Not logging exercise calories?
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Sid1988
Posts: 170 Member
MFP has set my daily calorie goal to 1200, I figured this was quite low so I have set it to 1400, but what I have decided to do is to not log my exercise calories and stick to eating 1400 per day.
Has anyone had any success from doing this?
Has anyone had any success from doing this?
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Replies
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I always log my exercise cals.... I just never EAT my exercise cals.0
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I've mine set to 2000 and never log exercise.0
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I never eat back my calories from exercise. i went from 225 to 114 in a year before putting some back on because I was starting to look questionably weighted.
While i understand the concept, if you dont have an HRM you have no solid clue of what you are actually burning. The counters on the machines can be off by hundreds of calories. I see it 10 of times a day..."i am not eating over my calories, why am i not losing" and more often than not it is because people are inadvertently going over their calories by eating back their exercise calories0 -
Yeah I think I'm not gonna log then starting today! I'm just gonna note them in my diary cuz I just upped my calories to a 1000 calorie deficit according to my tdee !0
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After losing 86 pounds I hit a plateau for 2 months..I am now not eating back my exercise calories and starting to lose again..0
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I typically stick to a 1400 calorie goal and it works very well for me. Occasionally I feel like I need an extra snack on days when I work out hard, so I will eat some of my exercise calories if I really need it- or If I have a big event or party where I'm dying to indulge a little.
For me, MFP sets my calorie goal at 1200 if I enter that I want to lose 2 lbs/week, and I enter that I'm sedentary. But I'm not sedentary! I had to go all the way up to "moderately active" to get to 1400. I'd say I vary between lightly and moderately active, depending on the week. I do lose about 2 lbs per week if I stay around a 1400-1500 average!
^ that said, everyone is different. If you're working out extremely hard, you probably need more than 1400 on your workout days, especially if you start to feel tired, drained, or weak. Don't be afraid to play around with it. I lost weight at 1700 cals/day, just more slowly.0 -
That's what I figured, the machines are never accurate with the amount of calories we actually burn and I don't want to be logging because of an estimate, I figured to stick to 1400 and not log exercise, that way I know exactly what I am eating rather than it say I burnt 500 calories spinning, eating them back but only to realise I may have only burnt 300.0
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I am 1200 cals a day, I exercise most day and I do eat back most of them
my reasons are I think it will make it easier for me to maintain my weight once I get to my goal weight
I have a heart rate /cals counter which record cals I burn , I know what is going into and out of my body
anyone can add me0 -
the best way to figure out what calories you should be eating-TDEE -20%
I always log my exercise (without using MFP calculations-so that it doesn't mess up my macros when it adds those cals back) I do NOT eat back burned cals
I also use an HRM to calculate my burns for better accuracy.0 -
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I'm new here - is there a way for me to LOG the exercise in MFP just so I can keep track... but not have it add back the calories/screw with my macros? I figured out my TDEE deficit at am supposed to eat 1700/day, and not planning to eat back exercise calories, but I hate doing the mental math once MFP gets all messed up after I log exercise!0
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Im at 2149 and dont eat my exercise cals back but I do log them0
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I'm new here - is there a way for me to LOG the exercise in MFP just so I can keep track... but not have it add back the calories/screw with my macros? I figured out my TDEE deficit at am supposed to eat 1700/day, and not planning to eat back exercise calories, but I hate doing the mental math once MFP gets all messed up after I log exercise!
Yes, you can make up your own exercise and give it a value of 1 calorie.0 -
I always log my exercise cals.... I just never EAT my exercise cals.
This. I don't exercise enough (yet) to eat them back but I use logging the exercise to encourage myself to do it.0 -
depends on how much cals you burn with exercise0
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I set mine to ONE calorie burned. I don't care about estimating the output, just measuring the input, that's they key to my success.0
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1400 is not enough if you're not going to log your exercise, unless you don't exercise much. If you're doing 500 calories workouts, 1400 is not going to cut it (although it's what I did at first and did ok, but I increased my calories later).
I switched to TDEE-20% today so I don't have to worry about logging my exercise anymore.0 -
I log them, but I don't eat them back. I aim for my calorie goal. But I am extremely obese and my body can handle a larger deficit without risking starvation mode. As I lose, I am sure this will change, but I see the exercise calories as my safety net. I don't usually use them, but they're there if I need them.0
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I really only log exercise as my diet is consistent
I don't like the 'food diary' I don't know what brands items are !!0 -
I am 1200 cals a day, I exercise most day and I do eat back most of them
my reasons are I think it will make it easier for me to maintain my weight once I get to my goal weight
I've been in maintenance for over a year and a half and have found that to be true. The larger calorie budget I got from eating back exercise calories made it easier to maintain a "normal" diet as I was losing the weight, by which I mean standard, full sized servings of the full range of foods I expected to eat for the rest of my life. That made for a fairly seamless transition to maintenance when the time came. And as an added bonus, the care I took to maintain as much as possible of my muscle mass resulted in my true maintenance calories being higher than MFP calculates for my size and age. It's a lot easier to carelessly lose muscle as you're losing fat on an aggressively large calorie deficit than it is to regain that lost muscle without also regaining fat. Then you have to lose the fat again to get your BF% down. Why put yourself through that unnecessarily, just to say you lost an extra pound this week? You may well find that you get to the finish line more quickly if you make a higher priority of keeping the muscle you already have.0
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