WHY DO PEOPLE EAT BACK THEIR EXERCISE CALS?!
Replies
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I just DO NOT get it!! You spend an hour in the gym working off burning 600 cal and then you just eat them back???
Why would you eat even a LITTLE back??
I thought the point was to burn these calories. WHY does MFP then add them to your food?!
Because you are supposed to. Goodness. You don't want to consistently be several hundred calories under what you're supposed to eat.0 -
Its no longer an "Eat less move more"
Its "Eat right and move with a purpose!"
Yes eating right means less junk, and guess what healthy foods aren't as high in calories as junk food. I just at a huge broiled chicken breast, spinach, mashed potatoes and a salad and that is just over 400 calories. Or I could eat a value meal at Mickey D's for 1000 calories. I can't understand how those who swear by eating back calories do it and eat right, because eliminating junk food automatically cut my calories.
But knowing how food works in your system clearly shows that you can eat anything below TDEE and lose weight.
A carb is a carb.
Etc....
After detoxing and regulating hormones you can eat anything to lose weight.
We have proven that.
That is not true, a carb is not just a carb. You can't tell me our body handles a chocolate bar the same as a strawberry. I have suffered from hypoglycemic episodes for nearly ten years and I also have PCOS. In the past when I dieted I just ate in moderation, not changing any of my eating habits. I never ate raw vegetables and rarely ate fruit. I ate a lot of pasta and always fed my sweet tooth. I always said I couldn't do low carb because of the hypoglycemia but when I started relying on veggies and fruits for carbs and eating less sweets, guess what the cravings for sweets went away as did the hypoglycemia. Some of you may want to focus on the number of calories consumed, I find the quality of those calories much more important to my weight loss journey and overall health.
PCOS I understand but what are you doing on a daily basis to break the insulin resistance you have?
Simple ways to break insulin resistance are:
1) Lifting weights
2) Small cycles of fasting
So if you could eat at a slight deficit, lift weights 3x a week and skip breakfast to have the body you want....
Be careful with chronic carb cutting.
It could lead to bigger problems down the road.
As a person with PCOS your biggest enemy is hormones.
Second biggest enemy is insulin resistance.
Overcome both and youll be set.
Currently I'm doing Jillian Michaels 90 Day Body Revolution, which is 6 days a week, weights 4 out of the 6. The funny thing is my PCOS was best in check and I was a size 4 when I ran all the time and lifted no weights. I lift weights now because of my my body goals, not for the PCOS.
I try to net under 100 carbs a day. This still allows me to have bread and some potatoes some times, but forces me to restrict the processed stuff and sweets which usually the cause of my hypoglycemic episodes. I have not had one since I cut carbs. Some people complain about feeling hungry or cranky and I'm neither. I eat well over 100g of protein most days and I guess that's why I'm full and I give it all in my workouts. In general women with PCOS have to work harder for the same result, its not a calories in vs calories out for us. Online BMR calculators don't capture what's truly going on in our bodies and unless you have a HRM, exercise calories are estimates, I wouldn't dare eat back all of an estimated amount. But if that works for some keep doing what works for you
Since you are eating at quite the deficit I'll challenge you to drop JM30DS down to 3x a week at your current caloric intake.
But eat back the calories.
I can guarantee a better weight loss than what you have now.
As for primal I believe Mark Sisson had a woman with Pcos who broke it with that lifestyle.
Don't say you can guarantee results, because you can't guarantee anything to someone with PCOS unless you are doing hormonal/blood work. I will pass on your challenge. I am not doing 30 Day Shred, but her 90 day Body Revolution, which makes 30DS look like a walk in the park. I am finishing up week 6 and I'm running 3 times a week. Working out makes me feel good. As for eating back calories, if I'm hungry I will do it, if I'm not I won't. I listen to my body, not some calculator. I am applying the self-discipline that I should have applied two years ago when I my 4s and 6s started turning into 10s and 12s. I will have to pass on Primal too, I actually hate meat, I force myself to eat chicken and fish as it is. And free range organic would cost me a small fortune here in Toronto. Hell I can barely afford regular. Meat and dairy prices are almost double what they are back home in the States. If my program fails me, I will switch it up, but until then I'm going to keep pushing forward.
*shrugs*
I can only go by the results of all the people eating under my advice.
When you are ready to try something different look me up.
All are welcome!0 -
I just DO NOT get it!! You spend an hour in the gym working off burning 600 cal and then you just eat them back???
Why would you eat even a LITTLE back??
I thought the point was to burn these calories. WHY does MFP then add them to your food?!
those calories taste better than non-gym calories. true story.0 -
Because MFP already figures in a reasonable to high calorie deficit when you choose your weight loss goals. If you are shooting to lose 2lbs/wk, and you don't eat back exercise calories, your deficit becomes higher than well established safe limits. You can only lose so much fat in a day, so pushing the boundaries means your additional weight loss beyond a reasonable deficit is going to come from your muscle mass. Not a good choice.
NOT TRUE, you won't start using muscle until your below 6% body fat.
Here's typical weight loss, per my exercise physiology textbook.
http://fitnessblackbook.com/main/starvation-mode-why-you-probably-never-need-to-worry-about-it/
The blog references a study, which shows that you won't lose muscle on a deficit unless you're around 5-6%. Many people can maintain and sometimes increase muscle mass on a cal deficit (especially with methods such as intermittent fasting).
Here's a starting point for you to look for it-
http://www.abstractboard.com/author/Friedl+K/K-Friedl.html
I did some digging and thought I *might* have found the "referenced" study(http://www.ajcn.org/content/83/5/1068.full), but then there's this in the discussion section, which is basically the opposite of the blog author's conclusion:
"With prolonged underfeeding, FFM loss is ≈25% of the weight lost, with fat accounting for the balance, although extreme energy deficits, as in the present study, can increase the contribution of FFM (38). Using less glycogen would tend to decrease protein use for gluconeogenesis and reduce the loss of FFM (38, 39). Women are reported to use less glycogen and excrete less urea nitrogen than men in response to ≈95 min of moderate-intensity exercise (35). The loss of FFM during the FEX was a smaller percentage of body weight loss in the women than in the men."
So, please, if you have the study post it.
You're right the blog didn't reference it, just talked about it. But yeh that's the right study you found.
My point is that- these guys started off not very lean (on average), they had a large cal deficit every day and consistently lost fat without losing muscle until they reached 5-6%. Going against what you said about muscle always being lost when losing fat.
I don't think it is unreasonable to say that this shows that we can lose fat without losing muscle (as that is what happened up until the 8th week when some of the guys hit 5-6% bf). & most people here won't intend to go below 5-6% fat OR be at such an extremely low cal deficit either (which both contributed to the eventual loss in muscle).
Again the army guys only started losing muscle when they were around 5-6%. Before that they maintained muscle whilst losing fat which goes against the point you're making that muscle is always lost when cutting.
With regards to the quote you give- at the end of the study muscle was lost yes due to the severe cal deficit in combination with the low bodyfat %'s, but that doesn't change the fact that the first 8 weeks showed that fat can be lost without muscle being lost.
Anyway there is plenty of anecdotal evidence out there as well of people losing fat and maintaining or even gaining muscle. Some examples can he found here http://www.leangains.com/search/label/Success Stories
You clearly didn't read the study. I did your research for you, I spoon fed you the conclusion, and you still are regurgitating what's in that blog. You can't be bothered to participate in an intelligent conversation, I'm finished with this.
And I am well aware of leangains- there is a VERY specific protocol that MAY allow you to build muscle on an overall deficit, which requires cycling calories above maintenance. It's not exactly the same as preserving LBM on a deficit. Eating adequate protein and lifting weights minimizes muscle loss while on a deficit. The idea that you CAN'T lose lean mass until you hit 6% or less body fat is stupid.
Thanks for finding this. There are a couple of issues with the study in any event that I am sure you noticed. The main one was the very small sample size. But the ones I am still trying to find is where this reference to 5% is mentioned (except in reference to a minimum % requirement for healthy BF% minimum) plus the study appears to last for only one week so I am not sure where the 8 week reference comes from in the blog. Did you see where these references would have come from within the study? Maybe I am missing them. Or maybe the folks who are citing this blog could answer these questions!
That being said, as you note, this study seems to be contrary to the conclusion reached in the blog.0 -
haha, love this thread.0
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Because MFP already figures in a reasonable to high calorie deficit when you choose your weight loss goals. If you are shooting to lose 2lbs/wk, and you don't eat back exercise calories, your deficit becomes higher than well established safe limits. You can only lose so much fat in a day, so pushing the boundaries means your additional weight loss beyond a reasonable deficit is going to come from your muscle mass. Not a good choice.
NOT TRUE, you won't start using muscle until your below 6% body fat.
Here's typical weight loss, per my exercise physiology textbook.
http://fitnessblackbook.com/main/starvation-mode-why-you-probably-never-need-to-worry-about-it/
The blog references a study, which shows that you won't lose muscle on a deficit unless you're around 5-6%. Many people can maintain and sometimes increase muscle mass on a cal deficit (especially with methods such as intermittent fasting).
Here's a starting point for you to look for it-
http://www.abstractboard.com/author/Friedl+K/K-Friedl.html
I did some digging and thought I *might* have found the "referenced" study(http://www.ajcn.org/content/83/5/1068.full), but then there's this in the discussion section, which is basically the opposite of the blog author's conclusion:
"With prolonged underfeeding, FFM loss is ≈25% of the weight lost, with fat accounting for the balance, although extreme energy deficits, as in the present study, can increase the contribution of FFM (38). Using less glycogen would tend to decrease protein use for gluconeogenesis and reduce the loss of FFM (38, 39). Women are reported to use less glycogen and excrete less urea nitrogen than men in response to ≈95 min of moderate-intensity exercise (35). The loss of FFM during the FEX was a smaller percentage of body weight loss in the women than in the men."
So, please, if you have the study post it.
You're right the blog didn't reference it, just talked about it. But yeh that's the right study you found.
My point is that- these guys started off not very lean (on average), they had a large cal deficit every day and consistently lost fat without losing muscle until they reached 5-6%. Going against what you said about muscle always being lost when losing fat.
I don't think it is unreasonable to say that this shows that we can lose fat without losing muscle (as that is what happened up until the 8th week when some of the guys hit 5-6% bf). & most people here won't intend to go below 5-6% fat OR be at such an extremely low cal deficit either (which both contributed to the eventual loss in muscle).
Again the army guys only started losing muscle when they were around 5-6%. Before that they maintained muscle whilst losing fat which goes against the point you're making that muscle is always lost when cutting.
With regards to the quote you give- at the end of the study muscle was lost yes due to the severe cal deficit in combination with the low bodyfat %'s, but that doesn't change the fact that the first 8 weeks showed that fat can be lost without muscle being lost.
Anyway there is plenty of anecdotal evidence out there as well of people losing fat and maintaining or even gaining muscle. Some examples can he found here http://www.leangains.com/search/label/Success Stories
You clearly didn't read the study. I did your research for you, I spoon fed you the conclusion, and you still are regurgitating what's in that blog. You can't be bothered to participate in an intelligent conversation, I'm finished with this.
And I am well aware of leangains- there is a VERY specific protocol that MAY allow you to build muscle on an overall deficit, which requires cycling calories above maintenance. It's not exactly the same as preserving LBM on a deficit. Eating adequate protein and lifting weights minimizes muscle loss while on a deficit. The idea that you CAN'T lose lean mass until you hit 6% or less body fat is stupid.
Thanks for finding this. There are a couple of issues with the study in any event that I am sure you noticed. The main one was the very small sample size. But the ones I am still trying to find is where this reference to 5% is mentioned (except in reference to a minimum % requirement for healthy BF% minimum) plus the study appears to last for only one week so I am not sure where the 8 week reference comes from in the blog. Did you see where these references would have come from within the study? Maybe I am missing them. Or maybe the folks who are citing this blog could answer these questions!
That being said, as you note, this study seems to be contrary to the conclusion reached in the blog.
You have to listen to the pod cast. The 8 weeks a what % they started losing ect... is in the podcast. I didn't actually read the page I just listened to them discussing the study. It does seem to to back him up though.0 -
Because MFP already figures in a reasonable to high calorie deficit when you choose your weight loss goals. If you are shooting to lose 2lbs/wk, and you don't eat back exercise calories, your deficit becomes higher than well established safe limits. You can only lose so much fat in a day, so pushing the boundaries means your additional weight loss beyond a reasonable deficit is going to come from your muscle mass. Not a good choice.
NOT TRUE, you won't start using muscle until your below 6% body fat.
Here's typical weight loss, per my exercise physiology textbook.
http://fitnessblackbook.com/main/starvation-mode-why-you-probably-never-need-to-worry-about-it/
The blog references a study, which shows that you won't lose muscle on a deficit unless you're around 5-6%. Many people can maintain and sometimes increase muscle mass on a cal deficit (especially with methods such as intermittent fasting).
Here's a starting point for you to look for it-
http://www.abstractboard.com/author/Friedl+K/K-Friedl.html
I did some digging and thought I *might* have found the "referenced" study(http://www.ajcn.org/content/83/5/1068.full), but then there's this in the discussion section, which is basically the opposite of the blog author's conclusion:
"With prolonged underfeeding, FFM loss is ≈25% of the weight lost, with fat accounting for the balance, although extreme energy deficits, as in the present study, can increase the contribution of FFM (38). Using less glycogen would tend to decrease protein use for gluconeogenesis and reduce the loss of FFM (38, 39). Women are reported to use less glycogen and excrete less urea nitrogen than men in response to ≈95 min of moderate-intensity exercise (35). The loss of FFM during the FEX was a smaller percentage of body weight loss in the women than in the men."
So, please, if you have the study post it.
You're right the blog didn't reference it, just talked about it. But yeh that's the right study you found.
My point is that- these guys started off not very lean (on average), they had a large cal deficit every day and consistently lost fat without losing muscle until they reached 5-6%. Going against what you said about muscle always being lost when losing fat.
I don't think it is unreasonable to say that this shows that we can lose fat without losing muscle (as that is what happened up until the 8th week when some of the guys hit 5-6% bf). & most people here won't intend to go below 5-6% fat OR be at such an extremely low cal deficit either (which both contributed to the eventual loss in muscle).
Again the army guys only started losing muscle when they were around 5-6%. Before that they maintained muscle whilst losing fat which goes against the point you're making that muscle is always lost when cutting.
With regards to the quote you give- at the end of the study muscle was lost yes due to the severe cal deficit in combination with the low bodyfat %'s, but that doesn't change the fact that the first 8 weeks showed that fat can be lost without muscle being lost.
Anyway there is plenty of anecdotal evidence out there as well of people losing fat and maintaining or even gaining muscle. Some examples can he found here http://www.leangains.com/search/label/Success Stories
You clearly didn't read the study. I did your research for you, I spoon fed you the conclusion, and you still are regurgitating what's in that blog. You can't be bothered to participate in an intelligent conversation, I'm finished with this.
And I am well aware of leangains- there is a VERY specific protocol that MAY allow you to build muscle on an overall deficit, which requires cycling calories above maintenance. It's not exactly the same as preserving LBM on a deficit. Eating adequate protein and lifting weights minimizes muscle loss while on a deficit. The idea that you CAN'T lose lean mass until you hit 6% or less body fat is stupid.
Thanks for finding this. There are a couple of issues with the study in any event that I am sure you noticed. The main one was the very small sample size. But the ones I am still trying to find is where this reference to 5% is mentioned (except in reference to a minimum % requirement for healthy BF% minimum) plus the study appears to last for only one week so I am not sure where the 8 week reference comes from in the blog. Did you see where these references would have come from within the study? Maybe I am missing them. Or maybe the folks who are citing this blog could answer these questions!
That being said, as you note, this study seems to be contrary to the conclusion reached in the blog.
For the reasons you mentioned exactly, either this is the wrong study or the blog author has some inside scoop to information that's not presented in the paper, or the blog author made *kitten* up and figured nobody would check the sources and just cite his blog for the info. There are a few similarities that line up between the blog and the study, but nothing to imply you can't lose LBM above 6% BF. Wonder why the actual reference isn't included in the blog, don't you?0 -
You have to listen to the pod cast. The 8 weeks a what % they started losing ect... is in the podcast. I didn't actually read the page I just listened to them discussing the study. It does seem to to back him up though.
Taking off the infini-quotes. But why is this not in the actual study. How can 8 weeks be used when the actual study was only 1 week. Is the study referred to above not the correct one. Sorry, just trying to understand the gap here. To be honest, I would not use podcasts as a basis for undertanding the details of studies, as I like to look at actual published studies. I will have a go at listening to see if they quote some other study.
ETA: thanks for pointing me to them though.0 -
Because the more you exercise, the more fuel that your body needs. If you are active, but don't eat enough then your body will think it's starving and hold onto fat instead of burn it. I am super active - I usually burn up to 2000 calories per day and if I don't eat enough then I feel like crap and burn out. The 1200 calorie is the net amount that you should consume. In other words, if I burn 1000 calories than I should eat those calories back AT LEAST. It's okay to have a deficit - I know that I physically cannot consume all the calories that I burn, but you should definitely keep your body well fed and fueled.0
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I think the solution to this endless debate would be for MFP to work out a clear flaw in its system. In your settings it asks you if you are sedentary, lightly active etc based on your daily occupation when factoring your calorie intake, but it doesn't do that for your workout regimen. I think us skeptics of the eating back would be more comfortable if MFP said based on your activity level you need x amount of calories. Instead it says eat this to meet this goal, and some of us are not willing to deviate from that goal because we had a kick *kitten* day at the gym. If you google eating back exercise calories, like 99 percent of the results are from MFP, clearly this is a flaw with the site since it is not a major issue in other fitness communities.
Again everyone just do what works for you. I personally prefer to eat when I'm hungry as opposed to worrying about estimated burned calories. I don't get the cranky, tired feeling that so many complained about. Though I did get that feeling in the past when I ate the same rich foods in moderation. I will keep using MFP to track my calories and progress, but I'm not drinking the eat your exercise calories back Kool-Aid, but I'm not knocking anyone who does.0 -
You have to listen to the pod cast. The 8 weeks a what % they started losing ect... is in the podcast. I didn't actually read the page I just listened to them discussing the study. It does seem to to back him up though.
Taking off the infini-quotes. But why is this not in the actual study. How can 8 weeks be used when the actual study was only 1 week. Is the study referred to above not the correct one. Sorry, just trying to understand the gap here. To be honest, I would not use podcasts as a basis for undertanding the details of studies, as I like to look at actual published studies. I will have a go at listening to see if they quote some other study.
I can't fill in the gap because I just listened to the pod cast. The study they discussed was 8 weeks and most of the subjects began losing LBM between 6 and 8 weeks.
It was a military study conducted by Carl Friedl. I may look into it further but not tonight.
Also it sounds like the study was not aimed at just finding out when they would start losing LBM but it was aimed more or less at finding out their physical limits under extreme strain.0 -
Because, if I didn't, I'd be running off about 700 calories a day.0
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I think the solution to this endless debate would be for MFP to work out a clear flaw in its system.
I don't think there's a flaw in the MFP system, I think there's a flaw in the way people think about their bodies. And if people continue to eat/live that way, they will die out, leaving the smarter, healtheir, eatinger segment of the population to thrive.0 -
I think the solution to this endless debate would be for MFP to work out a clear flaw in its system.
I don't think there's a flaw in the MFP system, I think there's a flaw in the way people think about their bodies. And if people continue to eat/live that way, they will die out, leaving the smarter, healtheir, eatinger segment of the population to thrive.
So smarter, heathlier people eat back their exercise calories? Is that the point you are trying to make. Sounds like the only flawed mindset is yours since you think it should apply to all. I believe in different strokes for different folks. Me choosing not to eat back my exercise calories unless I'm hungry does not stop you from doing it or hinder your journey in anyway.
And yes, I think not factoring in workout regimens seems like a flaw to me. Fitday, sparkpeople and weightwatchers all factors in fitness level. MFP does not. I only left Fitday for MFP because there was a group for Jillian Michaels Body Revolution. The fact that this debate isn't raging on in other sites, but is a weekly topic is an indicator that their is a kink in the MFP system.0 -
You have to listen to the pod cast. The 8 weeks a what % they started losing ect... is in the podcast. I didn't actually read the page I just listened to them discussing the study. It does seem to to back him up though.
Taking off the infini-quotes. But why is this not in the actual study. How can 8 weeks be used when the actual study was only 1 week. Is the study referred to above not the correct one. Sorry, just trying to understand the gap here. To be honest, I would not use podcasts as a basis for undertanding the details of studies, as I like to look at actual published studies. I will have a go at listening to see if they quote some other study.
I can't fill in the gap because I just listened to the pod cast. The study they discussed was 8 weeks and most of the subjects began losing LBM between 6 and 8 weeks.
It was a military study conducted by Carl Friedl. I may look into it further but not tonight.
Also it sounds like the study was not aimed at just finding out when they would start losing LBM but it was aimed more or less at finding out their physical limits under extreme strain.
Long story short- you can certainly lose muscle and fat above 6%BF. Below 6%BF, your body begins catabolizing muscle preferentially over fat.0 -
I eat back a portion of my exercise calories, if I didn't, my food choices would be more limited. I am steradily losing weight and eating nice food, cooked sensibly.
I have seen diaries on here where the person would barely keep a flea alive, others that seem to live on vitamin pills and shakes.
Yes, it IS their choice, but surely they can't go on like this forever? I found out the hard way that starving myself did not work- sure I lost the weight but as soon as I started to eat reasonable meals it came back on, I got so disappointed, I gave up and ended up heavier than I had ever been.
better to choose the eating lifestyle that you can keep, permanently.
MFP is the best thing that ever happened to me, although I did lose a lot of weight before I discovered it- by changing my food habits to healthy /low fat, and EXERCISE.- and I really love the food diary, and the inspirational posts.0 -
You have to listen to the pod cast. The 8 weeks a what % they started losing ect... is in the podcast. I didn't actually read the page I just listened to them discussing the study. It does seem to to back him up though.
Taking off the infini-quotes. But why is this not in the actual study. How can 8 weeks be used when the actual study was only 1 week. Is the study referred to above not the correct one. Sorry, just trying to understand the gap here. To be honest, I would not use podcasts as a basis for undertanding the details of studies, as I like to look at actual published studies. I will have a go at listening to see if they quote some other study.
I can't fill in the gap because I just listened to the pod cast. The study they discussed was 8 weeks and most of the subjects began losing LBM between 6 and 8 weeks.
It was a military study conducted by Carl Friedl. I may look into it further but not tonight.
Also it sounds like the study was not aimed at just finding out when they would start losing LBM but it was aimed more or less at finding out their physical limits under extreme strain.
Long story short- you can certainly lose muscle and fat above 6%BF. Below 6%BF, your body begins catabolizing muscle preferentially over fat.
I got that too. They do mention thought that the loss is pretty negligible up to that point. Unfortunately they don't quantify negligible at all.0 -
You have to listen to the pod cast. The 8 weeks a what % they started losing ect... is in the podcast. I didn't actually read the page I just listened to them discussing the study. It does seem to to back him up though.
Taking off the infini-quotes. But why is this not in the actual study. How can 8 weeks be used when the actual study was only 1 week. Is the study referred to above not the correct one. Sorry, just trying to understand the gap here. To be honest, I would not use podcasts as a basis for undertanding the details of studies, as I like to look at actual published studies. I will have a go at listening to see if they quote some other study.
I can't fill in the gap because I just listened to the pod cast. The study they discussed was 8 weeks and most of the subjects began losing LBM between 6 and 8 weeks.
It was a military study conducted by Carl Friedl. I may look into it further but not tonight.
Also it sounds like the study was not aimed at just finding out when they would start losing LBM but it was aimed more or less at finding out their physical limits under extreme strain.
Edited: MoreBeans worked it out while I was typing and came to the same conclusion that was my initial assumption - at very low levels of BF%, muscle is primarily used for energy - but that does not mean than none gets used above that.0 -
(sigh). To answer your question, its because MFO creates a deficit. I eat over my BMR, & under my TDEE, and eat back MOST and sometimes ALL of my cals, and I'm STILL losing weight. *WOOT WOOT*0
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This is what I do, set MFP to maintain based on lightly active (I'm not working out an awful lot right now) If I work out, log those, if it creates a deficit of <1200, eat those back. Works for me.0
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I don't eat 'back' my exercise calories, I plan for them in my day. I know how much I'm going to exercise during any given day so I plan my meals accordingly. I eat 600 or so of my exercise calories (I work out around 1300 cals a day). I've been losing 2 pounds or more each week doing so. I feel great and have the energy to live my life; to exercise. This is what works for me.
But I do remember feeling skeptical about it.0 -
I had the same question, and was super confused. I was getting the same response that you are getting, but it still didn't make sense to me. I saw a nutritionist, and she explained it this way...maybe it'll help you because it helped me. You need to find your BMR and add your exercise to that. Subtract what you've eaten for the day from the sum of your BMR and exercise; the difference should be about 300-500. Yes, the weight loss will be slower, but she said it's easier to maintain for life. If you wanted to lose 2 lbs a week, then I guess the difference should be around 700.
So here's an example of how I do it. My BMR is 1350, and one day I worked out and burned 1030 calories. So 1350+1030 = 2380. I ate 1630 calories so I do 2380-1630 which gives me a deficit of 750 for the day. It's worked for me so far. The main thing I was concerned about was putting my body into starvation mode which is the last thing I want to do. So her explanation has worked for me. Hope it makes sense!
Thanks MaeMae - that helps ME understand it better0 -
Because they are much tastier than the other kind of calories.0
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NOT TRUE, you won't start using muscle until your below 6% body fat.
You are misinformed. LBM can be lost at ANY bf% .0 -
I had the same question, and was super confused. I was getting the same response that you are getting, but it still didn't make sense to me. I saw a nutritionist, and she explained it this way...maybe it'll help you because it helped me. You need to find your BMR and add your exercise to that. Subtract what you've eaten for the day from the sum of your BMR and exercise; the difference should be about 300-500. Yes, the weight loss will be slower, but she said it's easier to maintain for life. If you wanted to lose 2 lbs a week, then I guess the difference should be around 700.
So here's an example of how I do it. My BMR is 1350, and one day I worked out and burned 1030 calories. So 1350+1030 = 2380. I ate 1630 calories so I do 2380-1630 which gives me a deficit of 750 for the day. It's worked for me so far. The main thing I was concerned about was putting my body into starvation mode which is the last thing I want to do. So her explanation has worked for me. Hope it makes sense!
Thanks MaeMae - that helps ME understand it better
Your BMR isn't your TDEE.
BMR = what your body needs just to stay alive and maintain your weight. IE, if you were in a coma and on a feeding tube.
TDEE = your BMR plus all the extra calories your body burns not just through exercise, but also by being awake and active. As soon as you get up in the morning and stagger off to the bathroom, you're burning more than your BMR.
My BMR is about 1250, but my TDEE is between 1900-2400, depending on how active I am that day.
So if you're subtracting your deficit from your BMR, it's actually way bigger than the example given, probably at least an extra 500 calories more.0 -
I concluded MFPs system is flawes and ripe to create confusion and unhealthy eating patterns. Ive not seen one other tracker system nor calorie formula that works this way. And Ive done them. Most base your defeceit on your current fitness level and activity. Some you even have to account for current bodyfat% before it'll give you a deficit.
But the forums are to did for! Love it!0 -
I workout so I can build muscle and endurance. I eat back those calories so I have the energy to work out.
Plus, I love to eat so if I start to feel deprived, I will fall off track.
^^^ This!
I burned over 1400 calories yesterday on a bike ride, which was only a 1/3 of the distance of my goal ride in just over a month. If I want to be able to accomplish my goal I need the fuel and energy to get there. Assuming I only ate my 1200 calories alloted yesterday after my ride, I'd have a deficit that would barely allow me to get out of bed today, much less function or think straight. Not to mention allow my muscles to recover so I can got out and go longer and harder tomorrow. I don't eat all of them back - I don't know that I physically could unless I gorged on total crap, as I'd still like to lose about 10 more pounds. Food is fuel, you've got to fill your tank if you want to keep going.0 -
I eat some of mine back if I need them. But if I'm not hungry or hurting I wont bother. I play roller derby but I haven't factored that into my 'daily' activity. I'd rather put it in when I do it based on the training sessions as they can be vastly different.
The reason I eat them back when I need to, and I got this advice from or league's PT...
It's much like the car. If it's running properly then it has the energy to devote to burning fuel properly. How can you expect it to do things right when it hasn't got enough to run on? It's like peddling a bike with one foot. Yeah, you'll get there but at what expense?
Yep, don't eat them back. It works for you but others it works better to support their metabolisms and basic bodily functions.
I've got mine set to lose 1 pound/week just sitting on my bum bum at work. I get 1880!! I was so stoked with that. Considering I can burn up to 1300 in a session.
Also, consider how much water you drink if you aren't losing. You need 33ml/kg of weight you currently are plus 1L for every hour of moderate exercise you do. I have upped my intake (I was standard 2L/day) to 3L at the minimum and on derby days I'll go up to 5-6. It doesn't just 'flush' you out but if your kidneys aren't working properly from dehydration, your liver takes the slack. If your liver is doing that it isn't processing fat as it should. DRINK AND PEE!! You will lose easier.0 -
That Military ratio chart and info really helpe me understand more.
Thanks so much for posting that site.
www.fat2fitradio.com/tools0 -
I think the solution to this endless debate would be for MFP to work out a clear flaw in its system.
I don't think there's a flaw in the MFP system, I think there's a flaw in the way people think about their bodies. And if people continue to eat/live that way, they will die out, leaving the smarter, healtheir, eatinger segment of the population to thrive.
So smarter, heathlier people eat back their exercise calories? Is that the point you are trying to make. Sounds like the only flawed mindset is yours since you think it should apply to all. I believe in different strokes for different folks. Me choosing not to eat back my exercise calories unless I'm hungry does not stop you from doing it or hinder your journey in anyway.
And yes, I think not factoring in workout regimens seems like a flaw to me. Fitday, sparkpeople and weightwatchers all factors in fitness level. MFP does not. I only left Fitday for MFP because there was a group for Jillian Michaels Body Revolution. The fact that this debate isn't raging on in other sites, but is a weekly topic is an indicator that their is a kink in the MFP system.
No offense but looking at your join date and your ticker maybe its what you need to lose the weight.
If thats your goal.
Going by previous posts you workout almost every day and you under eat.
Its no shocker that you've lost almost nothing.
Then you debate the reasons why?
1) You under eat creating stress
2) you workout every day creating more stress
3) you almost never have a chance to recover from your workouts
I'll explain:
Food = recovery.
People who workout every day and eat right and get the proper sleep will recover faster than people who dont.
You eat too little food for recovery.
Then you do the same thing the next day.
And the day after that.
If you were to eat the proper amount of nutrients daily and workout 3-4x a week giving proper time for rest and recovery, you will see better results.
Thats why I said guarantee.
And JM 30DS isnt a true resistance program so you wont get the proper training from it and you wont break the insulin resistance
You have 2 main culprits from your condition:
1) Hormones. You eat better and youll regulate most of these BTW.
2) insulin resistance. You break this by periodically fasting and resistance training.
Stop arguing over something that you cant even make work for yourself.0
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