn 300 or less, I eat it. In between depends on how my appetite is.0
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I eat back a portion of them. Not only to account for inaccuracy of the number burned, but because I only want to eat back my NET calories burned. MFP takes into account how many calories you burn in a given day without exercise. For me, it works out to about 75 calories per hour just sitting on my butt. So if I work out for an hour and burn 500 calories, I only eat back 400 - because that is how many EXTRA calories I burned, and then 25 is the wiggle room. I hear virtually no one talk about this on MFP, which is surprising.0
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Nope. I know the numbers are higher than I burn, but, I have fun recording them anyways (I sometimes try to "net" negative calories).
But, I personally work out as much as I do to increase my fitness levels to burn extra calories, not to eat more. That's my goals, I'm happy with the outcome for far.
I'm not sure how often you "net" negative calories, but that is not a long-term solution and could be very dangerous. Your body needs a minimum level of calories to survive - if you are netting a negative number, that means you are quite literally starving your body.0 -
Yes I eat back 85% of my calories burned leaving 15% for error in logging and whatnot..... Best of Luck....0
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I use TDEE-20%, so I do not eat my exercise calories back...0
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not when i burn 2-3k. i'll eat like half or 75% back then.
if i had a ton of weight to lose, i'd probably not be too strict on it. now that i'm down to only needing to lose a handful of pounds (between 5-10) i try to hit 1700-2000 net calories a day.0 -
Most days I don't. If I'm hungry I will eat some but not all.0
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I use TDEE-20%, so I do not eat my exercise calories back...
This method is still inadvertently eating them back.0 -
I eat back a portion of them. Not only to account for inaccuracy of the number burned, but because I only want to eat back my NET calories burned. MFP takes into account how many calories you burn in a given day without exercise. For me, it works out to about 75 calories per hour just sitting on my butt. So if I work out for an hour and burn 500 calories, I only eat back 400 - because that is how many EXTRA calories I burned, and then 25 is the wiggle room. I hear virtually no one talk about this on MFP, which is surprising.
My guess would be that not a lot of people know about it.0 -
I eat back a portion of them. Not only to account for inaccuracy of the number burned, but because I only want to eat back my NET calories burned. MFP takes into account how many calories you burn in a given day without exercise. For me, it works out to about 75 calories per hour just sitting on my butt. So if I work out for an hour and burn 500 calories, I only eat back 400 - because that is how many EXTRA calories I burned, and then 25 is the wiggle room. I hear virtually no one talk about this on MFP, which is surprising.
My guess would be that not a lot of people know about it.
I forget where I read about it, but I am glad I did, and it makes sense once you think about it. What I do now is subtract the calories I would have burned from the amount of calories I log for my exercise - that way I am still shooting for the calorie goal MFP gives me and it makes my charts/reports more accurate than if I logged all the exercise calories and came in "under" because I didn't eat them all back. Using this method, my weight loss has progressed pretty much exactly on target with my goals over the course of 6 months.0
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