Why is it that people on the Biggest loser etc

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Replies

  • SunLove8
    SunLove8 Posts: 693 Member
    you wont,...... the calories that you burned off from working out is just that....old calories....I do not eat my calories I burn off...defeats the purpose....that why they lose so much weight.....they actually aim for negative calories!! I eat my 1200 a day and workout as much as possbile. the more you workout, the more you will lose...just make sure you are getting lots of water, 90 grams of protein to keep your muscles and build more, and not too much sugar. High fat and sugars make you crave more of them, to get rid of cravings, keep these low! You can look at my goals and compare to yours....I'm actually signed u with jillian michaels.com to get good advice on diet excersise and since i'm incorporated what she says, I'm seeing the scale move more! Good luck

    Do u realize that MFP already puts u in a 500 calorie deficit to start with? You are in the negatives already if u didn't work out at all and ate all 1200 calories a day? That is how people gain weight back when ending a program. That is definitely putting ur body in starvation mode bc u start in a deficit.

    Nope, I have never heard that MFP already puts a person in a 500 calorie deficit to start with. Where did you find that info? I'm surpirsed I haven't heard about it until now.
  • MisdemeanorM
    MisdemeanorM Posts: 3,493 Member
    Nope, I have never heard that MFP already puts a person in a 500 calorie deficit to start with. Where did you find that info? I'm surpirsed I haven't heard about it until now.

    That's why they project you will lose weight just following the calorie counting alone. The deficit is 500 if you are set to lose 1 lb per week (3500 (1lb) / 7 (days) = 500 per day) If you set for fewer lbs a week your deficit will be smaller, and more lbs your deficit will be larger. But also keep in mind, depending on how much you have to lose and other factors, 500 might be too high for you and you may need to shoot for losing 1/2 lb a week not 1 lb a week. If you have 20 lbs to lose you are not going to be able (generally speaking) to healthily pull a 1000 deficit to lose 2 lbs a week, but if you have 120 lbs to lose, your body can spare more energy income.
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    you wont,...... the calories that you burned off from working out is just that....old calories....I do not eat my calories I burn off...defeats the purpose....that why they lose so much weight.....they actually aim for negative calories!! I eat my 1200 a day and workout as much as possbile. the more you workout, the more you will lose...just make sure you are getting lots of water, 90 grams of protein to keep your muscles and build more, and not too much sugar. High fat and sugars make you crave more of them, to get rid of cravings, keep these low! You can look at my goals and compare to yours....I'm actually signed u with jillian michaels.com to get good advice on diet excersise and since i'm incorporated what she says, I'm seeing the scale move more! Good luck

    Do u realize that MFP already puts u in a 500 calorie deficit to start with? You are in the negatives already if u didn't work out at all and ate all 1200 calories a day? That is how people gain weight back when ending a program. That is definitely putting ur body in starvation mode bc u start in a deficit.

    Nope, I have never heard that MFP already puts a person in a 500 calorie deficit to start with. Where did you find that info? I'm surpirsed I haven't heard about it until now.

    Here are some threads about how MFP is set up (yes, there is a built in deficit if you entered 1/2 lb/week loss goal or higher) and why not replacing at least some of those exercise cals will slow your metabolism. MUST READS!

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/61706-guide-to-calorie-deficits

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/3047-700-calories-a-day-and-not-losing

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/10589-for-those-confused-or-questioning-eating-your-exercise-calo
  • Forgive me for being lazy, but I didn't read all the other posts before I typed this.

    I consider their weight loss healthy, and their knowledge (nutrition) equally as healthy. What you have to understand is that they are surrounded 24hrs a day, by a lot more people than we are allowed to see. There are doctors, nutritionist, chefs, and trainers. Anytime you have a team of professionals like that your every move is dictated to you, and failing has to be a choice.

    Secondly the massive numbers we see lost weekly are, in the beginning, from simple movement. These are usually sedentary people who have been thrown into all out balls to the wall training for hours a day. Thay is enough shock to the system to cause the body to begin dumping weight to cope. Several of the contestants gain some/all of the wieght back, but that's simply a choice. It has nothing to do with the model, the individual does not have the power to deny themselves. This site for instance is a wonderful thing. We can get all the encouragement possible, but at the end of the day we have to be honest with ourselves.....
  • jewelzz
    jewelzz Posts: 326 Member
    I've wondered that, too. I have a feeling they don't eat their exercise calories. I've never even heard of eating back the calories you burn during your work outs until I started MFP. I remember seeing on a past show that there was a whiteboard tracking calories for the day and it had a total of around 1280.


    I saw that show to,however they are eating that was what the ranch supplied for them the rest they had to do on their own.For them to loose at the least 7 lbs a week they have to burn 3500 hundred cals a day,and make up for some of what they burn.I dont think its the most healthy way to do it,but this show is extreme weight loss.
  • dawniee
    dawniee Posts: 143 Member
    All my info come from jillianmichael.com...i also have a nutritionist that told me what to do.....BOTH JILLIAN MICHAEL AND MY "PERSONAL TRAINER" said DO NOT eat more just beause of the calories you burned. Nothing to be confused about. Jillian put it this way which makes it so simple...i think we get confused because of all the different opinions. She says "If you burn more calories than you eat, you will lose weight. Tip the equation the other way by eating more than you burn, you will gain weight. Balance the equation, and you will maintain your weight. It's not magic, it's just math. If you want to lose weight you need to create a calorie deficit. If you want to lose weight, you need to create a calorie deficit.
    First, you need to figure out how many calories your body burns on a daily basis. That number also happens to be the number of calories you can eat each day if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose weight, you must subtract calories from that daily total. One pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories, so if you want to lose 1 pound a week, you'd cut 500 calories each day (7 x 500 = 3,500). If you want to lose 2 pounds a week, you'd cut 1,000 calories a day. Once you make this subtraction, you have your "magic" number — the number of calories you should aim for each day to lose weight.

    That's word for word Jillian Michaels. Hope that helps.
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    All my info come from jillianmichael.com...i also have a nutritionist that told me what to do.....BOTH JILLIAN MICHAEL AND MY "PERSONAL TRAINER" said DO NOT eat more just beause of the calories you burned. Nothing to be confused about. Jillian put it this way which makes it so simple...i think we get confused because of all the different opinions. She says "If you burn more calories than you eat, you will lose weight. Tip the equation the other way by eating more than you burn, you will gain weight. Balance the equation, and you will maintain your weight. It's not magic, it's just math. If you want to lose weight you need to create a calorie deficit. If you want to lose weight, you need to create a calorie deficit.
    First, you need to figure out how many calories your body burns on a daily basis. That number also happens to be the number of calories you can eat each day if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose weight, you must subtract calories from that daily total. One pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories, so if you want to lose 1 pound a week, you'd cut 500 calories each day (7 x 500 = 3,500). If you want to lose 2 pounds a week, you'd cut 1,000 calories a day. Once you make this subtraction, you have your "magic" number — the number of calories you should aim for each day to lose weight.

    That's word for word Jillian Michaels. Hope that helps.

    All of this is true - however, it does not take into account that MFP already creates a calorie deficit for you, regardless of whether you exercise. If you chose a 1 lb per week loss goal - you have 500 cals subtracted from your cal goal every day - no matter whether you sit on your butt, log 20 minutes of exercise, or log 5 hours of exercise. Period. If you don't eat those exercise calories you burned, that MFP adds cals back in for, you are creating a LARGER deficit - ie more than 1 lb per week loss.

    MFP does NOT work like most other calculators, which include whatever exercise you input in their cal recommendation at the start of the day. MFP ADDS those calories once you actually LOG the individual workouts, and maintains the built-in deficit no matter what.
  • rileysowner
    rileysowner Posts: 8,331 Member
    All my info come from jillianmichael.com...i also have a nutritionist that told me what to do.....BOTH JILLIAN MICHAEL AND MY "PERSONAL TRAINER" said DO NOT eat more just beause of the calories you burned. Nothing to be confused about. Jillian put it this way which makes it so simple...i think we get confused because of all the different opinions. She says "If you burn more calories than you eat, you will lose weight. Tip the equation the other way by eating more than you burn, you will gain weight. Balance the equation, and you will maintain your weight. It's not magic, it's just math. If you want to lose weight you need to create a calorie deficit. If you want to lose weight, you need to create a calorie deficit.
    First, you need to figure out how many calories your body burns on a daily basis. That number also happens to be the number of calories you can eat each day if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose weight, you must subtract calories from that daily total. One pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories, so if you want to lose 1 pound a week, you'd cut 500 calories each day (7 x 500 = 3,500). If you want to lose 2 pounds a week, you'd cut 1,000 calories a day. Once you make this subtraction, you have your "magic" number — the number of calories you should aim for each day to lose weight.

    That's word for word Jillian Michaels. Hope that helps.

    All of this is true - however, it does not take into account that MFP already creates a calorie deficit for you, regardless of whether you exercise. If you chose a 1 lb per week loss goal - you have 500 cals subtracted from your cal goal every day - no matter whether you sit on your butt, log 20 minutes of exercise, or log 5 hours of exercise. Period. If you don't eat those exercise calories you burned, that MFP adds cals back in for, you are creating a LARGER deficit - ie more than 1 lb per week loss.

    MFP does NOT work like most other calculators, which include whatever exercise you input in their cal recommendation at the start of the day. MFP ADDS those calories once you actually LOG the individual workouts, and maintains the built-in deficit no matter what.

    Actually every calculator I have seen, not that I have looked at a lot, does what MFP does without the net calories. By that I mean they figure out a calorie restricted amount you eat to lose weight, and that is what you eat whether you exercise or not. MFP's way is fine to, but I have not seen any definitive research papers cited by those saying it is the only way to go. It is sort of like the 5-6 meals a day thing. There is no peer reviewed research to support that view. If you want to eat 5-6 meal a day go for it. If you want to eat 1 meal a day and get all your calories that way, go for it. I will stick to 3 meals. It works for me and I don't have to obsess over how to fit meals in during work hours. If there is hard research to show differently from say the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, then I will consider it in light of the other papers already published on that topic. The same goes for eating exercise calories. Do what works for you. I have not been eating my exercise calories for the year I have been working on losing weight, and I am doing just fine overall.
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    All my info come from jillianmichael.com...i also have a nutritionist that told me what to do.....BOTH JILLIAN MICHAEL AND MY "PERSONAL TRAINER" said DO NOT eat more just beause of the calories you burned. Nothing to be confused about. Jillian put it this way which makes it so simple...i think we get confused because of all the different opinions. She says "If you burn more calories than you eat, you will lose weight. Tip the equation the other way by eating more than you burn, you will gain weight. Balance the equation, and you will maintain your weight. It's not magic, it's just math. If you want to lose weight you need to create a calorie deficit. If you want to lose weight, you need to create a calorie deficit.
    First, you need to figure out how many calories your body burns on a daily basis. That number also happens to be the number of calories you can eat each day if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose weight, you must subtract calories from that daily total. One pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories, so if you want to lose 1 pound a week, you'd cut 500 calories each day (7 x 500 = 3,500). If you want to lose 2 pounds a week, you'd cut 1,000 calories a day. Once you make this subtraction, you have your "magic" number — the number of calories you should aim for each day to lose weight.

    That's word for word Jillian Michaels. Hope that helps.

    All of this is true - however, it does not take into account that MFP already creates a calorie deficit for you, regardless of whether you exercise. If you chose a 1 lb per week loss goal - you have 500 cals subtracted from your cal goal every day - no matter whether you sit on your butt, log 20 minutes of exercise, or log 5 hours of exercise. Period. If you don't eat those exercise calories you burned, that MFP adds cals back in for, you are creating a LARGER deficit - ie more than 1 lb per week loss.

    MFP does NOT work like most other calculators, which include whatever exercise you input in their cal recommendation at the start of the day. MFP ADDS those calories once you actually LOG the individual workouts, and maintains the built-in deficit no matter what.

    Actually every calculator I have seen, not that I have looked at a lot, does what MFP does without the net calories. By that I mean they figure out a calorie restricted amount you eat to lose weight, and that is what you eat whether you exercise or not. MFP's way is fine to, but I have not seen any definitive research papers cited by those saying it is the only way to go. It is sort of like the 5-6 meals a day thing. There is no peer reviewed research to support that view. If you want to eat 5-6 meal a day go for it. If you want to eat 1 meal a day and get all your calories that way, go for it. I will stick to 3 meals. It works for me and I don't have to obsess over how to fit meals in during work hours. If there is hard research to show differently from say the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, then I will consider it in light of the other papers already published on that topic. The same goes for eating exercise calories. Do what works for you. I have not been eating my exercise calories for the year I have been working on losing weight, and I am doing just fine overall.

    Most calculators I've seen ask for your "intended" exercise - and include that in the daily goal from the start. MFP leaves out exercise, until you actually log it.

    Yes, some people underestimate cals. Yes, some people overestimate burns. But not by 500 or more. And if they DO have that much off in their estimations, they're using the system incorrectly to begin with. Counting calories requires COUNTING them - not half-assed guessing. I agree that a small buffer can be appropriate - but that doesn't mean not eating them at all.

    They're all reaching the same conclusion. You eat this amount = you lose this amount of weight. What people don't understand, somehow, is that if you do NOT eat exercise cals, you have just moved yourself to a purposeful attempt to lose faster than you signed up for, and likely faster than is HEALTHY for you. There is a REASON MFP only goes as high as 2 lb per week loss - because for all but the most obese people (with 100+ lbs to lose), anything faster than that is unhealthy and very hard to sustain - and leads to failure and bad nutrition - particularly if you are not under the care of a dietician.
  • reneelee
    reneelee Posts: 877 Member
    I've wondered that, too. I have a feeling they don't eat their exercise calories. I've never even heard of eating back the calories you burn during your work outs until I started MFP. I remember seeing on a past show that there was a whiteboard tracking calories for the day and it had a total of around 1280.

    You are right and a female contestant last season said she couldn't have anything to eat at the bowling alley while visiting home, because the lowest calorie item on the menue was six hundred calories and that was half her calories for the day.
  • amymeenieminymo
    amymeenieminymo Posts: 2,394 Member
    Forgive me for being lazy, but I didn't read all the other posts before I typed this.

    I consider their weight loss healthy, and their knowledge (nutrition) equally as healthy. What you have to understand is that they are surrounded 24hrs a day, by a lot more people than we are allowed to see. There are doctors, nutritionist, chefs, and trainers. Anytime you have a team of professionals like that your every move is dictated to you, and failing has to be a choice.

    Secondly the massive numbers we see lost weekly are, in the beginning, from simple movement. These are usually sedentary people who have been thrown into all out balls to the wall training for hours a day. Thay is enough shock to the system to cause the body to begin dumping weight to cope. Several of the contestants gain some/all of the wieght back, but that's simply a choice. It has nothing to do with the model, the individual does not have the power to deny themselves. This site for instance is a wonderful thing. We can get all the encouragement possible, but at the end of the day we have to be honest with ourselves.....


    One important thing to remember is the fact that this is a TV show. So while they may have nutritionists and doctors behind the scenes and some it is may resemble healthy dieting, the main premise of the show is entertainment, plain and simple. Most people watch it for the drama and watching the trainers rip someone a new one for "only" losing a few pounds that week. As a society we are obsessed with the idea of losing weight easily, quickly and painlessly and this show monopolizes on that dream. You didn't gain it all overnight guys, so it won't all go away overnight either.

    Reality shows are far from reality, so I really hope that nobody mirrors their weight loss plan by what they do on Biggest Loser.
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    All my info come from jillianmichael.com...i also have a nutritionist that told me what to do.....BOTH JILLIAN MICHAEL AND MY "PERSONAL TRAINER" said DO NOT eat more just beause of the calories you burned. Nothing to be confused about. Jillian put it this way which makes it so simple...i think we get confused because of all the different opinions. She says "If you burn more calories than you eat, you will lose weight. Tip the equation the other way by eating more than you burn, you will gain weight. Balance the equation, and you will maintain your weight. It's not magic, it's just math. If you want to lose weight you need to create a calorie deficit. If you want to lose weight, you need to create a calorie deficit.
    First, you need to figure out how many calories your body burns on a daily basis. That number also happens to be the number of calories you can eat each day if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose weight, you must subtract calories from that daily total. One pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories, so if you want to lose 1 pound a week, you'd cut 500 calories each day (7 x 500 = 3,500). If you want to lose 2 pounds a week, you'd cut 1,000 calories a day. Once you make this subtraction, you have your "magic" number — the number of calories you should aim for each day to lose weight.

    That's word for word Jillian Michaels. Hope that helps.

    All of this is true - however, it does not take into account that MFP already creates a calorie deficit for you, regardless of whether you exercise. If you chose a 1 lb per week loss goal - you have 500 cals subtracted from your cal goal every day - no matter whether you sit on your butt, log 20 minutes of exercise, or log 5 hours of exercise. Period. If you don't eat those exercise calories you burned, that MFP adds cals back in for, you are creating a LARGER deficit - ie more than 1 lb per week loss.

    MFP does NOT work like most other calculators, which include whatever exercise you input in their cal recommendation at the start of the day. MFP ADDS those calories once you actually LOG the individual workouts, and maintains the built-in deficit no matter what.

    Actually every calculator I have seen, not that I have looked at a lot, does what MFP does without the net calories. By that I mean they figure out a calorie restricted amount you eat to lose weight, and that is what you eat whether you exercise or not. MFP's way is fine to, but I have not seen any definitive research papers cited by those saying it is the only way to go. It is sort of like the 5-6 meals a day thing. There is no peer reviewed research to support that view. If you want to eat 5-6 meal a day go for it. If you want to eat 1 meal a day and get all your calories that way, go for it. I will stick to 3 meals. It works for me and I don't have to obsess over how to fit meals in during work hours. If there is hard research to show differently from say the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, then I will consider it in light of the other papers already published on that topic. The same goes for eating exercise calories. Do what works for you. I have not been eating my exercise calories for the year I have been working on losing weight, and I am doing just fine overall.

    I'm glad it's worked for you. But I would say you are an exception, not the rule.

    Anyway, as far as peer reviewed research, ask Banks and I'm sure he'll be happy to provide some sources. Also, here is a thread from Robin that cites some of her research on it...

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/153704-myth-or-fact-simple-math-3500-calories-one-pound-eat
  • amymeenieminymo
    amymeenieminymo Posts: 2,394 Member
    All my info come from jillianmichael.com...i also have a nutritionist that told me what to do.....BOTH JILLIAN MICHAEL AND MY "PERSONAL TRAINER" said DO NOT eat more just beause of the calories you burned. Nothing to be confused about. Jillian put it this way which makes it so simple...i think we get confused because of all the different opinions. She says "If you burn more calories than you eat, you will lose weight. Tip the equation the other way by eating more than you burn, you will gain weight. Balance the equation, and you will maintain your weight. It's not magic, it's just math. If you want to lose weight you need to create a calorie deficit. If you want to lose weight, you need to create a calorie deficit.
    First, you need to figure out how many calories your body burns on a daily basis. That number also happens to be the number of calories you can eat each day if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose weight, you must subtract calories from that daily total. One pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories, so if you want to lose 1 pound a week, you'd cut 500 calories each day (7 x 500 = 3,500). If you want to lose 2 pounds a week, you'd cut 1,000 calories a day. Once you make this subtraction, you have your "magic" number — the number of calories you should aim for each day to lose weight.

    That's word for word Jillian Michaels. Hope that helps.

    All of this is true - however, it does not take into account that MFP already creates a calorie deficit for you, regardless of whether you exercise. If you chose a 1 lb per week loss goal - you have 500 cals subtracted from your cal goal every day - no matter whether you sit on your butt, log 20 minutes of exercise, or log 5 hours of exercise. Period. If you don't eat those exercise calories you burned, that MFP adds cals back in for, you are creating a LARGER deficit - ie more than 1 lb per week loss.

    MFP does NOT work like most other calculators, which include whatever exercise you input in their cal recommendation at the start of the day. MFP ADDS those calories once you actually LOG the individual workouts, and maintains the built-in deficit no matter what.

    Actually every calculator I have seen, not that I have looked at a lot, does what MFP does without the net calories. By that I mean they figure out a calorie restricted amount you eat to lose weight, and that is what you eat whether you exercise or not. MFP's way is fine to, but I have not seen any definitive research papers cited by those saying it is the only way to go. It is sort of like the 5-6 meals a day thing. There is no peer reviewed research to support that view. If you want to eat 5-6 meal a day go for it. If you want to eat 1 meal a day and get all your calories that way, go for it. I will stick to 3 meals. It works for me and I don't have to obsess over how to fit meals in during work hours. If there is hard research to show differently from say the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, then I will consider it in light of the other papers already published on that topic. The same goes for eating exercise calories. Do what works for you. I have not been eating my exercise calories for the year I have been working on losing weight, and I am doing just fine overall.

    Most calculators I've seen ask for your "intended" exercise - and include that in the daily goal from the start. MFP leaves out exercise, until you actually log it.

    Yes, some people underestimate cals. Yes, some people overestimate burns. But not by 500 or more. And if they DO have that much off in their estimations, they're using the system incorrectly to begin with. Counting calories requires COUNTING them - not half-assed guessing. I agree that a small buffer can be appropriate - but that doesn't mean not eating them at all.

    They're all reaching the same conclusion. You eat this amount = you lose this amount of weight. What people don't understand, somehow, is that if you do NOT eat exercise cals, you have just moved yourself to a purposeful attempt to lose faster than you signed up for, and likely faster than is HEALTHY for you. There is a REASON MFP only goes as high as 2 lb per week loss - because for all but the most obese people (with 100+ lbs to lose), anything faster than that is unhealthy and very hard to sustain - and leads to failure and bad nutrition - particularly if you are not under the care of a dietician.


    Well said!
  • liscar
    liscar Posts: 311 Member
    and I dont mean to sound confused but yet i am :) some say you should eat some of your exercise calories and some say not to.. I just dont get which is best

    I eat mine. I lose about 3 lbs a week when I do. When I don't, I gain.

    Bottom line- for me eating my exercise calories works.

    I eat all mine and I've love 18 pounds ---- I have energy, I don't struggle through my workouts AND I'm not hungry so I don't cheat or binge
  • FearAnLoathing
    FearAnLoathing Posts: 4,852 Member
    ok one thing im a little confused on im on 1200 calories and day now if i dont eat all those calories i get the starvation mode warning,lets say i eat 1200 or 1300 hundred one day then exercise away 500 leaving my net at like 800 or 700 how come i dont get the warning then.
  • runningneo122
    runningneo122 Posts: 6,962 Member
    ok one thing im a little confused on im on 1200 calories and day now if i dont eat all those calories i get the starvation mode warning,lets say i eat 1200 or 1300 hundred one day then exercise away 500 leaving my net at like 800 or 700 how come i dont get the warning then.

    I'd say that that is a Q for Mike re: programming. Sounds like the S/M message is reacting ONLY to "intake" and not "net".
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    ok one thing im a little confused on im on 1200 calories and day now if i dont eat all those calories i get the starvation mode warning,lets say i eat 1200 or 1300 hundred one day then exercise away 500 leaving my net at like 800 or 700 how come i dont get the warning then.

    I assume it's not set up to do that with net cals, only with basic intake. But that's a good question, and one I would put to Mike and see if they can address it - because it should give the same warning in both instances.
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    ok one thing im a little confused on im on 1200 calories and day now if i dont eat all those calories i get the starvation mode warning,lets say i eat 1200 or 1300 hundred one day then exercise away 500 leaving my net at like 800 or 700 how come i dont get the warning then.

    I'd say that that is a Q for Mike re: programming. Sounds like the S/M message is reacting ONLY to "intake" and not "net".

    :laugh: Get outta my head, Neo! :tongue:
  • reneelee
    reneelee Posts: 877 Member
    I'm not getting involved in the eating your exercise cals debate.... but if you haven't read the interview with former BL contestant Kai, it's rather eye opening to what they go through.

    This is part 1... part 2 and 3 are linked within the text of the article...

    http://www.bodylovewellness.com/2010/06/09/kai-hibbard-biggest-loser-finalist-part-1-of-3/

    OMG! I like this show so much, kind of sorry I read the story.
  • shardown
    shardown Posts: 258 Member
    I'm not getting involved in the eating your exercise cals debate.... but if you haven't read the interview with former BL contestant Kai, it's rather eye opening to what they go through.

    This is part 1... part 2 and 3 are linked within the text of the article...

    http://www.bodylovewellness.com/2010/06/09/kai-hibbard-biggest-loser-finalist-part-1-of-3/

    That is horrid. I had a short rant this morning about how disgusting the BL is and that interview only confirms my thoughts.
  • runningneo122
    runningneo122 Posts: 6,962 Member
    ok one thing im a little confused on im on 1200 calories and day now if i dont eat all those calories i get the starvation mode warning,lets say i eat 1200 or 1300 hundred one day then exercise away 500 leaving my net at like 800 or 700 how come i dont get the warning then.

    I'd say that that is a Q for Mike re: programming. Sounds like the S/M message is reacting ONLY to "intake" and not "net".

    :laugh: Get outta my head, Neo! :tongue:

    :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
  • superflycat2
    superflycat2 Posts: 8 Member
    weight is just a number, cms is more important anyway!
  • Remember the pictures of holocaust death camp survivors? Well they weren't that skinny cause they were eating 6 meals a day, I'll tell you that! "Starvation mode" is really a misnomer: yes, your metabolism will slow down in your body's effort to preserve itself, but if you keep pushing it, it doesn't have a choice but to use that fat supply just to live.

    The harm in entering starvation mode isn't that you stop loosing weight, its that when you return to a normal diet, you gain exponentially.

    Yes, so let your body enter starvation mode, because if the people in a Holocaust death camp can "push it" and keep loosing weight, so can you! And it's totally legitimate and healthy for your body!


    Ha. Brilliant.
  • Losing2Live69
    Losing2Live69 Posts: 743 Member
    I never eat all the calories they add back for my exercise. Yes, I know I need to eat more when I exercise, but to burn 500, eat 500...burn 400, eat 400...I would never lose weight! That's how it works for me at least. I stick within my calorie goal give or take 200 or so. I have lost 16 pounds since January 7th (5 since Feb 8th). If I am super hungry and near or over my calorie goal I eat a chicken breast or an egg...something high in protein and low in carbs. I'm burning something, I have gone down 4 sizes in two months and that is constantly being under the calories suggested by MFP.
  • CatseyeHardcast
    CatseyeHardcast Posts: 224 Member
    Also keep in mind the weight the contestants on BL lose is not in 1 week. It is usually at least 2 weeks between weigh ins.
  • Janworkingitout
    Janworkingitout Posts: 434 Member
    If you speak to a professional they will tell you not to eat your work out calories! Aim to eat 1200 to 1300 calories a day and aim to do at least 3500 calories burned in exercise in a week. You will find many conflicting things on here but what works for one may not work for another. I follow the advice of a professional trainer, who has been trained in many aspect of the health field. He is the one that recommended this site in our Boot Camp! If you follow those 2 simple things and make what you are eating a priority you will lose! Be extremely aware of what you are eating and be accountable for it!

    Well said... this is absolutely what has worked for me!
  • charlaynem
    charlaynem Posts: 3 Member
    What you said is too funny:laugh: ...the six hours would not motivate me at all...:explode:
  • Remember, alot of them have been known to gain alot of the weight back once the show is over. The key is to do it slow and steady, fit it into your life, and change your emotional relationship to food and your body. It doesn't seem like it's a realistic setting that instills healthy emotional habits...just sayin!...
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