TDEE Help
EnchantedEvening
Posts: 671 Member
I'd like to calculate my TDEE, but I don't know what I should use for my "activity level".
I have a desk job, so I sit on my butt for eight hours per day five days per week (I haaaate it).
I generally walk for an hour after work every day, and sometimes I walk for a half-hour during my lunch break since I can't stand sitting.
According to my HRM (with chest strap), I burn around 1200 calories during an hour of walking at 3-4 mph, but I subtract some to allow for BMR and error percentage. Apparently, it takes a lot of energy to move this body.
Would that be moderately active or just lightly active?
I have a desk job, so I sit on my butt for eight hours per day five days per week (I haaaate it).
I generally walk for an hour after work every day, and sometimes I walk for a half-hour during my lunch break since I can't stand sitting.
According to my HRM (with chest strap), I burn around 1200 calories during an hour of walking at 3-4 mph, but I subtract some to allow for BMR and error percentage. Apparently, it takes a lot of energy to move this body.
Would that be moderately active or just lightly active?
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Replies
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Moderately active.0
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Wow! 1200 calories for an hour of normal walking. That's a phenomenal burn rate!0
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Thank you. That matches the description on Fitness Frog too.0
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Yeah, I know I won't burn that forever. It's just because I'm so heavy and trying to ambulate 315 pounds at a 4 mph pace takes a lot of work. Once I'm a more "normal" weight, I'll be suffering along with everyone else, trying to burn 400 in an hour.Wow! 1200 calories for an hour of normal walking. That's a phenomenal burn rate!
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Sitting 8 hrs a day is sedentary.
For MFP you can set it to moderately active and not log light activity or set it to sedentary and log everything.
Either way it's an estimate. You'll see best as you log for a few weeks and adjust up or down based on your weight loss.
Create a starting point, adjust after 4-5 weeks, rinse repeat. Track everything.
Good luck!0 -
I don't think TDEE would count me as "sedentary" since it asks how often you exercise every week. That's an MFP setting.0
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I agree with moderate activity.0
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If I was starting mfp again, I'd start by seeing what happened if I ate mfp's maintenance calories for the activity level I thought I was and calibrate from there.
If I'd done that, I would have found I lost quite rapidly still, and I would have stuck to that figure, rather than suffering on 1200.0 -
I don't think TDEE would count me as "sedentary" since it asks how often you exercise every week. That's an MFP setting.
The TDEE research only considered exercise workouts or sports as active.
Sedentary is not just an MFP setting.
Here - http://www.ajdesigner.com/phpweightloss/weight_loss_equations_total_daily_energy_expenditure_sedentary.php
You are probably Light Activity, but since the equations do not take into consideration someone who burns 1000 cals per hour with the standard multiplier, my suggestion is that you set it as sedentary (multiplier of 1.2) and log all you exercise versus the option of using the Light Activity multiplier (1.375) and not logging your base activity which would normally be included in the multiplier.
I weight lift 3-4 times a week, I run or bike once a week and walk a lot, but I've set my base calculation as sedentary as this allows me to log all my activity. If you want a more in depth answer, there is the new Road map thread.
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/654536-in-place-of-a-road-map-2-0-revised-7-2-12
Btw, the sedentary label seems offensive to me because of the association we give it, so my intent is not to give you a measure of your real activity but on how to best use the equation given that you actually have a great burn potential.0 -
That's what I tell my clients to do: eat the maximum amount of calories until they reach a state where they don't gain nor lose weight for about a month. If people knew and started at their actual maintenance range prior to dieting, they'd have far greater success.If I was starting mfp again, I'd start by seeing what happened if I ate mfp's maintenance calories for the activity level I thought I was and calibrate from there.
If I'd done that, I would have found I lost quite rapidly still, and I would have stuck to that figure, rather than suffering on 1200.0 -
If I did that, would I eat my calories back or no?You are probably Light Activity, but since the equations do not take into consideration someone who burns 1000 cals per hour with the standard multiplier, my suggestion is that you set it as sedentary (multiplier of 1.2) and log all your exercise versus the option of using the Light Activity multiplier (1.375) and not logging your base activity which would normally be included in the multiplier.0 -
Now I'm even more confused. I did the TDEE calculation from the "Road Map V2" thread, and my "sedentary" TDEE minus 20% is 2068. MFP's sedentary calorie setting is 1670. Why is there such a huge difference?0
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MFP assumes you will not exercise and gives you a big deficit to begin with. Then when you DO exercise you need to log it and eat those calories back to fuel your workout.
If you follow the road map and take your TDEE - 20% then you would not have to track your exercise burn and eat extra calories, it already includes your exercise.0 -
Gotcha. Thank you very much.
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I'd say lightly active.0
This discussion has been closed.
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