1200 Calories a day plus workout
Replies
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I eat back my exercise cals, I like to eat so I set my cals at 1200 in order to make me workout out in order to be able to eat more than that lol. Works for me, no excuse not to work hard if I want my chocolate. You will still lose this way.0
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If I workout should i still only eat 1200 calories? Or can i increase my calories for the day and still lose weight?
You can increase your calories, but you will lose weight more slowly, and if you inadvertently eliminate your deficit you won't lose weight at all.
Unless you're hungry or feel unwell, I would stick to 1,200, do your workouts, and see how things go for the next few weeks.
What!?
MFP as designed expects you to eat your calories back BECAUSE the calorie deficit is built in already (MFP does not ASSUME that anyone will exercise). When you exercise you increase the calorie deficit.
When your calorie deficit is TOO big your body will use muscle mass for fuel.
I eat every single exercise calories BECAUSE: I want to lose fat NOT muscle. I have my activity level set to sedentary and log actual workouts only (not walking the dog). The calorie counts are not grossly overstated because I use a heart rate monitor.
Some people inadvertantly eat back too many calories because their treadmill (or whatever) overstates calorie burns. MFP numbers are also "generous." Some people inadvertantly eat too much because they set their activity level higher than it should be (activity level is a range).
Eat your calories back BUT be conservative0 -
Go with how your body feels. If you feel fine without eating back your calories, then dont force yourself to eat anyway, but if you feel tired or weak then of course eat more! I go with how i feel, some days i need to eat back my workout calories, other days i feel great without doing so.0
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Why does everyone here say 1200 so low? What are you guys eating?0
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If I workout should i still only eat 1200 calories? Or can i increase my calories for the day and still lose weight?
You can increase your calories, but you will lose weight more slowly, and if you inadvertently eliminate your deficit you won't lose weight at all.
Unless you're hungry or feel unwell, I would stick to 1,200, do your workouts, and see how things go for the next few weeks.
1200 calories should be your NET. If you're eating 1200, working out, and not eating back those work out calories, you have a deficit right thur.
EDIT: Woah, old topic. Sorry for bringing it back, haha0 -
I just have a question on where the vast majority of individuals on here trying to lose weight are getting this 1200 calorie number. I know everyone has different requirements, my BMR alone is in the 1900-2000 range. Not to mention my calories burned during workouts on top of daily activities.0
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I was tested and m current BMR is 1450....I eat 1300 calories/day when I want to lose. I eat back exercise calories when I do crossfit because I do not want to lose muscle. The more muscle you have the higher your BMR will be....it is possible that some people's BMR would be really low if they werent very active and had really low muscle mass.... I cant wait until my BMR is more like 1900!
I can only imagine what someone like Michael Phelps BMR is....he eats 10,000 calories a day to maintain when competitive swimming. Thats crazy0 -
READ THIS OTHER THREAD PLEASE!! I beg of you
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/954018-why-am-i-not-losing-any-weight-frustrated
*rages* I swear MFP puts unhealthy things in people's minds by saying 1200. I went to 1200 and lost nothing, upped to 1400 + eating back exercise calories and finally started to lose.0 -
If I workout should i still only eat 1200 calories? Or can i increase my calories for the day and still lose weight?
You can increase your calories, but you will lose weight more slowly, and if you inadvertently eliminate your deficit you won't lose weight at all.
Unless you're hungry or feel unwell, I would stick to 1,200, do your workouts, and see how things go for the next few weeks.
What!?
MFP as designed expects you to eat your calories back BECAUSE the calorie deficit is built in already (MFP does not ASSUME that anyone will exercise). When you exercise you increase the calorie deficit.
When your calorie deficit is TOO big your body will use muscle mass for fuel.
I eat every single exercise calories BECAUSE: I want to lose fat NOT muscle. I have my activity level set to sedentary and log actual workouts only (not walking the dog). The calorie counts are not grossly overstated because I use a heart rate monitor.
Some people inadvertantly eat back too many calories because their treadmill (or whatever) overstates calorie burns. MFP numbers are also "generous." Some people inadvertantly eat too much because they set their activity level higher than it should be (activity level is a range).
Eat your calories back BUT be conservative
MFP and gadgets can only estimate what your energy expenditures are and many people overestimate how much they're exercising and underestimate what they eat.0 -
I just have a question on where the vast majority of individuals on here trying to lose weight are getting this 1200 calorie number. I know everyone has different requirements, my BMR alone is in the 1900-2000 range. Not to mention my calories burned during workouts on top of daily activities.
Well, my maintenance calories are about 1600-1700 calories daily. Myfitnesspal has me set at 1200 because -500 a day = pound of fat lost weekly. A lot of people on here are aiming for 1-2 pounds a week, so that's where the 1200 comes from.0 -
I am on 1200 cals a day even when i workout, it will bring your deficit up and loose more... if you dont get too hungry
You will lose weight quicker HOWEVER, much of the weight you lose will be muscle mass. Rapid weight loss is prone to plateaus also.
I eat all my exercise calories back because my goal is to lose FAT not muscle. Decreasing my body fat% is about losing fat (not muscle).0 -
I just have a question on where the vast majority of individuals on here trying to lose weight are getting this 1200 calorie number. I know everyone has different requirements, my BMR alone is in the 1900-2000 range. Not to mention my calories burned during workouts on top of daily activities.
1200 is a popular number because people new to MFP plug in some "large number" of pounds per week to lose.
So MFP gives them the absolute lowest number it can 1200 (for women) ....... that does NOT mean 1200 calories is best for everyone, and it does NOT guarantee the "large number" of pounds lost per week WILL happen .... or even CAN happen.0 -
I myself have been in that situation lately. I don't get the opportunity to work out till in the evening after dinner. I try to stay within the 1200 calories per day but then when I work out I am burning a good 200-300 calories. After my workout entry it puts me back to 200-300 below the 1200 calorie limit. What are some good food choices to fulfill those calories back but yet help my body continue to burn while I sleep?0
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Wow lots of bad advice here.
Hmm - so why don't you elaborate, then, if you know all the right answers?
my thought exactly. why is it a bad advice ?0 -
Wow lots of bad advice here.
Hmm - so why don't you elaborate, then, if you know all the right answers?
my thought exactly. why is it a bad advice ?
The bad advice I see (my opinion) is this
1. Eat back calories if you are hungry......um, there are plenty of anorexics that are "stuffed" on 800 calories a day. Hunger does not indicate whether your body is using muscle mass for fuel. Eating high quality (protein & fat) nourishing foods (as opposed to high volume/high fiber foods)....helps you keep muscle & lose fat. Protein & fat are calorie dense....no problem upping calories with these.
MFP includes ZERO exercise & then gives you a deficit. Exercise adds to that deficit.
2. Accepting 1200 as "gospel"......1200 is merely a lowest default number....it's not based upon height, weight, age, activity level. 1200 comes from "I want to lose XX pounds per week"......you put in a too high number here.....1200 is a too low number there. It is possible that 1200 is an appropriate number....but don't assume0 -
Wow lots of bad advice here.
Yup. You probably shouldn't be eating 1200 calories anyways.
This calculator is based off of your daily expenditure:
http://www.health-calc.com/diet/energy-expenditure-advanced
If anything just make healthier choices instead of counting calories.0 -
I just have a question on where the vast majority of individuals on here trying to lose weight are getting this 1200 calorie number. I know everyone has different requirements, my BMR alone is in the 1900-2000 range. Not to mention my calories burned during workouts on top of daily activities.0
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