why eat back exercise calories?
awf2215
Posts: 17 Member
Can someone please explain why I would eat back exercise calories? Seems like there's no point in exercising if I just eat the calories back. I am currently eating about 1300 per day. Some days, like on weekends I go up to 1400 - 1600. How do I prevent going into starvation mode, but still lose weight? I don't want to eat too much or too little. My weight loss has been less than a pound a week, even though I have went from sitting on the couch all night and at my desk all day and not caring what I ate to eating 1300 calories and working out 5-6 days a week. aghhh
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Keep your NET calories above 1200 and you should be good. If you are at or close to a healthy weight (lower fat reserves) the eat back all your exercise calories. The body will try and protect its fat reserves when they are low.
Slow weight is the healthiest way to go. You are still losing weight. My only option was .5lb per week and I got there. What is important is that you do get there, not how fast you can get there.
You can even try calorie cycling. Going low a couple of days and then going high a couple of day.
Search "Intermittent Fasting" on the link in my signature. There are a few options and IF can be really great for fat loss.0 -
MFP already has a created calorie defecit.
Some people eat all their exercise cals, some eat some of them, and some eat none at all.
I went up and down with the same 3-4lb while eating them all, and now I'm giving just eating some of them a go, and leaving like 200. See how that goes over the coming weeks.
1lb a week is a decent weight loss that is healthy and sustainable. If you're not losing at all, then maybe try eating more, eating less (not less than 1200), changing what you eat, drinking more fluids, eating more regularly, changing your exercise routine...0 -
1300 calories per day is substantially below the average maintenance number for most people even at relatively low activity levels. Basically, if you just sat in a chair all day then went to sleep, you'd probably burn roughly 1500 calories just being awake. If you get up at all to move around doing normal daily things, you'll probably burn about 2,000. Doing daily cardio isn't just about burning calories, it's about stimulating your metabolism so that even when you aren't running, your body is burning more calories than normal.
What I'm trying to say is, don't feel bad eating back the calories you burn from a workout as long as your daily calorie consumption is below your maintenance intake level. The workout itself isn't what makes you lose fat, it's the whole day. The run just makes it so you can eat a little more and still lose weight.0 -
i know exactly what you mean...i think this website wants you to lose weight the healthy way.(thats why they only give you the option 1.5 lbs a week as the highest to lose) its not good for you to lose more than that....unless you are way over weight which you are not by any means. i see you joined in april 8lbs in a month and a half is a really good accomplishment! congrats!i would just keep doing what you're doing...maybe add some more cardio into your diet. running is the best way to shed weight...i try to sweat for at least 45 mins at the gym everytime i go.0
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My nutrionist said that if you want to keep the weight you are now you eat back your exercise calories, but if your trying to lose you dont eat them back.. another thing no matter how much strength training or walking you , if you dont add cardio you wont lose as much weight..0
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You have to remember that your calories are already set for weight loss--depending on what you put in your profile (losing or maintaining) so exercise is just going to cut out more and your metabolism will slow down. You want to keep at that set goal to prevent this starvation mode and you will still lose weight.0
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I eat them back because I would feel like **** after exercising if I didnt. I need those calories. Without them, I would be weak and immunocompromised. Some days, I dont eat ALL of them back, and some days I go over.
I like to work out, and it's good for my body in many ways that don't translate directly to weight loss (cardiovascular health, bone health, improved mood).
I always have quick carbs before my workout, and protein after. I want to build some lean muscle, so I have tone and form to my body.0 -
Are you drinking enough water throughout the day? I found that drinking enough water and staying hydrated helps out a lot. I agree with other posters that say you need to eat most if not all of your exercise cals you worked off. Your body will need the extra fuel to keep you going. I also agree with the poster that said you need to watch your NET cals and keep them in range with your weight lose goal.0
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We lose weight by having a deficit in our calorie intake vs. calories burned. MFP ALREADY calculates that deficit for you. When you exercise, you create an even BIGGER deficit...so you can eat more. If you don't eat them (depending on your baseline calories) you could do more harm than good. Most of us got into this situation by overeating. So, if there is a plan that allows you to EAT but still lose weight, then why not do it? Somedays I seriously feel like I am overeating, but I still continue to lose weight! You can seriously eat more if you fill those calories with healthy foods instead of junk (I know we all know that, but still).
Why would you exercise if you just eat them back? It's important to keep your muscles healthy and happy! Muscle needs more energy than fat... If you are 140 with lots of muscles you will burn more calories laying in bed all day then you would if you were 140 with lots of fat instead of muscle.
I'm dead serious. If you look at the bottom of your food diary and it says you have more calories to eat, then eat them. If you follow the plan that this site sets out for you, you WILL lose weight!0 -
My nutrionist said that if you want to keep the weight you are now you eat back your exercise calories, but if your trying to lose you dont eat them back.. another thing no matter how much strength training or walking you , if you dont add cardio you wont lose as much weight..
Wrong, this only makes sense if you are eating maintenance calories. MFP gives you a deficit to lose your goal amount of weight, in order to lose that goal amount you MUST eat your exercise calories. It is all based on math by giving you a caloric deficit that will achieve your goal.
Not eating them may lead you to burn muscle, instead of fat, for fuel. Your metabolism may slow down, lack of energy as the more you workout the more fuel you need.
Think of a car. sitting in the driveway you don't burn much (evaporation) going slow burns less gas/km than going fast (think of this as normal daily activity) need some fuel, now if you drive further and faster (exercise) you will require more fuel.0 -
My nutrionist said that if you want to keep the weight you are now you eat back your exercise calories, but if your trying to lose you dont eat them back.. another thing no matter how much strength training or walking you , if you dont add cardio you wont lose as much weight..
Wrong, this only makes sense if you are eating maintenance calories. MFP gives you a deficit to lose your goal amount of weight, in order to lose that goal amount you MUST eat your exercise calories. It is all based on math by giving you a caloric deficit that will achieve your goal.
Not eating them may lead you to burn muscle, instead of fat, for fuel. Your metabolism may slow down, lack of energy as the more you workout the more fuel you need.
Think of a car. sitting in the driveway you don't burn much (evaporation) going slow burns less gas/km than going fast (think of this as normal daily activity) need some fuel, now if you drive further and faster (exercise) you will require more fuel.
Thank you for responding to this. I see alot of people make this same statement. This would be true for someone that did not adjust their diet. But for us on MFP the diet has been adjusted already. I feel like people fail to mention the calorie deficit they are already on when talking to nutritionists/dieticians/phyical trainers/etc.0 -
MFP said to eat 1200 calories. I up'd it to 1300 cause my trainer said I probably wasn't eating enough at 1200. So sounds like I should get my net calories to 1200.0
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Can someone please explain why I would eat back exercise calories? Seems like there's no point in exercising if I just eat the calories back. I am currently eating about 1300 per day. Some days, like on weekends I go up to 1400 - 1600. How do I prevent going into starvation mode, but still lose weight? I don't want to eat too much or too little. My weight loss has been less than a pound a week, even though I have went from sitting on the couch all night and at my desk all day and not caring what I ate to eating 1300 calories and working out 5-6 days a week. aghhh
Okay... Assume that all of the solid advice for *healthy* weight loss is to be ignored...for now. I am not encouraging this by any means, but go ahead and try not eating them back if you think it's counterproductive. I'll tell you from experience that NOT eating them back IS counterproductive, but if you want to learn for yourself, I'll be the first to point you in the right direction for failure.
Constantly not eating them back creates an exercise bulimic disorder, where you will be having a massive calorie deficit each day. You say you don't want to hit "starvation mode", well, mathematically, you will be. It's inevitable. Eating 1200 calories and burning off 600, for example, will only give you 600 calories for that day. Do it again, and you'll have had only 1200 calories in 2 days. Do it again, and so on and so forth. By the end of the week you'll have accumulated so many negative calories that your body will do what its supposed to do... and think that it IS starving. Therefore it will eat away at your muscles and fat and anything else it can use for fuel.
Any food that you put into your body will be held onto for as long as it possibly can and it will convert it immediately for storage in the form of fat. You will then at that point become "skinny fat," where you may be low in weight, but absolutely emaciated and possibly still have flab. Great. You will have successfully attained your goal weight in the worst way possible to your health.
So, that's what the future of not eating your exercise calories holds for you. If it's something you can live with, by all means, don't eat them back. No one here will force you to. Make an informed decision and question no further.0 -
I'm definitely not an expert, but when I was usiing Weight Watchers, we were told that we didn't need to eat back our exercise calories. I usually don't, but ocassionally I eat back my exercise calories if I want to indulge myself. Also, since you have started an exercise program, you may be gaining more muscle mass. So even though you may be losing fat weight, muscle weighs more than fat and your loses won't show on the scale. You could try measuring the inches you are losing as your guide to weight loss instead of going strictly by the scale.0
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I'm definitely not an expert, but when I was usiing Weight Watchers, we were told that we didn't need to eat back our exercise calories. I usually don't, but ocassionally I eat back my exercise calories if I want to indulge myself. Also, since you have started an exercise program, you may be gaining more muscle mass. So even though you may be losing fat weight, muscle weighs more than fat and your loses won't show on the scale. You could try measuring the inches you are losing as your guide to weight loss instead of going strictly by the scale.
The points they give you though are probably higher in calories than what a 1200 cal/day diet would be. If your goal was 1800, you could get away with only eating some of your exercise calories and be fine, but if you have a large deficit you should eat all of the exercise calories.0 -
I'm definitely not an expert, but when I was usiing Weight Watchers, we were told that we didn't need to eat back our exercise calories. I usually don't, but ocassionally I eat back my exercise calories if I want to indulge myself. Also, since you have started an exercise program, you may be gaining more muscle mass. So even though you may be losing fat weight, muscle weighs more than fat and your loses won't show on the scale. You could try measuring the inches you are losing as your guide to weight loss instead of going strictly by the scale.
just so ya know when i was on weight watchers i was told the exact opposite. that was the point of the points tracker and fitness tracker. it told me how much i could eat what i burned off and how much more i should eat. they told me specifically because of my size that i needed to eat them back and to make sure i ate ALL of my points to be healthy and not hit starvation mode.
so it must just depend on the location???0 -
Okay... Assume that all of the solid advice for *healthy* weight loss is to be ignored...for now. I am not encouraging this by any means, but go ahead and try not eating them back if you think it's counterproductive. I'll tell you from experience that NOT eating them back IS counterproductive, but if you want to learn for yourself, I'll be the first to point you in the right direction for failure.
Constantly not eating them back creates an exercise bulimic disorder, where you will be having a massive calorie deficit each day. You say you don't want to hit "starvation mode", well, mathematically, you will be. It's inevitable. Eating 1200 calories and burning off 600, for example, will only give you 600 calories for that day. Do it again, and you'll have had only 1200 calories in 2 days. Do it again, and so on and so forth. By the end of the week you'll have accumulated so many negative calories that your body will do what its supposed to do... and think that it IS starving. Therefore it will eat away at your muscles and fat and anything else it can use for fuel.
Any food that you put into your body will be held onto for as long as it possibly can and it will convert it immediately for storage in the form of fat. You will then at that point become "skinny fat," where you may be low in weight, but absolutely emaciated and possibly still have flab. Great. You will have successfully attained your goal weight in the worst way possible to your health.
So, that's what the future of not eating your exercise calories holds for you. If it's something you can live with, by all means, don't eat them back. No one here will force you to. Make an informed decision and question no further.
This is probably the best explanation I've heard for why you need to eat back your calories.0 -
Ok. So, I have been on MFP Aug 29th of last year and in that time I have lost 36lbs, eating a base of 1200 and my exercise calories. I put it that way because it varies from day to day as to how many calories I burn.
But I have been on a horrid plateau for the last two months and I have not lost a dany ounce.....Granted I have not gained any weight, but hell I want to lose so much more. So I joined a gym and I have been working out with a trainer. He has adviced me to eat 1500 calories per day period and not to track calories burned or to eat them back. Under pressure from him and my spousal unit I am trying this for 2 weeks. I am almost one week in and I FEEL LIKE CRAP. I have NO energy. I am exhausted. I can't focus.
And yes purhaps I will lose weight as my body is probably eating away at its fat stores, but hell I would rather live in a plateau state then live like this. Damn I feel horrible.0 -
Can someone please explain why I would eat back exercise calories? Seems like there's no point in exercising if I just eat the calories back. I am currently eating about 1300 per day. Some days, like on weekends I go up to 1400 - 1600. How do I prevent going into starvation mode, but still lose weight? I don't want to eat too much or too little. My weight loss has been less than a pound a week, even though I have went from sitting on the couch all night and at my desk all day and not caring what I ate to eating 1300 calories and working out 5-6 days a week. aghhh
Okay... Assume that all of the solid advice for *healthy* weight loss is to be ignored...for now. I am not encouraging this by any means, but go ahead and try not eating them back if you think it's counterproductive. I'll tell you from experience that NOT eating them back IS counterproductive, but if you want to learn for yourself, I'll be the first to point you in the right direction for failure.
Constantly not eating them back creates an exercise bulimic disorder, where you will be having a massive calorie deficit each day. You say you don't want to hit "starvation mode", well, mathematically, you will be. It's inevitable. Eating 1200 calories and burning off 600, for example, will only give you 600 calories for that day. Do it again, and you'll have had only 1200 calories in 2 days. Do it again, and so on and so forth. By the end of the week you'll have accumulated so many negative calories that your body will do what its supposed to do... and think that it IS starving. Therefore it will eat away at your muscles and fat and anything else it can use for fuel.
Any food that you put into your body will be held onto for as long as it possibly can and it will convert it immediately for storage in the form of fat. You will then at that point become "skinny fat," where you may be low in weight, but absolutely emaciated and possibly still have flab. Great. You will have successfully attained your goal weight in the worst way possible to your health.
So, that's what the future of not eating your exercise calories holds for you. If it's something you can live with, by all means, don't eat them back. No one here will force you to. Make an informed decision and question no further.0 -
Be careful eating back calories if you are relying on MFP's estimates on how many calories you burn. If you have a relatively active count from a heart rate monitor, or bodybugg, or something similar that's one thing. But from an online calculator estimate it's another.
What I mean is, if you use MFP and just enter in 'jogging' and '45 minutes', the number it spits out may be wildly incorrect. If it's higher than what you actually burned, then you eat all those calories, you are not going to have your target deficit. Make sense?
Anyway, my thought on eating back calories is pretty simple. I'm not going to eat them all back, but I'll eat some of them back (or maybe even all of them) if I'm hungry. But, regardless of how many calories I've burned...if I'm not hungry, I'm not going to eat....because doing so makes me feel like crap. That last part is really my final opinion on the subject, to be honest. Everyone is right, you already build in a calorie deficit so you dont actually HAVE to burn more than that....slow and steady wins the weight loss race. It just doesnt work for me if I'm not hungry.
edit: forgot to add. I wrestled from 5 years old until 25. Highschool, then college, then briefly after when I thought I was good enough to continue to the olympics in Greco (hah, I wasnt! Mike Foy was mean...). Anyway, back then I would stay @ around 178 lbs, and generally right around or less than 7% bodyfat. There's no way in hell I could have ever eaten all my exercise calories back if I'd have wanted to; but I'd have never wanted to because < 180 lbs is just NOT a natural weight for me. I did not train that hard just to get in shape, I trained that hard because I required that much of a calorie deficit to maintain and stay in a certain weight class. In college it was basically to stay out of heavyweight (this was before they added the 220lb class in folkstyle), in AAU it was to stay at 180.5. Then once the season was over I'd go right back to ~210 lbs for 4 or 5 months, then start cutting again to get down to the proper weight class.
Anyway, not saying thats right (its quite incorrect and incredibly unhealthy, I know)...but that's the mindset I have. Burn more calories to lose weight.0 -
Be careful eating back calories if you are relying on MFP's estimates on how many calories you burn. If you have a relatively active count from a heart rate monitor, or bodybugg, or something similar that's one thing. But from an online calculator estimate it's another.
What I mean is, if you use MFP and just enter in 'jogging' and '45 minutes', the number it spits out may be wildly incorrect. If it's higher than what you actually burned, then you eat all those calories, you are not going to have your target deficit. Make sense?
Anyway, my thought on eating back calories is pretty simple. I'm not going to eat them all back, but I'll eat some of them back (or maybe even all of them) if I'm hungry. But, regardless of how many calories I've burned...if I'm not hungry, I'm not going to eat....because doing so makes me feel like crap. That last part is really my final opinion on the subject, to be honest. Everyone is right, you already build in a calorie deficit so you dont actually HAVE to burn more than that....slow and steady wins the weight loss race. It just doesnt work for me if I'm not hungry.
edit: forgot to add. I wrestled from 5 years old until 25. Highschool, then college, then briefly after when I thought I was good enough to continue to the olympics in Greco (hah, I wasnt! Mike Foy was mean...). Anyway, back then I would stay @ around 178 lbs, and generally right around or less than 7% bodyfat. There's no way in hell I could have ever eaten all my exercise calories back if I'd have wanted to; but I'd have never wanted to because < 180 lbs is just NOT a natural weight for me. I did not train that hard just to get in shape, I trained that hard because I required that much of a calorie deficit to maintain and stay in a certain weight class. In college it was basically to stay out of heavyweight (this was before they added the 220lb class in folkstyle), in AAU it was to stay at 180.5. Then once the season was over I'd go right back to ~210 lbs for 4 or 5 months, then start cutting again to get down to the proper weight class.
Anyway, not saying thats right (its quite incorrect and incredibly unhealthy, I know)...but that's the mindset I have. Burn more calories to lose weight.
Professions or sports that require competitors to remain in a specific weight class are outside of the general guidelines of "the average person" wanting to lose weight for health benefits. Either way, you've acknowledged that "(its quite incorrect and incredibly unhealthy, I know)...but that's the mindset I have" ... so you've made the willing and informed decision to do what you feel benefits you. Which was my point. Do what you want, but don't make a decision without knowing the reality of the results that the choice entails.0 -
MFP said to eat 1200 calories. I up'd it to 1300 cause my trainer said I probably wasn't eating enough at 1200. So sounds like I should get my net calories to 1200.
If you were at 1200 and NOT eating your exercise calories, then he was right...you probably weren't eating enough. If you set your goal to 1200 and exercise 500 - so you eat 1700 - then yes, you would be eating enough. My daily calorie goal is 1200 and I eat every last exercise calorie I burn...and that includes cleaning and cooking calories burned! I have been consistently losing weight. You will probably be just fine staying at 1300 calories if it makes you feel more comfortable. It will just set your calorie deficit 100 calories less. This actually works better for some people. Try it out at 1300 for a month and then try it out at 1200 for a month and see what gives you better results. But I would recommend eating your exercise calories with both cal goals. The choice is obviously yours though. Best of luck to you.0 -
Ok. So, I have been on MFP Aug 29th of last year and in that time I have lost 36lbs, eating a base of 1200 and my exercise calories. I put it that way because it varies from day to day as to how many calories I burn.
But I have been on a horrid plateau for the last two months and I have not lost a dany ounce.....Granted I have not gained any weight, but hell I want to lose so much more. So I joined a gym and I have been working out with a trainer. He has adviced me to eat 1500 calories per day period and not to track calories burned or to eat them back. Under pressure from him and my spousal unit I am trying this for 2 weeks. I am almost one week in and I FEEL LIKE CRAP. I have NO energy. I am exhausted. I can't focus.
And yes purhaps I will lose weight as my body is probably eating away at its fat stores, but hell I would rather live in a plateau state then live like this. Damn I feel horrible.
Maybe you should up your calories to 1400 or 1500 AND eat your exercise calories. ??? I know a lot of people that started eating more and then jump started their loss again. If you're feeling like crap then it's not right for you. Especially if you were feeling good before while you were eating your exercise calories.0 -
Do what you want, but don't make a decision without knowing the reality of the results that the choice entails.
I'll agree with that.
Of course, I dont think it's really a BAD thing to not eat your exercise calories back as an end-sum, yes-no answer. So no, I dont think that's incredibly unhealthy. I was really referring to the diet I had in season: which was basically all liquid and suppliments combined with 6-8 hours per day...every day...of pretty strenuous training. Surprised I didnt kill myself. Heck, back then it wasnt even illegal (meaning intercollegiate rules and similar) to do thinks like, say, wrap your body in saran wrap, then 5 layers of sweats, turn on the showers and go jump rope in the steam for an hour to drop 5 pounds of water weight before you weigh in.0 -
My nutrionist said that if you want to keep the weight you are now you eat back your exercise calories, but if your trying to lose you dont eat them back.. another thing no matter how much strength training or walking you , if you dont add cardio you wont lose as much weight..
Wrong, this only makes sense if you are eating maintenance calories. MFP gives you a deficit to lose your goal amount of weight, in order to lose that goal amount you MUST eat your exercise calories. It is all based on math by giving you a caloric deficit that will achieve your goal.
Not eating them may lead you to burn muscle, instead of fat, for fuel. Your metabolism may slow down, lack of energy as the more you workout the more fuel you need.
Think of a car. sitting in the driveway you don't burn much (evaporation) going slow burns less gas/km than going fast (think of this as normal daily activity) need some fuel, now if you drive further and faster (exercise) you will require more fuel.
Thank you for responding to this. I see alot of people make this same statement. This would be true for someone that did not adjust their diet. But for us on MFP the diet has been adjusted already. I feel like people fail to mention the calorie deficit they are already on when talking to nutritionists/dieticians/phyical trainers/etc.
So whens the last time any of yall be to a nutrionist ? yes i told her about this website and she agreed that it was a great website.. But far as me wanting to lose weight why would I eat back what i just burnt off? It makes no sense.. You go with how your body feels.0 -
BEEN*0
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My nutrionist said that if you want to keep the weight you are now you eat back your exercise calories, but if your trying to lose you dont eat them back.. another thing no matter how much strength training or walking you , if you dont add cardio you wont lose as much weight..
Wrong, this only makes sense if you are eating maintenance calories. MFP gives you a deficit to lose your goal amount of weight, in order to lose that goal amount you MUST eat your exercise calories. It is all based on math by giving you a caloric deficit that will achieve your goal.
Not eating them may lead you to burn muscle, instead of fat, for fuel. Your metabolism may slow down, lack of energy as the more you workout the more fuel you need.
Think of a car. sitting in the driveway you don't burn much (evaporation) going slow burns less gas/km than going fast (think of this as normal daily activity) need some fuel, now if you drive further and faster (exercise) you will require more fuel.
Thank you for responding to this. I see alot of people make this same statement. This would be true for someone that did not adjust their diet. But for us on MFP the diet has been adjusted already. I feel like people fail to mention the calorie deficit they are already on when talking to nutritionists/dieticians/phyical trainers/etc.
So whens the last time any of yall be to a nutrionist ? yes i told her about this website and she agreed that it was a great website.. But far as me wanting to lose weight why would I eat back what i just burnt off? It makes no sense.. You go with how your body feels.
Again MFP already give you a deficit for your base calories to lose your goal amount of weight, if you don't eat your exercise calories you may not be eating enough, or you may lose faster, but you won't lose your goal amount of weight, and it should be your goal for a reason, so why would you not want achieve your goal. Is your goal so wrong that you want to lose more, if so just change your goal, then you can still eat your exercise calories and lose your new goal amount of weight. It is a goal for a reason.0 -
It wont actually let me change my goal to lose more than 2 lbs per week.0
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I would be careful if you use calories burned from the Exercise tab. They may not be accurate depending on your workout and body type. You run the risk of over eating on your workout calories. I found it best to use my HRM to determine my calories burned.0
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