Lose Weight By Walking?
Rottie16
Posts: 4
I love walking, but I have tried running and seem to get tired very easily, If i eat 1200-1500 Calories a day and do 1 hour of fast walking, will i lose weight? Also any advice you could give me?
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Replies
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yes. I started by only walking 20 minutes a day and 1200 calories. I now walk more and eat more but I am down.0
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Make sure to vary your route with different hills so your body does not get used to your routine. My friend and I have been walking three miles each day we can, she has lost 30 pounds by also adding in some resistance work with light weights etc. Good walking sneakers are a must and replace them when the tread on the bottom wears out to make sure you are supporting your feet! Good luck!0
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the main way to lose weight is through calorie deficit - walking will help you tone and feel better though and it does burn calories which is great0
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I think walking is great exercise. Running can wear out your knees. I know several people who have had to have knee replacement because of running. I walk daily and it sure works for me. Log your calories and drink lots of water.0
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Walking on its own won't make you lose weight, no. Only by eating less calories than you burn will you lose weight. However, all exercise, including walking, burns calories, so the more of it you can do, the more it will help keep you under your calorie goal for the day, so will indirectly help you lose weight.
Walking is just as good as running in this respect, except that obviously you will have to walk for longer to burn the same calories (e,g, you may have to walk for an hour to burn the same calories that you'd burn by running for 35 minutes)..
It's impossible to say whether you'll lose weight by eating 1200-1500 calories per day and walking for an hour, because you don't specify your height & weight details. Those figures would be a reasonable average for most women, but that's all. I suggest that you enter all your details into MFP and ask it to tell you how much you should eat (tell it you're completely sedentary). Then eat what it tells you, PLUS eat back 2/3rds of the calories it says you burn when walking as well. The chances are this will be somewhere in the range you quoted, but it'll be better if you are sure...0 -
Walking has made all the difference to my weight loss over the last year or so & it's only over the last few months I have been lifting some weights & getting on the cross trainer now my weight is down but before this walking was all I did & lots of it, love walking.0
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Yes im 5'2 and 125lbs Thanks!0
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Walking is exercise. If your daily walk (your exercise) is sufficient to put you into a reasonable caloric deficit, you'll lose weight, regardless of whether your body 'adapts to your new routine' in other ways.0
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Yes. I've done it before, except I'm sure that I was eating much more than that. I ate at McDonald's and other fast food places for each meal and walked four miles in an hour to an hour and fifteen minutes-never ran or jogged. Basically, if your body uses up more calories than it needs, you'll lose weight.0
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I did not begin exercise, even walking, until I had lost over 90 pounds.
Exercise helps, but most weight loss comes from calorie deficit.
About 2/3 of my exercise comes from walking. I walk over 5 miles per day, everyday, 7 days per week, and use the elliptical in the gym at work M-F. My fitbit is my best tool for moving more.0 -
My wife and I started walking the same day we started using My Fitness Pal. I have lost 60 lbs, and she has lost 30 lbs. Last night I did 6 miles on the treadmill. Eat at a deficit and get whatever exercise you can. If you like to walk, then walk at a brisk pace and use the Runtastic App if you have a smart phone.0
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Walking is good at first. Once you get down to a weight that doesn't put too much pressure on your knees (which you seem to be at for the most part already) you should start doing some more intense exercise. You're still young, so as long as you have healthy knees, you should be able to start running at some point.
Most of your weight loss is going to come from creating a calorie deficit through what you eat. You cannot expect to burn all of your extra calories through exercise.0 -
90% of weight loss is diet. You'll get all kinds of exercise advice and exercise is great for fitness but your calories are where the weight loss comes from. I have no idea if you'll lose on any set amount of calories because I know nothing about you. If you're 90 and 4'10" then 1200 might be your maintenance but if you you're 20 and 6' then 1200 would be extremely under eating and not a healthy way to live.0
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I walk an average of 40 minutes a day (or bike 20) and I've found that I lose faster doing so. Is it as good as HIIT and spinning? Of course not... but any movement is good movement!0
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Walking is my primary exercise, in addition to chores around my property. My old joints say NO! to running. You can lose weight with just a calorie deficit. But adding some exercise gives you extra calories to eat, which makes it much easier to stay on track, IMHO. Put your numbers in MFP and log everything accurately.0
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I've lost my weight walking. It's important to keep challenging yourself with either length, speed, or incline. It's not good to do the same workout each time, so consider challenging yourself on one front at a time. I want to be able to run, but also want to save my knees. So for now, I'm trying to build up to it.0
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I recommend buying a heart rate monitor if you're going to incorporate walking into your exercise regimen, only because MFP tends to overestimate the actual calories burned. the last thing you'd want is to think you're burning 200 calories when you're only burning 100. That's when people eat back too many calories.0
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You'll also lose weight without the walking and by just keeping to the 1200-1500 calorie range. Sticking to the allowance is the key to weight loss.0
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I did not begin exercise, even walking, until I had lost over 90 pounds.
Exercise helps, but most weight loss comes from calorie deficit.
About 2/3 of my exercise comes from walking. I walk over 5 miles per day, everyday, 7 days per week, and use the elliptical in the gym at work M-F. My fitbit is my best tool for moving more.
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My Fitbit one & daily walking has made all the difference to me & my steady weight loss.0 -
yes!!! and be fitter!!!0
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Yes you will lose weight. I walk three days a week for two to two and a half hours. On 1200 cal. works for me.0
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I my Fitbit as well! I aim for 10,000 steps and 15 flights of stairs a day. I'm training for a test where I have to walk 3 miles in 45 minutes carrying a 45 pound pack. That means walking a minimum of 4 mph, and I'm short (5'3"), so I really have to book it to do that. I jog a little a couple times a week on the treadmill to push my heart rate and stretch out my legs a bit, but overall I've found walking and listening to an audiobook more enjoyable as a form of cardio. I was doing Focus T25 before, with lots of plyometrics and HIIT, and it was killing me, and I was dreading the workouts. I like the challenge of them, but think I'll save it for when there is less weight stressing out my joints! I lost 4 pounds last month, which was right on target with my MFP calorie deficit. Bumped my goal up to 2 pounds a week for December.
I just started strength training again, and also find walking a great way to work out soreness.0 -
I just walk, not only is it fresh air but you get to see things, say "Good morning" to other people and generally just feel good. I have to have a target, so it is off to the shops or into town0
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I think walking is great exercise. Running can wear out your knees. I know several people who have had to have knee replacement because of running. I walk daily and it sure works for me. Log your calories and drink lots of water.
On to walking that's all I did for the first 3 months it's a great exercise0 -
I lost the majority of my weight with walking, I did 3 to 4 miles 5 times a week and ate at a reasonable deficit (circa 100 to 150 under my BMR), I ate back my exercise calories when I was hungry, if not I banked them for an indulgent weekend0
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I found walking a great help, but as others have said the main thing is to eat at a deficit and LOG ACCURATELY. If you don't log accurately you are fooling yourself on calorie intake! Its easy to say - oh, that walk is about one biscuit - but I bet it isn't0
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I did not begin exercise, even walking, until I had lost over 90 pounds.
Exercise helps, but most weight loss comes from calorie deficit.
About 2/3 of my exercise comes from walking. I walk over 5 miles per day, everyday, 7 days per week, and use the elliptical in the gym at work M-F. My fitbit is my best tool for moving more.
That's awesome. When I was in high school, I walked to school and back which was a 10 mile total per day. I didn't have an ounce of fat on me. I never even thought of that mileage being my best friend, but it sure was. When I was bored, I would run the distance so I could get home faster or get to school faster.0 -
Power walking + calorie deficit = 60lbs for me! I still have about 15lbs to go, but I've begun doing SL 5x5 to help me along.
And walking outdoors is great for stress levels, and helps me get going whenever I feel unmotivated in life! Go for it and enjoy. :flowerforyou:0 -
You most definetly can lose weight walking, I have. As long as you are active doing something that you enjoy it will help you get healthy and you will continue it. If you don't care to run but really like walking then by all means walk!
I walk go for a 1 hour walk every morning. I started at 1 mile and now walk a little over 4 miles with my next goal to get to over 5 miles an hours. It helps if you have an area that you like to walk, I have a trail that has a pretty diverse landscape that I really like. What I like best is the peaceful sense it gives me. Yes, there are times that I feel unmovitated to go but once I am out there I am always glad I am there.0 -
do 1 hour of fast walking, will i lose weight?
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