Does anyone count housework as excersise?

13

Replies

  • Rho_Ro
    Rho_Ro Posts: 201 Member
    I decided to put myself down as sedentary at the start (one year ago) and any activity would therefore cause a quicker loss. It did. Then I read that you are meant to eat back your exercise cals, so I started putting the bigger household chores as exercise, eg cooking in the kitchen for a couple of hours; vacuuming the floor; washing the vinyl floor; moving furniture, etc and I would take a big hunk off the time I actually worked. It has worked well for me.

    At the end of the day it's up to you how you interpret the guidelines to this site. I don't believe there is really any hard and fast rule, do what works for you. At one point I put my activity up on MFP and I lost my way. I am back down to sedentary.

    GOOD LUCK!!!!
  • I_Will_End_You
    I_Will_End_You Posts: 4,397 Member
    Sometimes I do. It depends on how much cleaning and what I'm doing. If I really clean the **** out of my house, closets, basement, throwing stuff out, going back and forth to the dumpster, then sweep, dustmop and regular mop my floors...yes. My floors are huge. I feel like I worked out after I deep clean, so why not? Regular daily cleaning (dishes, sweeping, dusting) I do not count.
  • sarahmonsta
    sarahmonsta Posts: 185 Member
    Sometimes I do, especially if I did a lot of working out already that day...for some reason it just makes me feel better about myself hahah.
  • MizTerry
    MizTerry Posts: 3,763 Member
    If I'm scrubbing, you betcha! Every other week I spend a couple of hours cleaning my Moms place. It counts.
  • JanaCanada
    JanaCanada Posts: 917 Member
    I used to log every breath I took....lol...including housework. But I discovered that I over estimated. A lot. And it didn't do me any good at all because I was eating back calories I hadn't really burned! :grumble:

    So now, I only log INTENTIONAL exercise, i.e, going to the gym, swimming, riding my bike, etc. Housework calories are now just bonus calories burned. Since I started logging this way, I have lost more weight, and faster, too. :drinker:
  • spider_mark51959
    spider_mark51959 Posts: 2,869 Member
    I myself probably would not count it. But I definitely would count various yard work like mowing, spreading mulch, raking/dumping yard waste etc.
  • ThinUpGirl
    ThinUpGirl Posts: 397
    No. I don't need an excuse to eat more.
  • StinkyWinkies
    StinkyWinkies Posts: 603 Member
    I do.

    For several reasons. 1) 'sedentary' is a base line for my caloric intake 2) It was how I learned to 'count' with another weight loss group 3) I am not laying around on a couch or bed and my doc says this is a good thing. 4) Is "proof" that I am moving around.

    Generally speaking though, I don't "eat back" housework calories, depends on the chores I've done or for how long.
  • pinkraynedropjacki
    pinkraynedropjacki Posts: 3,027 Member
    were you cleaning before you made a lifestyle change? If the answer is yes, then no you shouldn't. Depends of course on what your cleaning involves - I have such a small apartment and I do clean, but I wouldn't say it's that straining or anything...


    Under that same logic though. You were eating before you made a change, are you going to stop considering that as well in your day to day activities or just stop eating? No, you still log it I guess. Same applies to housework. Regardless if you do it daily, weekly or whatever..... it's still more than doing nothing at all.

    I am eating differently. It is just logical - if you waked to work for 30mins a day and were putting on the pounds, why would you suddenly start logging that on MFP? It's a normal daily activity for your body that isn't really strenuous.

    Go ahead, eat 200extra cals from all the 'exercise; you get by washing and walking to the garbage bin. I am just trying to be helpful and logical - I have ridden to uni for 20-60mins a day (depends on how many times) and I used to log it but realised it was stupid as all I logged it for was some cheat calories. Log it for a record and just record 1 cal, and not cheat calories then you're in the clear.

    That means don't log ANY walking either cause you walk as part of your normal day. If you hang the washing like I do, then you get way more than just 200 cals a day extra. Try closer to 400 easily & that's just the washing. Then do all the other housework like I do & that's at least an extra 200. I don't log it because I know what people would think & unless they KNOW how I'm doing it then they will think I'm lying. Walking to the bin though? Takes all of 2 seconds so not even 1 cal gone. If you rode each day as much as you said then it's classed as exercise, regardless if you did it before or not. It's still exercise. Anything ABOVE doing NOTHING is some form of exercise.


    BTW I walk about 30km a day at least, nice even walk, nice pace. Because it's not strenuous I guess it's not exercise...... even though I never walked that far at all when I was fat. Oh well, guess then those extra 1000 calories I burn off each day wont count.
  • Robin_Bin
    Robin_Bin Posts: 1,046 Member
    BTW I walk about 30km a day at least, nice even walk, nice pace. Because it's not strenuous I guess it's not exercise...... even though I never walked that far at all when I was fat. Oh well, guess then those extra 1000 calories I burn off each day wont count.
    30 kilometers / day ???
    That's over 18 miles each day or roughly 40,000 steps. It's definitely exercise.
  • norcal_yogi
    norcal_yogi Posts: 675 Member
    no
  • Warchortle
    Warchortle Posts: 2,197 Member
    I think if you have to ask... I don't think anyone has asked if running 5 miles counts as exercise.
  • I only log if its vigorous cleaning, like spring cleaning time now. And only if its longer than an hour straight.
    And I'm talking heavy scrubbing, vacuuming all the stairs, washing walls, pulling out the fridge, stove, making numerous trips taking large bags of garbage behind the complex ect..,

    Everyday things like laundry, sweeping, mopping, dishes ect... no
  • StArBeLLa87
    StArBeLLa87 Posts: 1,582 Member
    I don't count it I just was curious! I changed my setting to active! Ty to those that were kind and honest when giving me advice! :flowerforyou:
  • ThatDamnRobyn
    ThatDamnRobyn Posts: 47 Member
    I do. I don't clean very often and when I do, it's really hard work! ;)
    I usually do it in place of a workout, and I usually do it for 3 hours or so, so I think it counts as extra calorie burn just like exercise. Especially if it's really heavy cleaning.
  • crnacrn07
    crnacrn07 Posts: 10 Member
    I count it. Especially when I break a sweat while doing it. :)
  • Mashizou
    Mashizou Posts: 28 Member
    I used to, but I started to feel like I was cheating myself. Now I don't record a workout unless its over 20 minutes in length and I can't sing along to my iPod.
  • I've been covering a friends jobs cleaning one day a week all day so I log that, but not my own housework no!
  • krhn
    krhn Posts: 781 Member
    If that's the case then yes! Log everything you do in :wink:
  • ngressman
    ngressman Posts: 229 Member
    If I am cleaning like a mad dog, then yes I count it. I don't count normal everyday cleaning though. I guess you could count it, but if you start gaining weight then quit counting it. Weight loss is a learning process.
  • pinkraynedropjacki
    pinkraynedropjacki Posts: 3,027 Member
    BTW I walk about 30km a day at least, nice even walk, nice pace. Because it's not strenuous I guess it's not exercise...... even though I never walked that far at all when I was fat. Oh well, guess then those extra 1000 calories I burn off each day wont count.
    30 kilometers / day ???
    That's over 18 miles each day or roughly 40,000 steps. It's definitely exercise.

    Nope, cause part of it is while I'm hanging the washing or doing housework. I walk about 2km doing the washing every day. That's just in the yard. Then there is the shopping.... I did that when I was fat so I cant count that either. Then there is just the nice walk along the beach...did that daily as well...cant count that. Then there is just normal walking around the house..... cant count that.

    But it IS all exercise.... it's all more than sitting on my *kitten* doing nothing.
  • ILiftHeavyAcrylics
    ILiftHeavyAcrylics Posts: 27,732 Member
    I'm not sedentary at all I work out over a hr a day so what would I put it at?

    I think sedentary is for your work. If you're sitting all day in front of a computer, than you're sedentary. I guess it counts for about 8 hours a day. Everything you do after work you log it into exercise. If you are a postman than you don't put it like you're sedentary, you put active. But you don't log that exercise because it is counted in your work... I don't know how to explain it well...

    As for logging housework, I logged it today, but I did about 3 hours and I only logged one hour. It depends on how fast I was cleaning and if my cardio was up.

    You are right that this is how MFP words it when you set up. But IMO since calorie burn estimates can be way off, especially for things like housecleaning, it's more honest to set your activity level higher. I should have qualified that I use the TDEE method, and traditionally TDEE includes exercise.

    Even if you're wanting to log exercise separately, I'd still try out lightly active over sedentary. I think that very very few people are sedentary by MFP definitions. I'm disabled and don't work at all, and I'm still lightly active (I figured that out by tracking my progress over a long period of time and adjusting).
  • JessHealthKick
    JessHealthKick Posts: 800 Member
    were you cleaning before you made a lifestyle change? If the answer is yes, then no you shouldn't. Depends of course on what your cleaning involves - I have such a small apartment and I do clean, but I wouldn't say it's that straining or anything...


    Under that same logic though. You were eating before you made a change, are you going to stop considering that as well in your day to day activities or just stop eating? No, you still log it I guess. Same applies to housework. Regardless if you do it daily, weekly or whatever..... it's still more than doing nothing at all.

    I am eating differently. It is just logical - if you waked to work for 30mins a day and were putting on the pounds, why would you suddenly start logging that on MFP? It's a normal daily activity for your body that isn't really strenuous.

    Go ahead, eat 200extra cals from all the 'exercise; you get by washing and walking to the garbage bin. I am just trying to be helpful and logical - I have ridden to uni for 20-60mins a day (depends on how many times) and I used to log it but realised it was stupid as all I logged it for was some cheat calories. Log it for a record and just record 1 cal, and not cheat calories then you're in the clear.

    That means don't log ANY walking either cause you walk as part of your normal day. If you hang the washing like I do, then you get way more than just 200 cals a day extra. Try closer to 400 easily & that's just the washing. Then do all the other housework like I do & that's at least an extra 200. I don't log it because I know what people would think & unless they KNOW how I'm doing it then they will think I'm lying. Walking to the bin though? Takes all of 2 seconds so not even 1 cal gone. If you rode each day as much as you said then it's classed as exercise, regardless if you did it before or not. It's still exercise. Anything ABOVE doing NOTHING is some form of exercise.


    BTW I walk about 30km a day at least, nice even walk, nice pace. Because it's not strenuous I guess it's not exercise...... even though I never walked that far at all when I was fat. Oh well, guess then those extra 1000 calories I burn off each day wont count.

    um so you say you never walked like that before?.. 30km is about 6 hours straight of walking a day. That surprises me a little but I'll trust you on that, nice work! But that is my point - if you didn't do it AT ALL before and are starting to do it NOW then then yes I think you should log it. Anyway I'm not really trying to start an argument - I honestly want what is best for other MFP users.

    It all comes down to how you adjust your cals and what works for you. Logging from MFP for my bicycle riding I was getting 200-600 extra calories a day which is RIDICULOUS now that I have checked with my HRM and it is less than half of that. You need to find what works for your body and listen to your body. If you are really, truly hungry (not just bored) then go and eat some apple and yoghurt or something small because clearly your body is telling you it needs fuel.

    I can work hard at the gym doing sprints and lunges on 8-15% on the treadmill and burn about 10cals/minute (185bpm)). So when MFP says I get close to the same burn from a leisurely bike ride for 15 mins (125cals or something with only 130bpm) it is quite ridiculous. People rely too much on what MFP says, like I used to, and hence aren't able to do a true, honest calorie count - this is what I think hindered my progress a lot, as I would log this extra 'exercise' and think 'yay I cycled for 20mins today, that is 200 cals!'. Once you can do a good calorie count - like I can now with my HRM - you can adjust your count and already take into account standard daily activity - like I do for riding my bike to class, walking to the shops etc. Other than that I am completely sedentary.

    Anyway, I'm out :)

    edit: you can lie to your diary, but your body isn't fooled. BEING HONEST in your diary is soooo important. If you really do feel like you worked hard putting out the washing, then log it. But if you think "... aww well it did take me 30mins walking a fair bit and all... I'll log it to squeeze in the extra glass of wine" then you're not going about it correctly. If someone wasn't that desperate to add more calories I don't think they would log house work regularly (maybe spring cleaning or something though).
  • AnJulNZ
    AnJulNZ Posts: 186 Member
    Day to day cleaning like vacuuming, cleaning the bathroom etc - no I don't log it. However if I'm cleaning out the garage or washing the ceiling, scrubbing down the outside of the house or mowing the lawns (for example) I count it because it takes a longer time and it's hard work. I don't have the energy to do a workout when I'm done!
  • witchy_wife
    witchy_wife Posts: 792 Member
    I like to add it just to see what it says, I don't really eat the calories back unless I am extremely hungry that day lol.

    I tend to do the majority of my housework on a weekend as I work all work so do rush around like a mad woman to get it done as quickly as I can. I'm sure it does burn off a fair bit of calories as I am shattered afterwards, but I do think that MFP probably over estimates the calorie burn for most people.
  • dancingj2
    dancingj2 Posts: 4,572 Member
    I also have sedentary. For minor housework I do not enter it as exercise. Doing laundry or vacuuming one room or washing the kitchen floor. When I decide to do serious house cleaning, like an hour or more, I will add that activity but usually only take about half of the time.
  • kss1231
    kss1231 Posts: 167 Member
    Yes, especially if you are cleaning floors.
  • MaryinBflo
    MaryinBflo Posts: 437 Member
    My advice is to choose the correct activity level and then don't enter the housework.

    agreed.
  • akj_25
    akj_25 Posts: 244 Member
    i have a fitbit that tracks all movement/ intensity of movement throughout the day. so i have my activity level set at sedentary and then anything that i do throughout the day is actually track as exercise, but i find that having fitbit track my activity level is more acurate than saying i am active, because on my 'lazy' days i am not getting credit for being active.
  • TheresaTester
    TheresaTester Posts: 115 Member
    Isn't house cleaning under the exercise database on MFP? I've never used it but I believe it's there...

    Yes, It's there, and I have used it. Some of my housework can be high-intensity (floors, bathrooms) and definitely increases my heart rate. That's when I count it.