Does it work to do extra calorie burning if you're over your

EmmaRankmore
EmmaRankmore Posts: 125
edited September 25 in Health and Weight Loss
Hey guys :)

I've been on this site for about 8 weeks but only just am venturing into the forums - and I'm so happy to see everyone is so motivating and supportive :)

Just a quick question - if I am over my calorie limit for the day, does it work to go and work it off as soon as I log my foods and work it out? I have an exercise bike at home, and if I look like I'm over my limit I go and exercise on the bike to make sure I'm back in the green again. Does this work? Am I right in thinking it?

I welcome your thoughts :)

xx
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Replies

  • Not really sure. I do that sometimes but not sure if it helps or not. I would think so?
  • Imthatg1rl
    Imthatg1rl Posts: 109
    If you are only going over a little every once in a while, I wouldn't kill myself over it. Variation is your caloric intake is not a bad thing. :)
  • cjfoster
    cjfoster Posts: 36
    :smile: Not sure that really helps...I try to stay at or below my intake..If i know there is something I r3eally want to eat--I plug it in to see if its really worth it..Usually I find that it"s not worth it and look to something more healthy and still keep within my goal,,The result has been weight loss! hope this helps
  • soccermom004
    soccermom004 Posts: 444 Member
    I would. I exercise extra if I know I am going to indulge, same thing.
  • dengarrett
    dengarrett Posts: 367
    Yep sure does. You add calories by eating and burn calories by exercising. Doesn't matter the order it occurs and there really isn't anything magic about a 24 hour period except it makes for a natural unit of measure.
  • reese66
    reese66 Posts: 2,920 Member
    Yes you can burn the calories :)
  • alifer
    alifer Posts: 387 Member
    I would say that every bit of exercise helps regardless of what your caloric intake is, but certainly the closer you stay to your caloric goal the better. Remember muscle weighs more than fat so whenever someone begins a workout routine the scale may show an increase in pounds at first.
  • Thanks very much for your replies everyone :) I'm hoping it does work - I've lost 13lbs in about 8 weeks so it must be working, right? It just sounds to me like cheating a bit lol.
  • That works, because it's an equation. Calories in should be less than Calories out (Calories out=your daily body function depending on weight and normal activity+your exercise). This is why if you're very active you can consume more calories and still lose or maintain.
    However, for weight loss I've found that controlling diet is most important b/c you should be re-training yourself how to eat. And, the last thing you want to do is tell yourself you'll burn off the extra calories later and never do it.
    Good luck!
  • I'm never over by heaps, just 100 or 200 calories tops - and I always exercise to make sure I am back under my limit (including eating my exercise calories). This doesnt happen very often, most of the time I'm below my limit anyway, I'm just curious as to whether this method works is all :)
  • Alphastate
    Alphastate Posts: 295 Member
    I would try to stay within your goal calorie intake before any cardio exercise is put in. You want to keep a caloric deficit in your diet to lose weight. All your cardio is like "bonus" calorie burn. You still lose weight if you consume less calories than what your daily caloric burn is through normal day-today activities, but you want that deficit to be as much as possible without going under 1200 calories consumed. Varying your intake is beneficial so that your body doesn't adapt to a set amount, but definitely try to keep in range of your goal calorie intake. One thing I do because of the way it subtracts cardio calories from your net, is wait till the end of the day to add my cardio. This way I stay on track with my goal calories, and can really see at the end of the day how the "bonus" calories benefit. Hope this helps! If you have any other questions, shoot me a message.
  • I would try to stay within your goal calorie intake before any cardio exercise is put in. You want to keep a caloric deficit in your diet to lose weight. All your cardio is like "bonus" calorie burn. You still lose weight if you consume less calories than what your daily caloric burn is through normal day-today activities, but you want that deficit to be as much as possible without going under 1200 calories consumed. Varying your intake is beneficial so that your body doesn't adapt to a set amount, but definitely try to keep in range of your goal calorie intake. One thing I do because of the way it subtracts cardio calories from your net, is wait till the end of the day to add my cardio. This way I stay on track with my goal calories, and can really see at the end of the day how the "bonus" calories benefit. Hope this helps! If you have any other questions, shoot me a message.

    See this is where I get confused lol. :P Take today for example. My net calories consumed after cardio was 1400 so I did some more cardio to bring that back down to 1200 net calories intake. Am I doing the right thing?
  • dengarrett
    dengarrett Posts: 367
    Think of it as a bucket of water that you want to keep at a certain level. Eating puts water in and exercise takes water out. If you exercise before you eat, the water level drops and then rises. If you eat before you exercise, the water level rises and then drops. Either way, you wind up at the level you want (assuming you don't put in more than you take out).
  • Think of it as a bucket of water that you want to keep at a certain level. Eating puts water in and exercise takes water out. If you exercise before you eat, the water level drops and then rises. If you eat before you exercise, the water level rises and then drops. Either way, you wind up at the level you want (assuming you don't put in more than you take out).

    So that being said, I'm on the right track. :) Thats a really good way of putting it for my tired little brain lol. Thankyou :)
  • Alphastate
    Alphastate Posts: 295 Member
    I highly recommend staying at your goal number. Eating more and then burning it off is kind of cheating. If you stay at your goal number and do the same extra cardio, you will see results faster.
  • tdonlin
    tdonlin Posts: 934 Member
    Yes, you are doing it right. Let the success you have already made be your guide. Like someone else already said, it's all about calories consumed vs calories burned.
  • lol I think its funny how people all have a different view on this stuff. Seems theres no straight answer :S
  • it sure does work!
  • dengarrett
    dengarrett Posts: 367
    Let the success you have already made be your guide.

    Best advice ever!
  • Alphastate
    Alphastate Posts: 295 Member
    There are a lot of different opinions, but I've been personal training for a long time and the hardest thing to get straight is peoples diet. Think of it like this, if you eat 2000 calories one day, but burn 2500 calories with cardio and daily activity, then the next day eat 1200 calories and burn 1800 calories in only daily activity, which sounds better? Controlling your diet is the best option. I'm not saying that on occasion you can't do the extra if you go over, but consistency, or at least relative consistency is key to management of weight loss in the long run.
  • There are a lot of different opinions, but I've been personal training for a long time and the hardest thing to get straight is peoples diet. Think of it like this, if you eat 2000 calories one day, but burn 2500 calories with cardio and daily activity, then the next day eat 1200 calories and burn 1800 calories in only daily activity, which sounds better? Controlling your diet is the best option. I'm not saying that on occasion you can't do the extra if you go over, but consistency, or at least relative consistency is key to management of weight loss in the long run.

    But then we get into the whole 'should I eat my exercise calories' discussion - which has been talked about ad nauseum on here and the conclusion is yes. And thats basically what I'm doing - making sure I'm eating enough. So if I start with 1200 calories, then exercise 500, thats 1700 I should be eating, right? If I eat 1800 for the day and realise that when I log it in the evenings, I do 100 more calories burned on my bike, which brings it to even.

    I'm sure I will get it right, I'm just trying to get as much info as I can to help me understand :)
  • WarmDontBurn
    WarmDontBurn Posts: 1,253 Member
    I would try to stay within your goal calorie intake before any cardio exercise is put in. You want to keep a caloric deficit in your diet to lose weight. All your cardio is like "bonus" calorie burn. You still lose weight if you consume less calories than what your daily caloric burn is through normal day-today activities, but you want that deficit to be as much as possible without going under 1200 calories consumed. Varying your intake is beneficial so that your body doesn't adapt to a set amount, but definitely try to keep in range of your goal calorie intake. One thing I do because of the way it subtracts cardio calories from your net, is wait till the end of the day to add my cardio. This way I stay on track with my goal calories, and can really see at the end of the day how the "bonus" calories benefit. Hope this helps! If you have any other questions, shoot me a message.

    See this is where I get confused lol. :P Take today for example. My net calories consumed after cardio was 1400 so I did some more cardio to bring that back down to 1200 net calories intake. Am I doing the right thing?

    This sounds right...As long as your NET doesn't go below 1200 and you are eating what is allowed for you. I just found out that I was eating below my NET. I was focusing on my goal which was 1200 calories....then I would burn 200 and only eat back say half so I was still below the 1200 NET. I have since upped my calories to 1320 and have been staying as close to that as possible but never under 1200 now. I figure MFP long time users must know what they are talking about...lol. I think people tend to forget to that MFP already factors in a deficit so if you yourself are creating one it might become to great.

    Sounds like you are on the right track and doing well!! Keep up the good work!
  • [/quote]

    This sounds right...As long as your NET doesn't go below 1200 and you are eating what is allowed for you. I just found out that I was eating below my NET. I was focusing on my goal which was 1200 calories....then I would burn 200 and only eat back say half so I was still below the 1200 NET. I have since upped my calories to 1320 and have been staying as close to that as possible but never under 1200 now. I figure MFP long time users must know what they are talking about...lol. I think people tend to forget to that MFP already factors in a deficit so if you yourself are creating one it might become to great.

    Sounds like you are on the right track and doing well!! Keep up the good work!
    [/quote]

    This is the problem I had too - I was creating too much of a deficit, thinking I was doing the right thing by being heaps under my calorie limit. I plateaued with my weight loss so I started exercising more and eating more as well but not going over with eating my exercise calories (apart from the few times) and not going under 1200 net calories consumed. I havent been doing this thing long enough to notice too much of a pattern yet so this is why I'm asking :)
  • And thankyou for the kind words :)
  • Alphastate
    Alphastate Posts: 295 Member
    No, I know it's tough through messaging on posts, but bottom line, if your goal calorie intake is 1200, you should only eat 1200. Don't add your cardio in till the end of the day, if at all. You want to stay under your daily activity caloric burn at all times. If you go over that, then you have to work even harder to burn it off. It's taxing your body unnecessarily. I typically don't even tell my clients to equate for their cardio on here because of this. It confuses the body way too much and it puts you at risk of not being able to maintain your weight loss if you ever stop exercising because it can make you want to consume lots of calories again.
  • WarmDontBurn
    WarmDontBurn Posts: 1,253 Member
    RatBoyGL posted an awesome breakdown..thought it might help here too :)

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/196238-frustrated-consuming-all-of-my-calories-too-many?page=2#posts-2598718 I think I was the last post and I quoted him so it should be easy to find!

    HTH
  • RatBoyGL posted an awesome breakdown..thought it might help here too :)

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/196238-frustrated-consuming-all-of-my-calories-too-many?page=2#posts-2598718 I think I was the last post and I quoted him so it should be easy to find!

    HTH

    Yeah that makes sense :) Okay I'll go with what I'm doing for a while and see how I go. I'm hardly ever over 1300 net calories consumed and very rarely under 1200 net calories consumed so I think I'm in the right area. :) Thanks for your help! :)
  • crazymgpilot
    crazymgpilot Posts: 26 Member
    Bottom line, I think you're doing the right thing. There've been many discussions on here about eating back your calories, whether to eat them back or not. Everybody is different but the thing is that your body needs so many calories to function, regardless of whether you work out or not. when you work out you burn many of the calories that your body would normally use to function, your basal metabolic rate, and if you get too low, and MFP uses 1200 as the number to try not to go below, your body goes into starvation mode, especially if this happens consistently. Personally, I eat back many of my calories but not all, keeping a deficit which MFP puts into the calculation. If you eat more, it's obvious that if you then exercise more and burn off those extra calories you'll still be in a deficit. What happens if you don't count your cardio calories is you can actually get into too much of a deficit and begin to store fat, or you'll lose weight, but your body will start burning your muscle for fuel and though you get skinny, you become as MFP says, Skinny fat. That's why they have the 1200 NET. Because your body needs fuel to function.
    For example, the other day, I did a massive cardio workout and burned over 1200 calories that day. UP to that point, I'd only eaten 1150 calories. That put me at a huge deficit, in fact it put me at negative numbers. Therefore I had a healthy, though calorie rich, dinner and made up my calories to put me over the 1200 net at a minimum...and I still lost weight that week, and continue to put on muscle, because if you don't fuel the workout while eating fewer NET calories, your body will find the calories from somewhere...usually your muscles.

    Therefore, keep doing what you're doing. If you keep it in the green for your net by exercising a little bit more if you go over....you'll continue to lose and won't lose muscle in the process.
  • stormieweather
    stormieweather Posts: 2,549 Member
    There are a lot of different opinions, but I've been personal training for a long time and the hardest thing to get straight is peoples diet. Think of it like this, if you eat 2000 calories one day, but burn 2500 calories with cardio and daily activity, then the next day eat 1200 calories and burn 1800 calories in only daily activity, which sounds better? Controlling your diet is the best option. I'm not saying that on occasion you can't do the extra if you go over, but consistency, or at least relative consistency is key to management of weight loss in the long run.

    MFP already calculates a deficit in it's calorie goals. So exercising more (without eating back those calories) actually increases that deficit to potentially unsafe and unsustainable levels. The idea (with MFP) is to maintain that 250/500/750/1000 calorie a day deficit exactly, no matter if you exercise or not. So you can lose weight whether you exercise or not, and so you can sustain the diet long-term.
  • crazymgpilot
    crazymgpilot Posts: 26 Member
    Good answer, and well put!
This discussion has been closed.