House work - Does it burn calories?
Zombie_Sam85
Posts: 9 Member
Hi,
I do like a bit of house work (odd I know) but blitzing a house listening to your fave music can be very enjoyable and i feel like i have achieved something - Apart from the usual comics, games and zombies.
But what I want to know is - Can doing your house work help you lose weight?
I get that doing the dishes may not trim the fat, but surely scrubbing, whizzing around with a hoover and stretching for the dust bunnies must do something?
Is there any way to maximise this workout?
I do like a bit of house work (odd I know) but blitzing a house listening to your fave music can be very enjoyable and i feel like i have achieved something - Apart from the usual comics, games and zombies.
But what I want to know is - Can doing your house work help you lose weight?
I get that doing the dishes may not trim the fat, but surely scrubbing, whizzing around with a hoover and stretching for the dust bunnies must do something?
Is there any way to maximise this workout?
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Replies
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This topic has been discussed quite a bit I think.
There was a study (Funded by the Coca-Cola corporation) That stated that homemakers exert
less energy now , than they did years ago due to labor saving devices etc.
I did a quick search of Housework Workouts and there are many youtube videos of people showing
how they added wrist weights when mopping, and taking better form when ironing etc.0 -
probably but why count them???? I assume they are in my BMR already.0
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I agree, this topic is and has been discussed at length... and while there are many around here that disagree. Anything that gets you moving is going to burn more calories than sitting or laying down.
The point is to move more and track your caloric intake (something you probably weren't doing before).0 -
Yess! BMR is used by calculating your lifestyle if you move around a lot or not but if you don't clean to this extent daily its not counted as BMR - depends what you set your activity level to
If you don't use labour saving equipment get out the broom and mop and duster and get scrubbing, to maximise working out while cleaning, add ankle/wrist weights, stretch high and low throw in a few lunges and ankle raises - play your favourite music and sing and dance around - you may look weird but I can guarantee you'll be having fun and you'll be working a sweat up :bigsmile:0 -
If you sweat when you do your housework, you're burning calories.
So depending on how vigorous the housework is, yes, of course you can lose weight doing housework. I wouldn't log it as exercise though.0 -
Housework is movement, it does burn calories. However, I unless you made it a point to do it fast enough to get your heart rate up, you're really, really out of shape, or you have a large house...I doubt it's doing much to improve your fitness. Whether it helps you lose weight or not is dependant upon your diet...as with any exercise.0
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If it's your usual, daily/weekly cleaning, then I'd say no. But if you're doing a major house-scrubbing every once in a while that involves a lot of work/movement and makes you sweat, I say, why not?0
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Were you doing any housework during the time period that you become overweight?0
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It would definitely require more calories than sitting at a desk all day, but realistically it's not much. I wouldn't count it personally, I don't even really count my regular excercise. It's factored into my TDEE so it takes the guesswork out of how many calories I burned doing any one thing in particular. If I"m really famished after a day of yardwork and I eat a couple hundred extra calories i don't stress. The same goes for when I'm not quite at 1800 calories but I'm feeling satisfied. It all balances out and IMO, counting housework calories is unecessary.0
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Yess! BMR is used by calculating your lifestyle if you move around a lot or not but if you don't clean to this extent daily its not counted as BMR - depends what you set your activity level to
If you don't use labour saving equipment get out the broom and mop and duster and get scrubbing, to maximise working out while cleaning, add ankle/wrist weights, stretch high and low throw in a few lunges and ankle raises - play your favourite music and sing and dance around - you may look weird but I can guarantee you'll be having fun and you'll be working a sweat up :bigsmile:
Oh I look weird most days haha! i'll have to add in some lunges and wrist weights then XD0 -
Were you doing any housework during the time period that you become overweight?
Not classified as overweight according to doctors and such, really aiming to lose some flab and control my bad eating habits. I do all the house work at home so i was hoping it would help me in my mini mission0 -
Were you doing any housework during the time period that you become overweight?
This is a silly question since she was clearly over eating or she wouldn't be here in the first place. It wasn't the activity that was the problem, it was the over eating of calories.0 -
The use of "BMR" in this thread made me cringe. That is all. -_-0
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Movement of all kinds burns calories. However, much of your "daily activity" type things are already included in your allotted calories. Whether you should count it as "exercise" or not depends on how you set up your calorie goals on here, and how much effort you are really expending.
I personally don't count it, because I did house cleaning before I was on any diet, it is already part of my calories.0 -
Yess! BMR is used by calculating your lifestyle if you move around a lot or not but if you don't clean to this extent daily its not counted as BMR - depends what you set your activity level to
If you don't use labour saving equipment get out the broom and mop and duster and get scrubbing, to maximise working out while cleaning, add ankle/wrist weights, stretch high and low throw in a few lunges and ankle raises - play your favourite music and sing and dance around - you may look weird but I can guarantee you'll be having fun and you'll be working a sweat up :bigsmile:
Look up BMR, please, it doesn't mean what you think it means. Use proper terminology so as not to confuse people.0 -
Forgive the pun...
I've got to "weigh" in on the side that housework CAN help with your exercise. But, it will depend on how often and how much you do. I tend to lump my personal cleaning for the week into a one-time weekly time (usually no more than 30 minutes) that I'll throw in somewhere towards the end of the week for my calorie burns. (Since I eat TDEE - %, I'll adjust the posted burn to 1 cal, but keep the daily "total" in the notes section to help me see how active I was for the day.)
However, I've just recently started working with a company where I'm doing a LOT more cleaning - some of it is harder than the rest, but I still say it averages out to the light/moderate effort category. I am amazed at how much I rack up in a 4 hour day in calorie burns. Again, because of the way I keep track of my calories, this is only a marker for me on activity - I'm mostly using the exercise log to post active minutes on my news feed, not actual burns.
And, before a ton of people start jumping around about the size of the burns... yes, I AM large. Yes, I am pouring sweat (and it's not just because some of the houses don't have air conditioning). And, yes, I AM moving it - don't have a HRM to track how much the heart rate jumps around, but I know at the end of the day I am quite happy to stumble through a shower and flop into bed. On my longer days (about 8 hours) I feel like I've just put in a 3 hour marathon at the gym lifting and swimming.0 -
Yess! BMR is used by calculating your lifestyle if you move around a lot or not but if you don't clean to this extent daily its not counted as BMR - depends what you set your activity level to
Look up BMR, please, it doesn't mean what you think it means. Use proper terminology so as not to confuse people.
Yes oops sorry! *cringe* I meant the activity thing it was the person who mentioned it earlier that confused me and fact you use bmr in the Harris benedict equation thing, but yeah I meant the activity level you set that mfp uses to work out your calorie deficit etc0 -
Yes oops sorry! *cringe* I meant the activity thing it was the person who mentioned it earlier that confused me, but yeah I meant the activity level you set that mfp uses to work out your calorie deficit etc
^^^^
This...just used to seeing that term when I am looking at my goals...0 -
All movement burns calories over being sedentary. Housework is no exception. How many calories varies with intensity. You could increase the burn by wearing a weighted vest, ankle weights and/or wrist weights.0
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BMR = Basal Metabolic Rate
TDEE - Total Daily Energy Expenditure
BMR is the number of calories required for keeping your body's organs and metabolic functions going (for example if you were in a coma, or sleeping all day)
TDEE is the above figure PLUS any activity (walking, talking, cleaning, exercsize etc) that is required to maintain your current weight.0 -
If it's your usual, daily/weekly cleaning, then I'd say no.
But if you popped over and cleaned my apartment that wouldn't be what you do normally so you could log the burn with a clear conscience0 -
If it's your usual, daily/weekly cleaning, then I'd say no.
But if you popped over and cleaned my apartment that wouldn't be what you do normally so you could log the burn with a clear conscience
^^^ or mine :laugh:0 -
Yess! BMR is used by calculating your lifestyle if you move around a lot or not but if you don't clean to this extent daily its not counted as BMR - depends what you set your activity level to
If you don't use labour saving equipment get out the broom and mop and duster and get scrubbing, to maximise working out while cleaning, add ankle/wrist weights, stretch high and low throw in a few lunges and ankle raises - play your favourite music and sing and dance around - you may look weird but I can guarantee you'll be having fun and you'll be working a sweat up :bigsmile:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
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Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Actually BMR is a "resting" rate. That's how many calories you burn doing nothing.
Again yes sorry I got mixed up with the bmr and activity level0 -
I don't count them because I assume that it is in my numbers already.0
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Our kids redecorate our home everyday! I undecorate it everyday! I dont count this because i was doing this before I started MFP. I also tend a bar on weekends where I am on my feet for 7 hours straight. I also did that when I was fat.
I only count activity that keeps my heart rate up above 150 for at least 10 min.0 -
Yes it does! Cleaning up house means a lot of hard work. This will definitely burn up the calories and will be a good way to do exercises systematically! But I prefer getting a residential cleaning company like http://mollymaid.co.uk/ to do the job. Cleaning up is pretty depressing for me!0
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Our kids redecorate our home everyday! I undecorate it everyday! I dont count this because i was doing this before I started MFP. I also tend a bar on weekends where I am on my feet for 7 hours straight. I also did that when I was fat.
I only count activity that keeps my heart rate up above 150 for at least 10 min.
I was working out when I was fat, just sayin'.0
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