Do you eat the calories you burned ?
leah_8303
Posts: 28 Member
tips appreciated
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Replies
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when I did MFP I did. That's how you account for that activity with this calculator...other calculators include an estimate of your exercise in your goal...so either way, you're accounting for that activity level in some manner.
The big downside to the MFP method is that it's difficult to estimate calories out and many people vastly overestimate their burn...to boot, there's also a tendency in underestimate intake so a lot of people run into problems here.
When I was doing the MFP method I ate back my exercise calories minus an allowance for estimation errors. Part of being healthy and fit is properly fueling that kind of activity...that's how you make fitness improvements and proper feeding is also important to recovery. The more rigorous your exercise regimen is the more important it is to properly fuel it. Many, if not most "overtrain" injuries incurred by the average person working out are due to a lack of proper fueling more so than truly overtraining.0 -
foreheadwax wrote: »the calories in calories out method has been disproven millions of times.
That's utter horse droppings.10 calories of sugar goes straight to your liver and turns into fat.
And that's complete bull ****.
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foreheadwax wrote: »the calories in calories out method has been disproven millions of times.
10 calories of sugar goes straight to your liver and turns into fat.
No
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foreheadwax wrote: »the calories in calories out method has been disproven millions of times.
you have to actually change what you eat.
10 calories of sugar goes straight to your liver and turns into fat.
10 calories from protein, fat, and meat gets turned into energy.
I'm not so sure you should be giving anyone advice with a lovely "0 lbs lost" boasted on your profile. I'd love to see your sources for these ridiculous claims.0 -
I eat back half of what MFP tells me I burned.0
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I only eat my exercise calories if I'm hungry, honestly. And if I do, it's usually a protein shake with almond milk and I only eat half of what I burn, at most.0
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foreheadwax wrote: »the calories in calories out method has been disproven millions of times.
you have to actually change what you eat.
10 calories of sugar goes straight to your liver and turns into fat.
10 calories from protein, fat, and meat gets turned into energy.
no. just no.0 -
foreheadwax wrote: »the calories in calories out method has been disproven millions of times.
you have to actually change what you eat.
10 calories of sugar goes straight to your liver and turns into fat.
10 calories from protein, fat, and meat gets turned into energy.
Lolwhat?
OP, it depends how accurate you are with your logging. If you're mostly estimating, you're probably better off not eating them.0 -
I do what KrissyMuree said. But, I might try logging my workouts as just 1 calorie burned so I can focus more on the food intake, we'll see how that goes.0
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i eat back mine but not all the time just a few days of the week0
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first it is really how much are you burning in workouts. if you are burning 1/4th of your calories a day working out, then you have to replace them. also make sure you are accurately measuring the calories burned in a workout. thinking you are burning 300 per day, but not.
In the end though if you are doing hard workouts you will need energy and fuel.0 -
foreheadwax wrote: »the calories in calories out method has been disproven millions of times.
you have to actually change what you eat.
10 calories of sugar goes straight to your liver and turns into fat.
10 calories from protein, fat, and meat gets turned into energy.
Interesting...it worked really well for me
<<<that's my thorwback Thursday pic from 2.5 years ago when I was a fat *kitten*...I'm no longer a fat *kitten* and as healthy and fit as I was in my early 20s.
And before you go on one of your, "everyone's an anorexic eating oreos" tirades, let me assure you that many people count calories and also eat well and get good nutrition. You can eat well and still over-eat and still put on weight...if that weren't the case then my latest bulk cycle would have been an epic fail.
CICO has never been dis-proven...it's pretty solid science.0 -
sometimes. but mostly only on the days when i run 9+ miles, even then its usally not much more. or i plan it as a splurge day anyway and have a big old juicy double burger~0
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I do not eat them back. I try to eat the same 2000 cals no matter if I worked out or not.
I am a creature of habit and tend to eat the same things day in and day out anyway (except for dinner), so I find it easy to just not play that game.
To be honest I do what some people above do and log my exercise as 100cal per hour which is definitely on the low side.0 -
Help me to understand please, if my goal is to lose 1.7 lbs per week, and am on 1,200 calorie 'healthy food' intake, then I burn 200 calories walking and stretching (noob) this is day two......... what should I be doing to be the healthiest I can be and still lose weight?0
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I should add I do a lot of cardio involving walking, jogging and running, so I use a heart rate monitor to track my calories and only eat half back in case there is an overestimate, since my HRM can have a 12% overestimation.0
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No.0
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sometimes. but mostly only on the days when i run 9+ miles, even then its usally not much more. or i plan it as a splurge day anyway and have a big old juicy double burger~
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victoria_1024 wrote: »I eat back half of what MFP tells me I burned.
This is what I do too. And I've lost 45lbs in 6 months. For me the extra calories is a big motivator to exercise (I know I should just want to do it for health reasons, but I don't.) If I did'nt eat some of the calories back I might not choose to be so active. For example, I'm going to Chipotle for dinner tonight (yipee!!!) I preplanned my meal and realized I'd be over my calories, so I just did 25 minutes of cardio that I wouldn't have done otherwise, and I gave myself half those earned calories to eat. Now I get to eat guilt free.
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