If every day were like today. You'd weigh X lbs in 5 weeks
Project9
Posts: 135
When you finish your food intake for the day, you push the "complete this entry" button at the bottom of your food list and then you get:
"If every day were like today... You'd weigh ___ lbs in 5 weeks".....From your experience, how close is this prediction?
Extra credit bonus points for answering this question: why 5 weeks? :huh:
"If every day were like today... You'd weigh ___ lbs in 5 weeks".....From your experience, how close is this prediction?
Extra credit bonus points for answering this question: why 5 weeks? :huh:
0
Replies
-
never close with me, I am baffled as to how they predict it as we are all different. interested to know the five week question though!0
-
Hah I've found that it's rarely ever correct.1
-
I wish.0
-
that's one reason i stopped completing my entries. i found that unsettling.0
-
Not so correct.. but I don't know that its the applications fault. I then eat more calories. It's incentive though, or discipline, and it works for me. It inspires me to keep doing good "that wasn't so hard and I'm doing great".. or I get to think "oh my gosh I cannot eat like that or I will be fat again in no time." I LOVE that they have it everyday.. if you are diligent about doing your diary.0
-
It has been pretty much always correct so long as I am honest with my entries.
The reason it gives 5 weeks as the time is because that is a reasonable amount of time to see an actual weight loss.0 -
Surprisingly, it's been spot on for me - but only when I've been spot on with my calorie intake for those 5 week periods. If I happen to go over or under my calories one day it amuses me how drastically the predicted weight loss changes :P I don't really pay much attention to it, but it is quite motivating to see the numbers gradually going down as time goes by0
-
I agree, though it's not accurate, it's my own fault because i'm regularly inconsistent.
It does motivate me though. When I eat good and work out, I get excited at the prospect of being so close to my goal in about a month. When I eat past my calorie goal, I look at how much weight I could gain and it motivates me to eat better0 -
Don't think it's completely accurate, but it motivates me, that's for sure.1
-
I assume it is fairly correct (calculating your weight and intake) but many people don't see those exact results because within those 5 weeks... each day varies. If you were to average each days presumed 5 weeks results, I'd think it would be close. I've never had the discipline to actually do this myself, so this is just my guessing.0
-
It has been pretty much always correct so long as I am honest with my entries.
The reason it gives 5 weeks as the time is because that is a reasonable amount of time to see an actual weight loss.
This is good to hear, because I am waiting a month to weigh in. Sometimes more frequent weight checks can be disappointing and I don't need any disappointments hurting my motivavation right off.0 -
The problem I see is the condition, "if every day were like today". I don't know about anyone else, but I don't have five weeks worth of days that are exactly the same. I notice what it says when I close my diary for the day, but I don't keep track of it.1
-
I assume it is fairly correct (calculating your weight and intake) but many people don't see those exact results because within those 5 weeks... each day varies. If you were to average each days presumed 5 weeks results, I'd think it would be close. I've never had the discipline to actually do this myself, so this is just my guessing.
Even when i jack-up for the day, the 5 weeks predictor has me down a few pounds, that what made me wonder if it wasn't correct.0 -
never been right , wish it were though...0
-
Well it will be off for everyone because how many of us eat the exact same thing every day for five weeks?1
-
I assume it is fairly correct (calculating your weight and intake) but many people don't see those exact results because within those 5 weeks... each day varies. If you were to average each days presumed 5 weeks results, I'd think it would be close. I've never had the discipline to actually do this myself, so this is just my guessing.
Even when i jack-up for the day, the 5 weeks predictor has me down a few pounds, that what made me wonder if it wasn't correct.
Are you sure you're eating at a surplus? You could be over your calorie limit, but still at a deficit, depending on how big your deficit was to begin with. Example: you're trying to lose 2pounds/week- you're at a 1000 calorie deficit... so even if you go above your calorie limit by 500... you are still at a 500 calorie deficit and will still lose weight...0 -
I assume it is fairly correct (calculating your weight and intake) but many people don't see those exact results because within those 5 weeks... each day varies. If you were to average each days presumed 5 weeks results, I'd think it would be close. I've never had the discipline to actually do this myself, so this is just my guessing.
Even when i jack-up for the day, the 5 weeks predictor has me down a few pounds, that what made me wonder if it wasn't correct.
Because you're still at a deficit of calories from maintenance. Your MFP calorie goal isn't maintenance...it has a substantial deficit built in already. This is why it is absolutely absurd when people cry about going over by 100 calories or whatever. Whaaaa...boohoo...instead of being at 1,000 (2 Lb per wk) or 500 (1 Lb per week) deficit they're at 900 or 400 or whatever.0 -
MFP thinks I should eat way fewer calories than I actually need, so it's always wrong for me. I don't even click the button.0
-
all it does is take your calorie defecit, assume you will eat at that deficet everyday for 5 weeks. 3500 calorie is a pound, so if you eat at a 500 caloire defiecent every 7 days you will lose a pound.. viola.. you will weigh 5 pounds less in 5 weeks. Easy caculation.
They probably say 5 weeks because it's give us an idea of where we will be next month if we continue to eat the way we did on this day. the effects our food choices wil have on weight.
Of course it's only right if you are eating the correct number of caloreis to start with.0 -
Well considering they said I'd lose 9 lbs in the 5 weeks and I'm already down 3.2 in less than 3 days I'm not sure how accurate it is. lol0
-
It's just a form of encouragement based on mathematics. No idea why 5 weeks tho.0
-
MFP thinks I should eat way fewer calories than I actually need, so it's always wrong for me. I don't even click the button.
Me too. I have mine set to TDEE -15%, plus I don't count or eat back exercise calories. According to MFP, I'd be gaining 2 lbs a month at that rate. In addition, I don't go by the scale to measure my progress.0 -
Simple math. A pound is 3,500 calories. If your TDEE is, say, 2,000 and you are eating consistently 1,500 cal/day, math says you lose a pound a week. If you eat 1,250 cal/day, math says you lose 1.5 pounds per week. Obviously it doesn't factor in stuff like eating 1,200 calories of salty food that might make you retain water, and chances are your TDEE isn't 100% accurate, so it's really just stating your potential.0
-
I do not eat or work out the same way everyday, so thats y it prob doesn't work...but I wish it were the case0
-
I end my day and think.....Wow that could be possible and keeps me going. Maybe someday the novelty will wear off but for now I like to see the numbers going down.0
-
in my experiance it won't be anywhere close because for 5 weeks straight my days aren't the same. I would go insane if it were the same everyday. ugh!
Good question i always wondered why 5 weeks too.0 -
Lies...all lies. I don't even look at it anymore.0
-
I do the math and it comes out to be about 2-3lbs per week and depending how my weeks go, it's pretty accurate. However, my days vary so one day it'll be substantially less and then other days it's more... so it pretty much averages out.0
-
When you finish your food intake for the day, you push the "complete this entry" button at the bottom of your food list and then you get:
"If every day were like today... You'd weigh ___ lbs in 5 weeks".....From your experience, how close is this prediction?
Extra credit bonus points for answering this question: why 5 weeks? :huh:
It's pretty accurate...if EVERY.SINGLE.DAY was like that day. BUT, this is the real world, and I'm sure you, and everyone else, myself included, are subject to real life and going over (or under) our calories every once in a while.0 -
It seems to stay a little ahead of the curve for me.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions