Do you eat your exercise calories back?
jennyleeb
Posts: 2 Member
Hey all,
My apologies if this has been asked a million times (and I'm sure it has), but I'm wondering how many of you eat your exercise calories back.
Have you had more luck eating them or not eating them? I have my settings on aggressive (2lbs/week) and I've been eating back many of my exercise calories because 1210 calories at 189lbs seems absurd but I'm still at a bit of a standstill.
Thanks for your advice!
My apologies if this has been asked a million times (and I'm sure it has), but I'm wondering how many of you eat your exercise calories back.
Have you had more luck eating them or not eating them? I have my settings on aggressive (2lbs/week) and I've been eating back many of my exercise calories because 1210 calories at 189lbs seems absurd but I'm still at a bit of a standstill.
Thanks for your advice!
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Replies
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the response I got when I asked the same thing , was to eat at least half, many people will say don't eat them. I eat half0
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I don't eat them back at all, but I'm also not completely accurate when logging (I don't weigh or measure food, for example) so I like to think that the extra exercise calories make up for anything I've underestimated when logging0
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I eat back 100% of my exercise calories, but I'm usually pretty meticulous / anal about my logging. I use a kitchen scale to weigh peanut butter, even.0
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Thanks! I figured it would be a mixed bag. I'm sure it's different for everyone but I was curious about what was working for people.0
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No, but exercise raises my macros, so I do wind up getting to eat a bit more than I would otherwise. If you are hungry, you should eat back some of them.
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Yes I eat mine back. If I didn't (and I've actually tried it, so I know it to be true) my workouts would suffer, I'd feel miserable, and it would be miserable for others to be around me.
If your wondering about progress:
I aim to lose 1lb per week. Here is a trend chart that I took a screenshot of for someone else who was asking more specific questions about this method.
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What's best for me may not be best for you so that's something to keep in mind.
For me, it depends on what I want that day. I'll usually eat at least some back, but if I want a shamrock shake and a cheeseburger and getting them means I eat them all back...I'll eat them all.
If you're hungry, eat back half or so. Don't use the MFP calorie estimation for your workout as it'll probably be wrong. I log my workouts through Runkeeper and just use the number it gives me. Probably still not accurate but it's a little closer as it takes my height and weight into account when estimating.
If you're not hungry, check your net calories. If you're under that 1210, eat enough to get closer to the 1210.
Some food for thought
~Lyssa0 -
I rarely eat them...sometimes i might on the weekend if I am going out0
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It depends on the day, but sometimes I eat them (if I'm hungry) and other times I don't. I also think your calorie intake is too low. It may sound crazy, but have you tried increasing your food intake a smidge? It will make any healthy changes you make more bearable long term and it may fool your metabolism out of starvation mode? Just a suggestion.0
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Part of them.0
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runmama411 wrote: »It depends on the day, but sometimes I eat them (if I'm hungry) and other times I don't. I also think your calorie intake is too low. It may sound crazy, but have you tried increasing your food intake a smidge? It will make any healthy changes you make more bearable long term and it may fool your metabolism out of starvation mode? Just a suggestion.
NO. One can't "fool your metabolism" and starvation mode doesn't exist!0 -
I eat more when I exercise. For me, exercise let's me eat the amount of food I want to eat. I also find that my exercise performance improves when I eat more. I don't look at it some much as eating the calories back. If I were at my goal weight, I would exercise with the intent that I would remain a constant weight. But since I want to lose weight, I subtract from the calories burned by both exercise and normal activities.0
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It depends how much I exercise. If I only walk for 30 min ... then no, I wouldn't try to eat those calories back. But if I cycle for 4 hours, I'll probably end up eating about half of those calories back.0
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Hi...yes, this question does come up periodically. I don't eat all mine back. Sometimes I eat half back; sometimes none.0
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Before I counted calories I would eat after my workout. When I realize how many calories I intake after my workout I tried to stop eating after. I see it as I "I busted my bottoms trying to workout them calories why would I want them back?". If I MUST eat after a workout I grab something light (fruit, veggies, tea) or drink a whey protein shake made with almond milk.
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I do if I'm feeling hungry. Usually I go for water with lemon and a hot shower.0
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I eat all of mine back as im on 1200cals and i think i'd murder someone if i didn't1
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I bank my exercise calories and eat them whenever I want/need (not necessarily the same day as exercise)
OP, how long have you been at a standstill? Do you weigh and measure all your food using a food scale? One can be had for $10-$200 -
Thanks! I figured it would be a mixed bag. I'm sure it's different for everyone but I was curious about what was working for people.
It shouldn't be a mixed bag - MFP is designed for them to be eaten. It's important to fuel your body - for energy, health, and fat loss and not just weight loss. Most sites use the TDEE method, which accounts for exercise up front. MFP doesn't believe you'll exercise until you tell it you have. But, they both account for exercise and have you eat based on that exercise.
The reason most people will say to eat 50-75% back is to account for inaccuracies - in calorie burn estimations (over) and food logging (over). Some people can eat 100% and lose just fine.
On MFP, exercise does not create your deficit. The calorie goal MFP gives you already has a deficit, if you told it you want to lose weight.
Exercise for health. Healthy calorie deficit for healthy fat/weight loss.0
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