logging calories burned

Options
I have been using MFP for 3.5 months so far and I have only been logging my biking, yoga, elipitical and treadmill in my diary. I have also been using a Fitbit Flex for my daily steps. I have not been tracking for my strength training with and without weights. Should I?

Replies

  • BrianSharpe
    BrianSharpe Posts: 9,248 Member
    Options
    You can log the calories burned doing strength or (if things are going well so far) just consider them a bonus and keep on going with what works.
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,811 Member
    Options
    Depends - have your weight loss expectations worked out? If yes, then don't change a thing.
    If you have been losing too fast then log your strength training, be aware that strength training doesn't actually burn a lot of calories though so won't make a huge difference.
  • EPK1071
    EPK1071 Posts: 35 Member
    Options
    I didn't think they would make a huge difference. And I have been on goal of a pound a week until recently where I have hit a plateau.
  • jabx1962
    jabx1962 Posts: 31 Member
    Options
    EPK1071 wrote: »
    And I have been on goal of a pound a week until recently where I have hit a plateau.

    Change your Workout and the plateau will be short. Personally, I plateaued for 3 months...Talked to a Trainer about it. They recommended a change in my routine, and I lost 3lbs in the first 10 days after changing up some things.

  • EPK1071
    EPK1071 Posts: 35 Member
    Options
    Ok I will do that. It has been 23 days for me . Did you change what you were doing completely or add weight/resistance and reps/time?
  • phogbear
    phogbear Posts: 30 Member
    Options
    It depends on your body and what your goal is. My goal is to build some muscle and lose fat. I track my lifting calories burned. I find I need to eat for those. I just use the generic strength training under cardio. It comes in less than my routine. If I don't eat, then I feel terrible.

    I was also told to change your routine up. I change my routine every 6-8 weeks. Always see a weight drop in the first couple of weeks.

    My walking and running, I log but I consider them a bonus. Unless I've done a lot in the last couple of days. Then I'll eat extra. Yesterday I took the kids sledding 2 hours, ran intervals, took them ice skating today and still lifted. So I'm eating extra today.

    My legs are so going to hurt tomorrow.
  • EPK1071
    EPK1071 Posts: 35 Member
    Options
    I will have to switch up my routine again. I am trying to build muscle and lose fat also.
  • phogbear
    phogbear Posts: 30 Member
    Options
    The word terrible was not a very good choice. Let me clarify....

    If I don't eat the calories I expend lifting (or close to it), my energy level drops and I'm starving the next day.

    So on days I lift, I'll eat a few extra carbs and make sure I hit my calorie goal. If I do that, then on the days I don't lift I eat at or just under my goal fairly easily.

    In Feb I was able to lose fat and gain muscle so the scale didn't move, but the tape measure did.

    About every week or two I'll have a cheat meal depending on how active I've been. I try and save them for a fun meal with the kids.
  • EPK1071
    EPK1071 Posts: 35 Member
    Options
    I don't do cheat days. I have worked really hard to change how I think about food. So I always think about food as fuel only and my best choices. It is not always easy!! Lol...I allow sweets in the house but only things I have made. Makes the kids happy. I am not a sugar person at all ..I am a bread person. So a cheat meal for me would be bread and bread.
  • phogbear
    phogbear Posts: 30 Member
    Options
    I love good bread! I don't eat it much anymore though.

    Here is the scientific reason for doing a cheat meal.

    Cheat meals, also called re-feed days/meals, will actually help you lose weight while you are cutting but keep your muscle gains. This applies if you are trying to lose fat while maintaining your muscle gain.

    When your body is in a calorie deficit several things happen. Your body slows down your metabolism, hunger is going to increase (especially with working out a lot), and your body will sacrifice your muscle to fuel itself. Keeping the fat as a back up. Muscle always goes first.

    There are also other things going on at a chemical level, but this would turn into a paper then. Basically your levels of certain nutrients are going to be drained by working out. The body will interpret these conditions as lean times, so it does the above things to protect it.

    The reason I do extra carbs is to restore glycogen levels in my body, there are other things going on to with the thyroid which is helped by this again paper territory. This also gives me a few hundred extra calories. By doing a re-feed meal every week, your tricking your body that it is not lean times, giving it energy and restoring nutrients. I do re-feed meals before lifting.

    Whether you do a re-feed day or meal depends on where you are. I do a meal, because that's all I need right now. Don't go crazy. I aim for 100-200 extra calories.
  • EPK1071
    EPK1071 Posts: 35 Member
    Options
    Interesting for sure!!! I actaually eat more now that I track my calories. It is something for me to consider.
  • editorgrrl
    editorgrrl Posts: 7,060 Member
    Options
    EPK1071 wrote: »
    I have been using MFP for 3.5 months so far and I have only been logging my biking, yoga, elipitical and treadmill in my diary. I have also been using a Fitbit Flex for my daily steps. I have not been tracking for my strength training with and without weights. Should I?

    You can learn more in MFP's Fitbit Users group: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1290-fitbit-users

    Your Fitbit is already tracking step-based activity for you. Non-step exercise can be logged either in Fitbit or in MFP—never both. It'll take trial & error to find which you prefer.

    Exercise logged in MFP overwrites your Fitbit burn during that time.