Exercise calories
Replies
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Don't know your age, or how truly active you are (and that can be confusing as I mentioned above).
But, what I find useful is something that gives a range of calorie intakes for the various levels. Then, if you find one level is not working for you, you can try one further up or down.
I suggest you pop your numbers in here:
http://www.fat2fitradio.com/tools/bmr/
That will give you a number of different calorie intakes for different exercise levels. Pick one that seems best for you, try for a couple or weeks or so and see the effect.
You do not eat the calories burned in exercise with this calculator.
Gives me 1712 based on no activity. So I'm guessing it does account for some exercise as it is a little high. I just started tracking sodium properly, and my salt for today and yesterday is HORRENDOUS. I need to drink more water today to counteract. Yesterday was hard because my water got turned off whilst they fixed a water pipe.
Yes, so that 1712 is for just sitting around and doing pretty much nothing.
Further down the page will be some other calorie values that would be appropropriate if you did light, moderate, very active exercise, etc.
Obviously, for the sedentary no exercise calories are included.
Hope that helps.
Maybe I should stick to my 1633 with exercise calories eaten like normal, because it's only the past 2 weeks it has stopped working. I have a horrible feeling it may be salt at the moment, but I don't know where to turn if it turns out it's not salt. So as it stands, I'm eating a sedentary level and I should still effectively be losing weight on the scheme I am following?0 -
Don't know your age, or how truly active you are (and that can be confusing as I mentioned above).
But, what I find useful is something that gives a range of calorie intakes for the various levels. Then, if you find one level is not working for you, you can try one further up or down.
I suggest you pop your numbers in here:
http://www.fat2fitradio.com/tools/bmr/
That will give you a number of different calorie intakes for different exercise levels. Pick one that seems best for you, try for a couple or weeks or so and see the effect.
You do not eat the calories burned in exercise with this calculator.
Gives me 1712 based on no activity. So I'm guessing it does account for some exercise as it is a little high. I just started tracking sodium properly, and my salt for today and yesterday is HORRENDOUS. I need to drink more water today to counteract. Yesterday was hard because my water got turned off whilst they fixed a water pipe.
Yes, so that 1712 is for just sitting around and doing pretty much nothing.
Further down the page will be some other calorie values that would be appropropriate if you did light, moderate, very active exercise, etc.
Obviously, for the sedentary no exercise calories are included.
Hope that helps.
Maybe I should stick to my 1633 with exercise calories eaten like normal, because it's only the past 2 weeks it has stopped working. I have a horrible feeling it may be salt at the moment, but I don't know where to turn if it turns out it's not salt. So as it stands, I'm eating a sedentary level and I should still effectively be losing weight on the scheme I am following?
From looking at sodium count, it was only over at 3500 in the past 2 days. Just be patient and take measurements. With exercise, try to incorporate weights if you already aren't - you aren't at a super high weight so really should be sure to maintain/gain muscle. Eating at a small deficit like this you are going to be able to gain a bit of muscle. People will say you can't, but I gained when netting 1400 cals (I could tell by the fact I was increasing weight) and even more now that I net 1600.
Patience + consistency is key0 -
I dont know how you might take this but ill just say it. I looked at your diary. Your diet is not ideal for losing weight at all. even though all the numbers add up and appear to give you a deficit. Bananas spring rolls peanut butter just to name a few of things you should never eat if your trying to lose weight. eating late in the evening etc. The numbers may appear to work but your body type and the way your body responds to the food you are eating suggest what you are eating is totally wrong. Sorry for being blunt but forget about the numbers and concentrate on the macros Protein low density carbs and let the fat take care of itself by only eating from lean protein sources. Low density carbs like broccoli carrots cauliflower cabbage Your salt intake is high due to the amount of processed foods you eat. never have a meal exceed 400 calories at a time. If you need more info ill gladly give you some. I have had great success in the last twelve weeks I have reduced my bodyfat percentage to 8% from 18% put on lean mass by training in the gym doing weights 4 times a week. Its worked for me it can work for you but you gotta change your diet.0
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Again, I'm getting mixed reviews. I ate 2600 on one day, but still net 1000kcals less because I just found it so damn hard to eat them back. I am definitely set to sedentary, so why would I be gaining on the burns I've calculated with my HRM? This TDEE stuff, I thought I understood is all becoming a bit overwhelming now.
i might be wrong, but it sounds like you're trying to weight yourself day by day to see results. that will -never- work, and you even seem to know why -- stuff like salt and water retention. heck, even if you regulated that, weight loss isn't an 'even' thing. you can 'seem to' gain a pound the day before you lose 3.
you need to be working on a monthly schedule. and if you're eating 1000 cals less than you should be per day, then yes, you're undereating. i added around 400 cals to my diet starting yesterday. does it feel odd doing that to lose weight? sure does. but it's also math, and makes sense.0 -
If you are sedentary you would have no exercise to add. So that's a bit silly.
the point is, you aren't actually sedentary. you use that setting to get your BMR and TDEE w/o any exercise built in. Then you can enter your exact (or close to it) calorie burn and avoid the abstract activity levels altogether.
so, no, not silly at all.0
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