Eat your exercise cals?
xxXcaraXxx
Posts: 58 Member
DO you eat them or not thanks Love Cara xxx
0
Replies
-
I do not.0
-
Yes.0
-
Yes.
But now I include them in my daily calorie goal and eat a very small percentage below my TDEE instead. But overall... yes.0 -
For a year I did not, I stuck to 1200 calories a day. Now I eat them back all of them0
-
When I have a craving, physical hunger, or feel like I need an energy or mood boost. For me, they are a akin to a financial fun allowance: nice to have when something I need or want strikes, but I'm not going to spend the money just because it's there.0
-
straight up answer...
Unless drinking them back with vodka every once in a while counts..
then no, because I am never hungry enough to eat them back.
Some people do, some people don't. Personal choice :happy:
Do what you feel your body is telling you, if you're hungry, eat.0 -
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. 98 percent of the time I eat some of them
For example today I burned 800 calories because I went out to lunch & am not going out to dinner with my family. So I will probably eat them back today. Plus my BMR is 1350sh and my TDEE is 1560ish and most of the time 1350 calories is NOT enough on an exercise day...I think it's different for people who weigh more than I do or who are overweight because they are already allowed 1800 calorie a day since their TDEE and BMR are higher then mine...so long story short I think the lower your TDEE or BMR is the more important it is to at least eat back some because your body can't really function on such a low net intake .0 -
Sometimes I do and sometimes I don't.0
-
I'm trying not to eat mine until I see some progress, once I'm focusing more on toning than trimming I'll probably eat them.0
-
Yep enjoying every last one of them...... I use a Polar FT60 heart rate monitor to track my calorie burns and only eat back 85% of them leaving 15% for error.... Best of Luck0
-
Some of them, I try not to eat all of them back because i'm trying to lose two pounds a week. However, I would caution using MFP's automatic calorie counts because they are oftentimes grossly overestimated and you could be doing yourself more harm then good, eating back more than you've burned.0
-
-
Yep enjoying every last one of them...... I use a Polar FT60 heart rate monitor to track my calorie burns and only eat back 85% of them leaving 15% for error.... Best of Luck
good approach....I sometimes go even higher with the margin for error and eat back about 70% or so0 -
Yes, I usually eat most of my exercise calories, if not all.0
-
When I have a craving, physical hunger, or feel like I need an energy or mood boost. For me, they are a akin to a financial fun allowance: nice to have when something I need or want strikes, but I'm not going to spend the money just because it's there.
This - except that I try very hard not to eat for a 'mood boost.' But I only eat exercise calories if I'm truly hungry.0 -
Ah by mood boost I should clarify that I mean for true moodiness (overly fatigued or irritable) not to indulge an emotional eating impulse. (I try not to do that because I'm not good at managing that once I get started.)0
-
Sometimes I do, depending on the day & what is going on - such as a birthday & I want a small piece of cake. Right now I am concentrating on losing weight & trying to stick to my allotted allowance.0
-
My first month here I didn't know what I was doing. I was eating 1200 and exercising and not eating back those exercise calories. I stalled for weeks until I started eating my exercise calories. Then I kept upping my calories. It's been steady since then. A member here took a poll a while back and found that the people who ate their exercise calories or <20% under TDEE lost less lean body mass than those who didn't eat back their exercise calories.0
-
Sometimes I do, depending on the day & what is going on - such as a birthday & I want a small piece of cake. Right now I am concentrating on losing weight & trying to stick to my allotted allowance.
If you are using MFP the way it's meant to be used, then exercise cals are part of your allotted allowance.0 -
I don't while I'm trying to lose weight0
-
I eat back a pretty good amount of mine. I take a water fitness class in the mornings and usually add on at least 15 minutes of lap swimming, more if we have more available time or if I wake up and can get to the pool before my class starts. If I don't eat back at least some of the exercise calories, I'm hungry to the point of irritability. I also eat about every two hours. Good luck!0
-
A member here took a poll a while back and found that the people who ate their exercise calories or <20% under TDEE lost less lean body mass than those who didn't eat back their exercise calories.
I always ate back most if not all of my exercise calories because, as a reforming couch potato in my late 50s, I knew I didn't have any lean body mass to spare. It worked out well for me. I lost 58 pounds without ever stalling out, which put me at 12 pounds below my original "realistic" goal weight and 2 pounds below my "fantasy" goal weight. And I've successfully maintained for over a year. One advantage of eating back your exercise calories, other than keeping your metabolic rate relatively high, is that the larger calorie budget makes it easier to condition yourself to the way you'll need to eat for the rest of your life to keep the weight off. You don't learn much of anything from starving yourself.0 -
I eat them back if I can. Its better in the long run and makes the process fun instead of a chore
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/654536-in-place-of-a-road-map-2-0-revised-7-2-120 -
I think you can eat them back by healthy food not fast food and other snacks.0
-
I usually eat half of them back. Not because I don't want to, but like another poster said, the estimated calorie burns on here can sometimes be way off. If had a heart rate monitor, I would probably eat more of them back. While HRM isn't 100% accurate either, it's still more accurate that alot of what's on here.0
-
i like to do exercise and have the calories there just in case. sometimes i do eat them (particularly if i go out for a meal) and sometimes i don't need too. i just eat what i want, in moderation, if i dip into them then i do. if i don't i don't0
-
I do TDEE - 20%.
Exercise accounted for in my tdee, so yep I sure do!0 -
Its important to eat them in order to lose only your recommended weight loss. If you don't you may lose weight quicker, but run the risk of gaining it again quickly0
-
Here is my answer...
most of us got here eating when we weren hungry....
So why eat your calories back.. IF YOU ARENT HUNGRY.
Why shove food into your throat, just because you can?
If you are hungry, eat.
If you arent, dont.
Its really THAT simple.0 -
If you are hungry, eat.
If you arent, dont.
Its really THAT simple.
actually, it is not that simple. To cut weight I had to learn how to deal with hunger on occasions. If I ate whenever I was hungry, I wouldn't have lost weight.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions