Factoring exercise via tdee
dinomomma
Posts: 264 Member
When describing your exercise based on your tdee what made you choose moderate or light or did you choose desk job and still track your exercise? Thanks in advance.
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Replies
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TDEE is designed to take in your exercise. so take your best guess at the intensity level and don't eat back the exercise calories.0
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TDEE is designed to take in your exercise. so take your best guess at the intensity level and don't eat back the exercise calories.0
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I chose moderate because I workout a minimum of 3 days a week for 1 hour. My cardio days are usually only 30 minutes or so and I try for once or twice week for a total of 4-5 days/week of total exercise. My job is lightly active...I'm on my feet a lot so between my job and my exercise I think that puts me at moderately active. I'm interested in what others say to see where I fall on the scale.0
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I chose moderately active because I'm out at the barn, mucking paddocks, grooming, riding or working horses, and otherwise on my feet or walking for 2-3 hours every day. I got tired of trying to keep track of every little thing, but it averages about 500-600 calories per day. MFP at 1200 + average exercise calories and TDEE - 15% came to within a few calories of each other, so I figured that was a pretty good target. I'm pretty close to goal, so weight is coming off slowly, anyway.0
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I chose sedentary - because the amount I exercise varies from week to week (new baby and all that jazz).
I add the exercise calories into my diary and eat most of them.0 -
I wonder if I should keep it the same due to nursing, I have it set to moderate.0
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I put moderate- I workout 6 days a week. I am a stay at home mom, but with a toddler and infant- I am always moving despite what some may think :-). Since I breastfeed, I found my TDEE-15% and added 500 calories for nursing.Needless to say I eat a lot, but losing inches and weight. Just started this so hoping it keeps up. For the nursing- everything I read said to add it after you find TDEE and calculated the deficit. My milk supply is great this way.0
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I just read that you should factor in exercise separately. You figure out TDEE based on lifestyle (so intensity and duration of movement over the course of your daily life)--not exercise. I'm not sure how reliable this info is but it makes sense to me, since what you are aiming to figure out is calories burned over a 24 hour period and not in an hour burst of exercise.
http://theskinnyequation.blogspot.com/p/weight-loss-calculators.html?m=1
http://theskinnyequation.blogspot.com/2013/03/fit-tip-of-day-most-accurate-way-to.html?m=1
This seems a better way to define it versus those ahort bursts of exercise:
Sedentary - desk job, mostly typing, minimal movement. 95% of us have this job (and dread it)
Lightly Active - walking around a good amount (about half the day), meetings, socializing
(retail jobs, barista)
Moderately Active - walking/socializing constantly in a fast paced environment (aka waiting tables, delivering mail, etc.)
Very Active - walking and heavy lifting; very labor intensive (construction workers, lumberjacks..this is probably not you)
Extremely Active - professional athlete, dancer, etc. (save this unless you are Lance Armstrong)0 -
It really all depends on the amount of effort you want to put into tracking exercises. If you want to simplify things and you have a very regular work out schedule and rarely miss your planned workouts, counting it into your TDEE may work for you.
I myself only count my day to day activities and enter my exercise separately. Since I walk about 2 miles M-F to/from work and often walk additional distance if going shopping etc (I live in central downtown area, so its annoying to drive and pay to park everywhere). I use a "Lightly Active" activity level. Using the Katch-McArdle formula that gives me a about 1900 TDEE, 20% reduction for a goal of 1500.
For me counting my workouts into my TDEE lead to over eating and little to no weight loss, some gains too. Its just to easy for me to skip workouts and still try to eat at the Moderate level.0 -
I just read that you should factor in exercise separately. You figure out TDEE based on lifestyle (so intensity and duration of movement over the course of your daily life)--not exercise. I'm not sure how reliable this info is but it makes sense to me, since what you are aiming to figure out is calories burned over a 24 hour period and not in an hour burst of exercise.
http://theskinnyequation.blogspot.com/p/weight-loss-calculators.html?m=1
http://theskinnyequation.blogspot.com/2013/03/fit-tip-of-day-most-accurate-way-to.html?m=1
This seems a better way to define it versus those ahort bursts of exercise:
Sedentary - desk job, mostly typing, minimal movement. 95% of us have this job (and dread it)
Lightly Active - walking around a good amount (about half the day), meetings, socializing
(retail jobs, barista)
Moderately Active - walking/socializing constantly in a fast paced environment (aka waiting tables, delivering mail, etc.)
Very Active - walking and heavy lifting; very labor intensive (construction workers, lumberjacks..this is probably not you)
Extremely Active - professional athlete, dancer, etc. (save this unless you are Lance Armstrong)
Activity Level
Sedentary (little or no exercise, desk job)
Lightly Active (light exercise/sports 1-3 days/wk)
Moderately Active (moderate exercise/sports 3-5 days/wk)
Very Active (hard exercise/sports 6-7 days/wk)
Extremely Active (hard daily exercise/sports & physical job or 2X day training, i.e marathon, contest etc.)
Based on what you posted, I'm maybe lightly active at best. Based on fat2fit I am more like very active.0 -
My job is variable by the week. Some weeks I'm at my desk all week for 40. Other's I'm literally on my feet for 80 hours. I chose the lightly active and then use a fitbit to even it out. On the weeks where I'm very active I get a few hundred extra fitbit cals. On the weeks that I'm not as active I end up getting negative fitbit cals so I keep myself honest.0
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I'm a stay at home mom too, with a school age kid and a toddler, I have two workouts a day about three days a week and 1 workout a day the other 3 days.0
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I use this calculator that I saw on another forum post as it allows me to use a combination of sedentary, moderate and vigorous activity:
http://iifym.com/tdee-calculator/0 -
I just read that you should factor in exercise separately. You figure out TDEE based on lifestyle (so intensity and duration of movement over the course of your daily life)--not exercise. I'm not sure how reliable this info is but it makes sense to me, since what you are aiming to figure out is calories burned over a 24 hour period and not in an hour burst of exercise.
http://theskinnyequation.blogspot.com/p/weight-loss-calculators.html?m=1
http://theskinnyequation.blogspot.com/2013/03/fit-tip-of-day-most-accurate-way-to.html?m=1
This seems a better way to define it versus those ahort bursts of exercise:
Sedentary - desk job, mostly typing, minimal movement. 95% of us have this job (and dread it)
Lightly Active - walking around a good amount (about half the day), meetings, socializing
(retail jobs, barista)
Moderately Active - walking/socializing constantly in a fast paced environment (aka waiting tables, delivering mail, etc.)
Very Active - walking and heavy lifting; very labor intensive (construction workers, lumberjacks..this is probably not you)
Extremely Active - professional athlete, dancer, etc. (save this unless you are Lance Armstrong)0 -
When describing your exercise based on your tdee what made you choose moderate or light or did you choose desk job and still track your exercise? Thanks in advance.
Was expecting another ridiculous "eat back your excersise calories" debate. This thread may still go there, but I was pleasantly surprised when I saw you are asking the exact right question. The whole question of eating back v. not eating back is pretty much semantics. Whether you set your activity level to sedentary, and then on an innndividual case basis add in your exercize calories,OR you set it to light or moderat,e estimating your exercise calories, your exercise calories are included in your calorie goal for any given day and you choose whether or not to eat them.
To me, it is more accurate to set activity to sedentary, and keep track of calories burned daily (the same as we do for calories consumed), then to try to estimate it with some arbitrary moniker of "light" or "moderate".
Just my $0.02.0 -
I'm 28yr old male, work 8 hours a day as a decorator (ladders,scaffold etc) weights 3 days a week for 20 mins or so and cardio exercise bike 2 days a week 20 mins, 3 young kids at home play 90 mins football every sat. Am I moderate or very active?0
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