Housework does it really burn calories?
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laurayates1980
Posts: 6
Well i have spent this morning cleaning ( again lol). But my question is does it really count as part of my fitness/workout? does it really burn the amount of calories it statesit does on ere. I have done all the usual everyday stuff washing up, washing clothes etc but i have done the hoovering and mopping and window cleaning etc. i have also been a really good girl and been out and swept the drive and the back yard not that i wanted too but ive been asking my other half 2 do it for about 2 weeks now and i may as well bang my head against a wall lol. So i guess what im getting at is have i really burnt any calories?
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Replies
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You even burn calories while sleeping....the question is...is it worth it for you to count it?0
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If you're cleaning more vigorously than usual then it may be worth counting, especially if it's taken a fair bit of time. Obviously general everyday housework would already be accounted for in your NEAT.
I'm a fitbit user so that would pick up when I've been more active than usual, be it from exercise, dancing round the lounge or housework. If I'm moving, I'm burning.0 -
When you put in your information, it gives you a calorie need based on your weigh, age, activity level, etc. This already takes into account the normal calorie burn of your everyday life. So adding calories burnt sleeping, or anything not usual for that matter is only hurting yourself. As for house cleaning, if you didn't originally use that in your activity level, then maybe you should use it, but I am unsure of how accurate it is estimating burnt calories but Im sure it does burn some.0
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I wear a devise made by BodyMedia that measures my activity the entire time I wear it. I only take it off for showers and if I was to go swimming. Yesterday was a spring cleaning day - major hoovering, cleaning bathrooms, washing clothes, dishes - moved the fridge to clean behind it, moved the bed to clean under, moved chairs to clean under them. During that time, my Link Armband data says that my exercise amounted to 101 mintues of moderate activity. I walked a total of 7335 steps. I burned 1667 calories. I started house work at 10 am and went to 5 PM with a break for lunch and to log at this site. So yes, house work does burn calories. Now - for this site - I don't add that exercise in. This site is linked up to my Bodymedia data and it pulled in that the first half of the day at 554 calories burned when I Iogged in at Lunch. That was good enough for me here. I use my Bodymedia data for my doctor and to really look at the entire picture of my data. I've been stalled for a couple of years and haven't lost weight so I wanted data to take to my doctor. WIth data, we could look and see what was going on with me. This devise even tracks my sleep. I love the data as it's really helped me understand what's going on. My doctor loved the data too.0
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I agree with most ppl's posts. If it is everyday straightening up around the house...then no, I would not log it. But if it is a major cleaning then I log it. I vacuumed for about 35 mins yesterday and I worked up a sweat! So, I logged it! Some people will argue that it isn't truely working out. Well, no it's not, but if it gets your heart rate up then it is a form of exercise (IMO!)0
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Stuff like that is just general living and really should be included in your activity level. Even if you do a spring cleaning, I wouldn't bother logging it as it is just an isolated event. You also burn calories just breathing....0
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I agree with most ppl's posts. If it is everyday straightening up around the house...then no, I would not log it. But if it is a major cleaning then I log it. I vacuumed for about 35 mins yesterday and I worked up a sweat! So, I logged it! Some people will argue that it isn't truely working out. Well, no it's not, but if it gets your heart rate up then it is a form of exercise (IMO!)
I agree! I dont log in my normal housework, however I do log in when I do major house cleaning which is once a week or every 2 weeks where I move furniture around and that sort of thing, and I wear my HRM to be accurate.0 -
I found it best to bump my activity setting from sedentary to lightly active (which gives about 130 calories extra) and NOT count all that normal stuff.
If I go above and beyond normal (shoveling snow, heavy yard work, the kind of cleaning I do before the inlaws visit, etc) I'd log that as exercise, but not regular vacuuming, toilet scrubbing, cat box scooping, etc.0 -
I'm in the "it's better to use an HRM or a pedomiter" camp. Unlike traditional exercises, it's just too vague and general to log as an exercise. But the HRM / pedomiter will pick up extra exertion and be able to factor it into things.0
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I only log my cleaning calories when I really, REALLY clean the house. However, I have my activity level set as sedentary, and I wear my HRM. That way I have an accurate count. Like you said, I don't count things like laundry, making the bed, etc. Those activities didn't make me thin before so why should they now.0
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You even burn calories while sleeping....the question is...is it worth it for you to count it?
Totally agree! I used to log it, but then again why wouldn't I log sleeping? Breathing? You don't log how many calories you burn while brushing teeth. In my opinion if you aren't vigorously challenging/pushing yourself, you won't make a change. I think a lot of people just log it so they can make excuses for eating more calories. Weightloss is about eating right and workig out hardcore! No one made a huge body change by doing the dishes or sweeping the floor.0 -
Thanks everyone for your advice. I do my general cleaning everyday and never log it but i have had a full day vigerously cleaning today.. moving furniture, turning matresses scrubbed the carpet on the stairs an i di work up quite a sweat so have logged just 40 mins of light housework duties even though it was more like 3-4 hours. i dont want to over eat calories thinking its ok cause i burnt them off.0
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In the very beginning of trying to lose, I would count the deep cleaning days.. But, my friend (who has helped me greatly in this process) said to me.. did you deep clean while getting fat? I said yes. He then said to count nothing that I did while gaining. Shopping doesn't count, cleaning, walking a dog.. nope.0
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I would never count cleaning. It's part of life. You still need to workout even if you cleaned all day.0
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I count the days I really, really clean. I don't clean every day because with two small children that's pointless. So when I get down to scrubbing the crayon off the walls and things of that sort, yeah, I count it.0
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In the very beginning of trying to lose, I would count the deep cleaning days.. But, my friend (who has helped me greatly in this process) said to me.. did you deep clean while getting fat? I said yes. He then said to count nothing that I did while gaining. Shopping doesn't count, cleaning, walking a dog.. nope.
I ran, skated, swam, hiked, and biked while gaining weight. Does it not count as exercise?0 -
Of course you burned calories. Should you log it as exercise? No.0
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In the very beginning of trying to lose, I would count the deep cleaning days.. But, my friend (who has helped me greatly in this process) said to me.. did you deep clean while getting fat? I said yes. He then said to count nothing that I did while gaining. Shopping doesn't count, cleaning, walking a dog.. nope.
That's how I feel. But if counting the calories burned while cleaning motivates you then do it.0 -
For all of those who wonder how many calories house cleaning really burns, perhaps you should look up some recent studies about lack of physical housework and increased waist measurements. There is a strong correlation. Back to the OP, normal everyday, I wouldn't include as it would be accounted for in my activity level (along with breathing and sleeping and whatever else anyone who is feeling snarky wants to add.) However, for major cleaning it is exercise so why not? It's like saying I worked out at home and not the gym is it okay to count that. Exercise is exercise. Calories burnt are calories burnt. It really doesn't matter where or in what manner they were done.0
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For me: I count it, I have my activity level set at "sedentary" as I have an office job where I sit all day, but last weekend I swept and mopped my entire home, and got sweaty doing so!
If it is a part of your regular daily activity AND you have your actvity level set to reflect it, then I would not count those as burned calories0
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