What activity level am I?
Janaglass32
Posts: 9
Hi, I'm having a hard time deciding what activity level I'm really on.
There's sedentary and then there's lightly active.
I'm a full-time cashier and I work about eight hours a day. I spend a good couple of hours scanning groceries quickly, some are quite heavy!
There's sedentary and then there's lightly active.
I'm a full-time cashier and I work about eight hours a day. I spend a good couple of hours scanning groceries quickly, some are quite heavy!
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Replies
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I also work about an hour to an hour 1/2 at the gym.0
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Cashier work can be physically demanding at times, depending on your job. Are you stocking coolers and tossing around cases of soda and things, or do you just stand behind a register. I have putting a lot of thought into this also as I cannot decide on my activity level either.0
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Yeah it's confusing. Sedentary though is literally just sitting on the couch and not really moving though right? I don't think cashier would fall in to that tbh. Too much moving around and lifting/standing.0
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You know, there's day's where's it 's just really crazy paste and I'm just checking and swiping like yesterday. And then their's days where i get 'a really crazy at last part of my shift, and somedays where I'm just real board- most the time I'm Pretty steady. I'm also shipped around to different types registers. Sometimes I get a lot of heavy stuff . I guess it just depends on the day and which register they stand me to register meaning-conveyor belt, speedy, self check-out, etc0
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Hi, I'm having a hard time deciding what activity level I'm really on.
There's sedentary and then there's lightly active.
I'm a full-time cashier and I work about eight hours a day. I spend a good couple of hours scanning groceries quickly, some are quite heavy!0 -
Having thought about it more and having been a cashier for about 12 or 13 years(convenience stores), I would personally go with active, you can always lower it to lightly active later if you need.0
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sedetary, and log your workouts
a fitbit might be nice to get all your walking around.0 -
Hi, I'm having a hard time deciding what activity level I'm really on.
There's sedentary and then there's lightly active.
I'm a full-time cashier and I work about eight hours a day. I spend a good couple of hours scanning groceries quickly, some are quite heavy!0 -
Lightly active, at the very least. On your feet, so definitely not sedentary.0
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I used sedentary, and log all my activities like cleaning stalls, and walking around the office building and up and down the stairs. I have a desk job, but live on a horse farm.0
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Lightly active.0
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To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything, and everybody is different.0 -
I worked as a cashier for 3 years back in high school and university, I would log as lightly active personally.0
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I agree with SSLRunner. My job is nowhere near as active as yours sounds, but I have had to change to active or I lose weight quicker than I want - I sit down most of the day, with a bit of walking round and initially set my activity to lightly active just because I cycle 10 mins (not fast) to work and back each day. Even logging and eating back my exercise calories separately I was losing weight when I wanted to maintain.0
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I agree with SSLRunner. My job is nowhere near as active as yours sounds, but I have had to change to active or I lose weight quicker than I want - I sit down most of the day, with a bit of walking round and initially set my activity to lightly active just because I cycle 10 mins (not fast) to work and back each day. Even logging and eating back my exercise calories separately I was losing weight when I wanted to maintain.0
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I'm a cashier at McDonald's and I put active, but that's mostly because I have to move around a lot no matter how busy it is. I wouldn't put anything less than lightly active if you're on your feet the whole day, though.0
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Thank you for all your general feed back-I have an idea where I need to beM0
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I also work about an hour to an hour 1/2 at the gym.
This is not part of your activity level it should be logged separately under exercise0 -
To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything, and everybody is different.
Do you log at least your running separately or are you using more of a TDEE approach? MFP settings assume you will log your exercise separately as mentioned by a previous poster. I suppose another method if you don't feel like you can properly quantify your exercise is to pick a higher activity level than you really may be
Per the app: Sedentary: on your buns most of the day - desk job. Lightly active: on your feet most of the day - teacher, salesman . Active: a good part of the day doing physical activity - waiter, mailman. Very active: heavy physical activity - bike messenger, carpenter.0 -
To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything[\b], and everybody is different.
Chose a number, work with that.
You can also use your own data after a few weeks to create your own estimate.
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/EvgeniZyntx/view/new-mfp-data-export-tool-major-update-6599270 -
To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything, and everybody is different.
Do you log at least your running separately or are you using more of a TDEE approach? MFP settings assume you will log your exercise separately as mentioned by a previous poster. I suppose another method if you don't feel like you can properly quantify your exercise is to pick a higher activity level than you really may be
Per the app: Sedentary: on your buns most of the day - desk job. Lightly active: on your feet most of the day - teacher, salesman . Active: a good part of the day doing physical activity - waiter, mailman. Very active: heavy physical activity - bike messenger, carpenter.
It has been my experience that the app is a guideline only, and their activity levels have not been accurate for me.0 -
To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything[\b], and everybody is different.
Chose a number, work with that.
You can also use your own data after a few weeks to create your own estimate.
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/EvgeniZyntx/view/new-mfp-data-export-tool-major-update-6599270 -
I have a desk job, I don't do much else except for clean my home and cook a bit. I may walk back and forth a few times in the office. I have no kids to run around after, since mine is 12. I do not count my exercise in my activity level. I add it separately using the MFP method. I have my activity level set to lightly active and I lose 1 lb a week with that. So I would really think that the OP is active. Trial and error though.0
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To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything, and everybody is different.
Do you log at least your running separately or are you using more of a TDEE approach? MFP settings assume you will log your exercise separately as mentioned by a previous poster. I suppose another method if you don't feel like you can properly quantify your exercise is to pick a higher activity level than you really may be
Per the app: Sedentary: on your buns most of the day - desk job. Lightly active: on your feet most of the day - teacher, salesman . Active: a good part of the day doing physical activity - waiter, mailman. Very active: heavy physical activity - bike messenger, carpenter.
It has been my experience that the app is a guideline only, and their activity levels have not been accurate for me.
If you were able to accurately measure and report your strength training and HIIT, etc that you do and record as 1 calorie, I suspect it would come closer. I would say you are doing an MFP/TDEE hybrid and this is most likely why the activity level chosen could not match your actual non exercise activity level. I do agree about trial and error being best0 -
To those of you who say lightly active (and the OP), the reason I say active:
I have a desk job, work out five to six days a week (running and weight lifting) and my activity level is set to active. Sedentary and lightly active, I lose weight.
I think it's more trial and error than anything, and everybody is different.
Do you log at least your running separately or are you using more of a TDEE approach? MFP settings assume you will log your exercise separately as mentioned by a previous poster. I suppose another method if you don't feel like you can properly quantify your exercise is to pick a higher activity level than you really may be
Per the app: Sedentary: on your buns most of the day - desk job. Lightly active: on your feet most of the day - teacher, salesman . Active: a good part of the day doing physical activity - waiter, mailman. Very active: heavy physical activity - bike messenger, carpenter.
It has been my experience that the app is a guideline only, and their activity levels have not been accurate for me.
If you were able to accurately measure and report your strength training and HIIT, etc that you do and record as 1 calorie, I suspect it would come closer. I would say you are doing an MFP/TDEE hybrid and this is most likely why the activity level chosen could not match your actual non exercise activity level. I do agree about trial and error being best
That said, I still think a cashier on her feet all day is active.0
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