Worried about 1200 cal diet?
shezzatruth19
Posts: 10 Member
Hi,
I've been a member of Fitness Pal for only a few days - I currently weight 12st 13 (181 pounds) and my ideal weight is 10st 5 (145 pounds).
I am looking to lose about 2 pounds a week (a healthy weight loss) but fitness pal has recommended only 1200 cal a day.
I was doing some research on the internet about it and apparently its unhealthy to eat that little for my height (5"7) and can lead to health problems (loss of muscle etc)
I would also like to add that when I ate a few calories under 1200 on one of the days Fitness Pal told me it was unhealthy and I needed to eat more.
Should I stay on the 1200 Cal a day diet or increase it a little?
I've been a member of Fitness Pal for only a few days - I currently weight 12st 13 (181 pounds) and my ideal weight is 10st 5 (145 pounds).
I am looking to lose about 2 pounds a week (a healthy weight loss) but fitness pal has recommended only 1200 cal a day.
I was doing some research on the internet about it and apparently its unhealthy to eat that little for my height (5"7) and can lead to health problems (loss of muscle etc)
I would also like to add that when I ate a few calories under 1200 on one of the days Fitness Pal told me it was unhealthy and I needed to eat more.
Should I stay on the 1200 Cal a day diet or increase it a little?
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Replies
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Hi,
I've been a member of Fitness Pal for only a few days - I currently weight 12st 13 (181 pounds) and my ideal weight is 10st 5 (145 pounds).
I am looking to lose about 2 pounds a week (a healthy weight loss) but fitness pal has recommended only 1200 cal a day.
I was doing some research on the internet about it and apparently its unhealthy to eat that little for my height (5"7) and can lead to health problems (loss of muscle etc)
I would also like to add that when I ate a few calories under 1200 on one of the days Fitness Pal told me it was unhealthy and I needed to eat more.
Should I stay on the 1200 Cal a day diet or increase it a little?
change your weight loss goal from losing 2lb to lose 1lb....0 -
Hi,
I've been a member of Fitness Pal for only a few days - I currently weight 12st 13 (181 pounds) and my ideal weight is 10st 5 (145 pounds).
I am looking to lose about 2 pounds a week (a healthy weight loss) but fitness pal has recommended only 1200 cal a day.
I was doing some research on the internet about it and apparently its unhealthy to eat that little for my height (5"7) and can lead to health problems (loss of muscle etc)
I would also like to add that when I ate a few calories under 1200 on one of the days Fitness Pal told me it was unhealthy and I needed to eat more.
Should I stay on the 1200 Cal a day diet or increase it a little?
change your weight loss goal from losing 2lb to lose 1lb....
^ Yes. And MFP works so you are supposed to eat back your exercise calories, so when you exercise you can eat more. Don't forget that!
Or, what I find simpler is to use an online calculater (or use a few and then average it out) to find your TDEE then subtract 20% to get a calorie defecit. I personally like the TDEE method better because it takes into account your weekly exercise, instead of having to rely on the MFP cals burned which can be very innaccurate.
Good luck!0 -
Hi,
I've been a member of Fitness Pal for only a few days - I currently weight 12st 13 (181 pounds) and my ideal weight is 10st 5 (145 pounds).
I am looking to lose about 2 pounds a week (a healthy weight loss) but fitness pal has recommended only 1200 cal a day.
I was doing some research on the internet about it and apparently its unhealthy to eat that little for my height (5"7) and can lead to health problems (loss of muscle etc)
I would also like to add that when I ate a few calories under 1200 on one of the days Fitness Pal told me it was unhealthy and I needed to eat more.
Should I stay on the 1200 Cal a day diet or increase it a little?
change your weight loss goal from losing 2lb to lose 1lb....
^^^ 2 pounds a week is an unrealistic goal considering how much you have to lose.
Read this:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/819055-setting-your-calorie-and-macro-targets
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1080242-a-guide-to-get-you-started-on-your-path-to-sexypants
Find a reasonable calorie goal for your body. Log accurately. Incorporate exercise. Be patient and set realistic goals for yourself. You'll be successful.0 -
Do what others say, and eat back your exercise calories.0
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Stay on the 1200 Calorie diet.0
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Stay on the 1200 Calorie diet.
This!!
Im pretty much the same measurements.... (Started at 220ish, now 164ish, 5"6!) and iv always stuck to 1200 a day, and im still losing. I also DONT eat back my exercise cals. Each to their own though, you will soon find what works best for you!! :flowerforyou:0 -
Hi,
I've been a member of Fitness Pal for only a few days - I currently weight 12st 13 (181 pounds) and my ideal weight is 10st 5 (145 pounds).
I am looking to lose about 2 pounds a week (a healthy weight loss) but fitness pal has recommended only 1200 cal a day.
I was doing some research on the internet about it and apparently its unhealthy to eat that little for my height (5"7) and can lead to health problems (loss of muscle etc)
I would also like to add that when I ate a few calories under 1200 on one of the days Fitness Pal told me it was unhealthy and I needed to eat more.
Should I stay on the 1200 Cal a day diet or increase it a little?
Just because MFP is programmed to issue a warning message at 1198 calories but not 1202 doesn't mean there is a magic cutoff of 1200 where above it you burn only fat and below it you burn muscle. It's all a continuum. Losing weight causes muscle loss, period. Yes, very low calorie diets will usually cause more muscle loss. 1200 isn't generally considered 'dangerously low' in my experience but if your research suggests otherwise, by all means, use a less restrictive calorie goal.0 -
Bump to read later0
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I would be starving at 1200 and having a hard time sticking to it and hitting my macro's and micro's (I am your height, and was at your weight a couple of months ago). At 1200 there is no room for treats if you are going to get everything your body needs. I wouldn't recommend it just because it isn't sustainable for me.
If you are going to try to stick with it, make sure you eat back at least a little of your exercise calories, and really pay attention to how your body feels.
Just to add, 2 lbs/week really isn't all that attainable unless you have more fat stores to burn. And it is recommended that you decrease your deficit as you get closer to your goals.
I guess my point is, if you're worried about it, don't do it. You can lose weight eating more without any issues.0 -
It's probably fine if adding athletic performance and maintaining a healthy lifestyle isn't a huge priority and you eat back exercise calories; make sure to eat your fruits, vegetables, EFA's, and protein as priority though. If you just wanna lose weight, go for it. If you wanna lose weight, run a marathon, squat 1.5x weight and keep it off; then reduce it by 500 a day. Do something sustainable.0
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Stay on the 1200 Calorie diet.
This!!
Im pretty much the same measurements.... (Started at 220ish, now 164ish, 5"6!) and iv always stuck to 1200 a day, and im still losing. I also DONT eat back my exercise cals. Each to their own though, you will soon find what works best for you!! :flowerforyou:
No. Just no. The MFP method is for you to eat back your exercise calories, so if you only eat 1200 and burn off 300 you are only netting 900...Your body needs more.
I agree with FerretBueller on the TDEE method - 10-20%. I don't stress about how many calories I burn, I eat 1800 calories a day and am losing weight.0 -
Stay on the 1200 Calorie diet.
This!!
Im pretty much the same measurements.... (Started at 220ish, now 164ish, 5"6!) and iv always stuck to 1200 a day, and im still losing. I also DONT eat back my exercise cals. Each to their own though, you will soon find what works best for you!! :flowerforyou:
OP - I'd agree with others who have suggested that 2lbs a week is not a realistic rate of loss for you, considering how much you have to lose. 1 lb a week would be better, especially if you want the loss to be all/mostly fat, and not lean mass with it. That should also give you more to eat.0 -
I'm old as f___, so 1200 calories for me is perfectly appropriate, and I'm taller than you. Depending on your age, you might need to be somewhere in the 1200 range, but careful accounting of calories in and calories out is CRUCIAL to weight loss. Almost nothing else is crucial. Get the calories in and calories out right, and the weight comes off. That means being as accurate as possible with your food calories and your exercise calories. Don't discount food calories as negligible because they come from "healthy" foods like veggies, or because "it was just one cookie", etc. Log EVERYTHING. And don't think that just because some exercise machine told you that you burned 500 calories that you actually burned 500 calories. I really wish those machines didn't have calorie burn estimates, those machines basically troll people into overeating.0
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I agree that machines (and people) overestimate exercise calories. I think the machines do it because if people saw how few calories they're really burning they'd mostly say, "To hell with this machine."0
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Change it to 1 pound a week. Eat "some" of your exercise calories. I say some because the calories burned estimated can be inflated. OR figure out your TDEE - 20% then you don't have to worry about exercise calories.0
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If you've just started, I say stick to the 1200 (as best as you can) FOR NOW, & then re-evaluate in a couple weeks. (As a note, "sticking to 1200" means eating your exercise calories back.)0
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As others have said, you have to use both diet AND exercise. If you only eat 1200 calories and do no exercise, there is no way you will be able to meet your nutritional requirements (and reaceive the warning from MyFitnessPal). Now, if you eat 1500 calories and exercise the equivalent of at least 300 calories, you'll be back at 1200 (and won't be reprimanded by MyFitnessPal for not eating enough calories) and lose weight. Even if the only exercise you do is walking slowly, it's still exercise and it's still burning calories. You may also want to reconsider your goals and drop it back to a pound per week. It's realistic and you have less chance of hitting heartbreaking plateaus.0
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Try to stick with the 1200, always keeping in mind that if you are hungry eat a healthy snack [yogurt with cinnamon (curbs the hunger), etc.] Your body will tell you if you are needing more fuel (energy). All these magic numbers are just a beginning point. The 1200 worked for me and I have kept all the weight off for 2 years now (without trying, and without over eating too).0
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I'm on a 1200 calorie diet as well, but I am only 5'2" and I put my goal weight as 120 pounds with a weight loss of 1 pound a week. Well, I am closer to my goal so at 1200 calories I am losing 0.8 pounds a week, but MFP will not go lower than 1200.
I always eat my workout calories, but this is my base.0 -
Try the 1200 for a bit, but still eat when you are hungry0
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The OP is 5'7, she doesn't need to do 1200 calories.0
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I don't claim to be an expert, as I am in a similar position to OP. But my plan is to stick to 1200 until Xmas hols, hopefully maximising weight loss before Xmas and while I am super motivated. After Xmas I will reduce my target to 1lb a week and go for the long haul slow and steady.0
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The OP is 5'7, she doesn't need to do 1200 calories.
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I have been doing 1,200 net (I wear a body media fit arm band and always eat back my exercise calories). SW 224 and CW 200, it's been about 15 weeks. I measure my body fat % with the navy method, and per that my loss has been almost all fat. If I'm not hungry, tired, and per the measuring tape I'm losing fat and not muscle I'm not sure I understand why it is supposed to be so unhealthy. Also, I had a physical a couple of weeks ago and all of my bloodwork was fine with exception of vitamin D (but that was a problem last year before dieting as well).
I'm really interested in this thread because I always read "Eat more, I did and I lost weight!!!" but I don't understand why with the above mentioned scenario I should.
Edit to add I'm 5'7" and 28.0 -
Stay on the 1200 Calorie diet.
This!!
Im pretty much the same measurements.... (Started at 220ish, now 164ish, 5"6!) and iv always stuck to 1200 a day, and im still losing. I also DONT eat back my exercise cals. Each to their own though, you will soon find what works best for you!! :flowerforyou:
And, I'm 5'6", started at 210 now at 159-160ish, most lost at 1500-1600 cal/day, eating back some exercise.
1200 is not necessary for weight loss.0 -
I have been doing 1,200 net (I wear a body media fit arm band and always eat back my exercise calories). SW 224 and CW 200, it's been about 15 weeks. I measure my body fat % with the navy method, and per that my loss has been almost all fat. If I'm not hungry, tired, and per the measuring tape I'm losing fat and not muscle I'm not sure I understand why it is supposed to be so unhealthy. Also, I had a physical a couple of weeks ago and all of my bloodwork was fine with exception of vitamin D (but that was a problem last year before dieting as well).
I'm really interested in this thread because I always read "Eat more, I did and I lost weight!!!" but I don't understand why with the above mentioned scenario I should.
Edit to add I'm 5'7" and 28.
The measuring tape is an extremely.....extremely inaccurate way to measure BF%.0 -
My understanding is that everything you can do at home is an extremely inaccurate way to measure BF%. The scale is giving same results, though I don't look at that as often. What would you recommend?0
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I started at 186 and followed MFP 1200 a day calorie intake + plus added the workout and have lost 30 lbs. It works!0
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Bump0
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You should definitely increase. It estimated 1200 calories for me and I am 5'1 and 161 pounds. We should not be eating the same amount (you should be eating more since your quite a bit taller). This is what it estimated for me to lose 1.5 pounds per week.0
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