When is 1200 calories appropriate? (hint: almost never)

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Replies

  • WinnerVictorious
    WinnerVictorious Posts: 4,733 Member
    My TDEE is about 2300. If I were eating just 1200 calories, that only giving it about HALF the fuel my body needs.

    If your employer cut your salary in half, you'd have a hard time getting by for more than a few weeks, maybe a few months if you had a lot in savings. But you could probably manage, if you HAD to, on a 10-20% cut in wages. You'd adapt. Same thing with your body. There's only so much you can cut and still live a normal life.

    I don't mind 1200+exercise calories. Its the ones set at 1200 and don't touch exercise calories that are setting themselves up for failure.

    i would be very happy if this thread turned into a collection or real life anecdotes from members who suffered and didn't reach their goals on a 1200 calorie diet, but eventually discovered that by eating more, they could reach their goal and be happier and healthier in the process. amazingly, just a couple of hundred calories per day can make all the difference in the world.

    i have seen dozens and dozens of members share their experiences like this spread across numerous threads, but never all collected in one thread that can be easily referred to at a later date.
  • ladyraven68
    ladyraven68 Posts: 2,003 Member
    One formula doesnt fit all...

    not that I eat 1200 or anything but lets not put people down for eating less than we believe they should. its their body not ours. and if they are losing and not malnourished who cares

    Yes, but many people are eating 1200, because they don't know any better. (like I did when I started)

    At least if this will give them some knowledge to make their own mind up. If they still chose to eat 1200, then at least they are doing it from a position of knowledge.

    Even if this thread only helps a few people then it will have been worth it.

    Well done OP.
  • Bookchick887
    Bookchick887 Posts: 119 Member
    My BMR according to F2F is 1280
    TDEE is 1505. How many cals do you advise for me?
    5 feet tall, 53 years old, low activity, 134 lb.
    Thank you!
  • crazihel
    crazihel Posts: 72 Member
    My maintainance total is rougly 2150 cals a day. I'm looking to lose the maximum healthy amount per week I can (no more than 2 pounds a week which is the limit MFP recommends)

    So....to achive this apparently I need a deficit of 1000 calories a day, which puts me at 1150, below the recommended daily minimum for women at 1200. So I eat more than that, about 1240 a day.

    I often go over...and I certainly eat back my exercise calories. I don't feel like I'm depriving myself of food because I eat three meals a day, plus snacks and fit it all in.

    So....is this all wrong?! Because it seems to be working, I've lost 10.4 pounds since 23rd January which I am happy about.
  • Eatkansasbeef
    Eatkansasbeef Posts: 71 Member
    Love this thread!
  • WinnerVictorious
    WinnerVictorious Posts: 4,733 Member
    My BMR according to F2F is 1280
    TDEE is 1505. How many cals do you advise for me?
    5 feet tall, 53 years old, low activity, 134 lb.
    Thank you!

    Dan usually will run the numbers for anyone who asks, but i'll take a stab at it for you...

    if i understand you correctly, you are saying that you are sedentary and do not do any extra cardio to lose weight. in that case, i come up about 1525 calories for your TDEE which is essentially what you have already calculated. keep in mind that these calculators have some amount of error to them, so let's just say that 1515 is correct. since you don't have much weight to lose according to your ticker, your deficit should not be large. maybe 10%-15% or so will put you at a loss of 1-2lbs per month, so that would be a daily calorie goal of 1360-1290 per day. just adding some cardio will allow you to increase that calorie goal, so you should seriously consider that (walking a couple of miles a day would do it). when you start getting to these lower numbers, even though you are still above 1200, you have to really make sure you have your macro goals dialed-in and are meeting them, as well as getting all of your micronutrients with a multivitamin (my recommendation). the more calories you have to eat, the easier it is to get proper nutrition.

    i would say, 1325 until you get to your goal. then bump it up to 1515. if you add cardio (strongly advised), then eat back all of those calories. just adding 250 calories of cardio per day would allow you to lose weight while eating 1575. that 250 calories can be as easy as going for a ~1 hour walk each day at a 3mph pace.

    once you get to your goal weight, then you go to maintenance and your calorie goal increases to your TDEE.
  • Deipneus
    Deipneus Posts: 1,861 Member
    Yawns. *eye roll* I'm always amazed at the amount of people so focused on what other people are doing and eating....
    It's fascinating isn't it.
  • andycet
    andycet Posts: 55 Member
    :flowerforyou:

    We need to do our utmost to keep this thread at the top of the forums for as long as possible!

    And when is MFP going to listen to common sense and stop advising everyone to eat 1200?!!

    I lost and gained the same 7lbs for 12 months eating 1200. Now, in a fraction of that time, I have lost 9lbs following the Roadmap (eating around 1600 calories a day plus exercise calories). And the weight is continuining to drop off. I'm not as grouchy, I drink alcohol, I have the energy to run and lift weights, my skin is better, I'm less hungry and far happier.

    'Nough said!

    What road map did you use?
  • ILiftHeavyAcrylics
    ILiftHeavyAcrylics Posts: 27,732 Member
    I will never understand the mentality of wanting to eat the bare minimum. I was really excited when people here told me that I didn't *have* to limit myself to 1200 calories.

    I also want to add for anyone thinking that disability means you automatically have to eat less-- I used to think that but it isn't necessarily true. I have a lot of heath problems. I left work because of disability (lupus, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic migraine) and in the beginning of trying to lose weight I was completely sedentary. I stayed home, I laid on the couch a lot. I did a small amount of housework (laundry, dishes, vacuuming once a week, etc). I ate about 1420 calories to lose weight, which is what MFP set me on for sedentary.

    After I had been logging for a few months I came across a method to use the amount you've eaten and the amount you've lost to figure out what your true TDEE is. Mine is 1820. That's 190 calories more than MFP's estimate for me.

    Just because you have a health condition it doesn't necessarily mean you have to be at 1200 calories either. I would encourage anyone in that position to experiment and figure out what you are really burning.

    If you can eat more food and still lose weight, why wouldn't you want to?
  • DoingitWell
    DoingitWell Posts: 560 Member
    Yawns. *eye roll*

    I'm always amazed at the amount of people so focused on what other people are doing and eating....

    ^^ this + how many times are we going to do this topic???
  • dmaloof2013
    dmaloof2013 Posts: 134 Member
    Bump
  • TrailRunner61
    TrailRunner61 Posts: 2,505 Member
    The older you are, the fewer calories you need to maintain. Thought I'd add that.

    If I get no exercise in, I will eat 1200 or less. My old, short, small-boned body doesn't need any more than that. On the other hand, if I do get in an awesome workout, like burning 800 or so, I'll eat all the exercise cals I want, but only if I'm truly hungry. It's working for me.
  • KD0224
    KD0224 Posts: 13
    I have actually been quite irritated with MFP about this. I understand that some people do only require 1200 calories, but no matter what I put in it says I only need 1200. I tried all of the activity levels just to see what it would say, 1200 calories across the board.

    Last year I spent 6 months losing weight, only eating 1200 calories and exercising almost everyday, and plateaued for quite a bit of that time. At the start of my "weight loss" this time I am more educated, and decided to find other sources to calculate my TDEE and I input my daily calories into MFP every morning. I am calorie cycling at the moment, but even before starting that I manually input my calorie allowance.

    While there are some people that do only need 1200 calories, a person who works out 5-7 days of the week needs more, and MFP should have the system set up to *correctly* reflect all the differences.
  • WinnerVictorious
    WinnerVictorious Posts: 4,733 Member
    My maintainance total is rougly 2150 cals a day. I'm looking to lose the maximum healthy amount per week I can (no more than 2 pounds a week which is the limit MFP recommends)

    So....to achive this apparently I need a deficit of 1000 calories a day, which puts me at 1150, below the recommended daily minimum for women at 1200. So I eat more than that, about 1240 a day.

    I often go over...and I certainly eat back my exercise calories. I don't feel like I'm depriving myself of food because I eat three meals a day, plus snacks and fit it all in.

    So....is this all wrong?! Because it seems to be working, I've lost 10.4 pounds since 23rd January which I am happy about.

    it can work, but there are usually consequences. most often, those relate to nutritional deficiencies and stalls. there are other consequences (e.g., loss of LBM), but those are the two most important ones for most people. but even if you stall eventually you'll break through it. it won't be pleasant though and it isn't necessary to go that route to get to your goal.

    the problem with the MFP calculations is that they allow 2lbs per week fat loss as the maximum, but don't set any minimums based on current weight and goal weight. if you have 200lbs to lose, a 1000 calorie per day deficit is not a problem because your TDEE is going to be high. but if you're trying to go from 130lbs to 120lbs, then a 2lbs per week goal is too aggressive. that's what you should always choose your goals with respect to TDEE-20% (or thereabouts). as your TDEE goes down, your desired loss rate should to. so to set your MFP goals properly, you really have to understand the underlying math a little bit. you can learn about that by reading Dan's Roadmap or the many threads in the Eat, Train, Progress group.
  • PinkNinjaKitty
    PinkNinjaKitty Posts: 32 Member
    I am having a hard time with this. MFP has given me 1200 calories a day to aim for plus my 500 or so exercise calories. I have a hard time eating all those calories. I eat a lot of veggies and they have barely any calories. I also don't eat meat. I am trying to eat more...without touching processed foods or junk. I have been doing this for weeks and have not lost a pound. I work out daily and people tell me I don't need to lose weight but I am 5'6'' 162. I know that I could stand to lose 20 lbs.

    I am going to try to eat more calories and see if that is what I need. It will be hard for me because I eat a mostly vegan diet. I guess I will have to up my intake of nuts and fruit.

    Thanks for the info..this could be why I have seen zero results. I was ready to give up
  • ILiftHeavyAcrylics
    ILiftHeavyAcrylics Posts: 27,732 Member
    I have actually been quite irritated with MFP about this. I understand that some people do only require 1200 calories, but no matter what I put in it says I only need 1200. I tried all of the activity levels just to see what it would say, 1200 calories across the board.

    Last year I spent 6 months losing weight, only eating 1200 calories and exercising almost everyday, and plateaued for quite a bit of that time. At the start of my "weight loss" this time I am more educated, and decided to find other sources to calculate my TDEE and I input my daily calories into MFP every morning. I am calorie cycling at the moment, but even before starting that I manually input my calorie allowance.

    While there are some people that do only need 1200 calories, a person who works out 5-7 days of the week needs more, and MFP should have the system set up to *correctly* reflect all the differences.

    Did you put in .5 lb/week as your goal? You have so little to lose you really shouldn't have it set any higher than that.
  • LorinaLynn
    LorinaLynn Posts: 13,247 Member
    Yawns. *eye roll*

    I'm always amazed at the amount of people so focused on what other people are doing and eating....

    ^^ this + how many times are we going to do this topic???

    I know, right? How dare anyone post helpful advice in a forum called "General Diet and Weight Loss Help." :indifferent:

    Personally, I'm grateful for topics like this and the frequency at which they occur. If no one had ever posted things that went against my preconceived notions of what weight loss was supposed to be like, I wouldn't have had the success I had. What I was doing before didn't work.
  • Bump.
  • WinnerVictorious
    WinnerVictorious Posts: 4,733 Member
    I am having a hard time with this. MFP has given me 1200 calories a day to aim for plus my 500 or so exercise calories. I have a hard time eating all those calories. I eat a lot of veggies and they have barely any calories. I also don't eat meat. I am trying to eat more...without touching processed foods or junk. I have been doing this for weeks and have not lost a pound. I work out daily and people tell me I don't need to lose weight but I am 5'6'' 162. I know that I could stand to lose 20 lbs.

    I am going to try to eat more calories and see if that is what I need. It will be hard for me because I eat a mostly vegan diet. I guess I will have to up my intake of nuts and fruit.

    Thanks for the info..this could be why I have seen zero results. I was ready to give up

    we've all been brainwashed into thinking that losing weight is a matter of eating healthy and eating healthy means filling up on celery and grapes and lettuce (etc.). those foods will fill you up, but leave you well short of your calorie goal. this means you aren't actually nourishing your body the way you think you are. go to the Eat, Train, Progress group and read about IIFYM (If It Fits Your Macros). this will explain why you don't need to limit your food choices to lose weight. as long as they fit in your daily macros, you can eat almost anything you want. in your case, you should add back some calorie dense foods to your diet to get you to your daily goal.
  • ILiftHeavyAcrylics
    ILiftHeavyAcrylics Posts: 27,732 Member
    I am having a hard time with this. MFP has given me 1200 calories a day to aim for plus my 500 or so exercise calories. I have a hard time eating all those calories. I eat a lot of veggies and they have barely any calories. I also don't eat meat. I am trying to eat more...without touching processed foods or junk. I have been doing this for weeks and have not lost a pound. I work out daily and people tell me I don't need to lose weight but I am 5'6'' 162. I know that I could stand to lose 20 lbs.

    I am going to try to eat more calories and see if that is what I need. It will be hard for me because I eat a mostly vegan diet. I guess I will have to up my intake of nuts and fruit.

    Thanks for the info..this could be why I have seen zero results. I was ready to give up

    Also make sure you are weighing/measuring everything with a food scale. Good luck :)
  • CharlieJuliette
    CharlieJuliette Posts: 459 Member
    Bump to read later
  • sozisfitnow
    sozisfitnow Posts: 209 Member
    if you are a sedentary 38-year old woman, who is 4'10" and weighs 115lbs and does not exercise, then your TDEE-20% would be approximately 1200 calories.

    if you are:

    more active than that...
    and/or younger than that...
    and/or male...
    and/or taller than that...
    and/or weigh more than that...
    and/or engage in cardiovascular exercise, then

    you should almost certainly be eating MORE than 1200 calories per day.

    i would hazard to guess that 99+% of the people on MFP are in the category that should be eating more than 1200 calories. 1200 calories per day is almost certainly too low for almost everyone who does not have an unusual medical condition requiring a low calorie intake, in which case that person would have to be under medical supervision.

    if you are new here or are trying to adhere to a 1200 calorie diet because you heard that's what you need to do to lose weight, i would urge you to read through Dan's Roadmap:

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/654536-in-place-of-a-road-map-2-0-revised-7-2-12

    when you are done, join the Eat, Train, Progress group run by 2 knowledgeable members who are trying to provide a safe harbor where accurate, scientifically sound health, nutrition, and fitness advice can be given without all of the background noise occasionally found in the public forums.

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/home/10118-eat-train-progress

    please do yourself a favor and find out the right calorie goal for yourself that allows you to change your body in a healthy and satisfying way. you don't need to starve yourself and you don't need to suffer the side effects of a 1200 calorie diet.


    Totally agree. I did the 1200 for a two week period , luckily I had read the forums and changed weight loss goals and got a higher cal goal. What you need to remember though is myself and many of my generation come from the VLCD era , so 1200 for a 'diet'
    actually seems pretty generous for the tough it out for a few days and then give up and say you cant diet mentality.
    Im now on maintenance on MFP for non exercise days and actually thats a weight loss diet for me of nearly 1600 cals!

    I think the longer you need to diet , the higher the calorie consuption can be . To be honest a lot of very overweight people could just eat a healthy average diet of 2,000 cals and plummet in weight .
  • d3mon4ngel
    d3mon4ngel Posts: 242 Member
    I have actually been quite irritated with MFP about this. I understand that some people do only require 1200 calories, but no matter what I put in it says I only need 1200. I tried all of the activity levels just to see what it would say, 1200 calories across the board.

    Last year I spent 6 months losing weight, only eating 1200 calories and exercising almost everyday, and plateaued for quite a bit of that time. At the start of my "weight loss" this time I am more educated, and decided to find other sources to calculate my TDEE and I input my daily calories into MFP every morning. I am calorie cycling at the moment, but even before starting that I manually input my calorie allowance.

    While there are some people that do only need 1200 calories, a person who works out 5-7 days of the week needs more, and MFP should have the system set up to *correctly* reflect all the differences.

    Did you put in .5 lb/week as your goal? You have so little to lose you really shouldn't have it set any higher than that.

    ^^ This

    The closer you get to your goal weight, the less of a deficit you should have. :flowerforyou:
  • WinnerVictorious
    WinnerVictorious Posts: 4,733 Member
    :flowerforyou:

    We need to do our utmost to keep this thread at the top of the forums for as long as possible!

    And when is MFP going to listen to common sense and stop advising everyone to eat 1200?!!

    I lost and gained the same 7lbs for 12 months eating 1200. Now, in a fraction of that time, I have lost 9lbs following the Roadmap (eating around 1600 calories a day plus exercise calories). And the weight is continuining to drop off. I'm not as grouchy, I drink alcohol, I have the energy to run and lift weights, my skin is better, I'm less hungry and far happier.

    'Nough said!

    What road map did you use?

    i believe they are referring to Dan's Roadmap. it's linked in the first post on this thread.
  • Julieann777
    Julieann777 Posts: 13 Member
    Thank you for this! Much needed.
  • I don't want MFP to change. The way MFP is designed is working for me. I don't think they want you to eat 1200 calories. I think they set you at that if you are not going to move all day. To me it is encouragement to work out. That is why they have it set up that if you work out then you gain calories back to eat. I have done the whole tdee thing and the calories it gives me for the day is pretty close to MFP giving me 1200 and then letting me eat my calories back. So depending on how hard or how long I work out and what I earn I could be eating up to 1800-2200 a day. So it does work for some.
  • katiemarlowe
    katiemarlowe Posts: 1 Member
    bump
  • BerryH
    BerryH Posts: 4,698 Member
    I would recommend beginners spend a week honestly tracking every mouthful and weighing portion sizes from an average pre-getting-fit day.

    I was one of those, "But I got fat eating 2,000 calories, how will I lose eating that much?" naysayers, until I realised I had easily been eating (and drinking) 3,000+ on some days.

    But, of course, everyone wants quick results, which is why they chose "lose 2lb a week" and end up on 1,200 calories.

    I'd never even heard 1,200 was a go-to figure until I started reading MFP forums, I just clicked on the "1lb a week - recommended" and it seemed obvious enough it was designed to eat your exercise calories too.
  • Yawns. *eye roll*

    I'm always amazed at the amount of people so focused on what other people are doing and eating....

    ^^ this + how many times are we going to do this topic???

    Lots of people do find it useful as is evident in this post. You are, of course, welcome to disregard. I don't see this as one of those threads moaning at what others are doing, those annoy me too. This is people offering genuine advice and I, for one, appreciate it.
  • KD0224
    KD0224 Posts: 13
    Yawns. *eye roll*

    I'm always amazed at the amount of people so focused on what other people are doing and eating....

    I don't see this as a way to be negatived focused on anything. What I get from this thread is that others are having the same issues with MFP, and it is a way to educate those who are not aware that MFP is wrong sometimes.

    When I first started using this site last year I was unaware that there was a sort of science behind losing weight. I thought, just eat a lot less than normal, but it is threads like this that educated me in how to be better at losing weight, and more healthy about it.