2000 cal a day???
ajfreder
Posts: 2 Member
hey I just started and my goal is to lose 100lb I'm at 2lb a week but have been givin 2000cal a day. Is this a mistake or what because I'm finding the each day I'm way under almost by 800-900 or even 1000cal each day.... Am I not eating right?
0
Replies
-
The goal is most likely correct. YOu have a lot to lose, so you can afford to eat that many calories.
You didn't get overweight by eating 1000-1200 calories a day, so you can obviously eat more. Have dessert every night, have slightly larger meals, etc.. Yeah, you'll lose faster if you're only eating 1000-1200 calories a day, but you'll be losing a lot of muscle mass along with that weight not just fat. Plus, your body needs fuel to perform its everyday functions, by not eating enough you are keeping those needed calories from your body.0 -
Is it possible that you aren't tracking accurately? Are you measuring and weighing ALL your food? Factoring in any added oils, milk or sugar for your coffee, any taste-testing, etc?
0 -
Yes, this is correct. You need to eat to burn. When you don't eat enough calories your body starves...literally so it retains most of the nutrients in the form of fat to ensure you don't die. To break that cycle, eat the calories listed, play around with the macro-nutrients until you find an optimal breakdown (35% Protein, 30% Carbs, 35% Fat) and drink plenty of water.0
-
^^^It doesn't even have to be that difficult. Just track your calories if you're trying to lose weight. Get the hang of that first. If MFP tells you that you can have 2,000 calories a day, give it a shot and see what happens. I can assure you that eating 1,000 calories less than that is NOT what you should be doing. That's simply not sustainable in the long run. Good luck0
-
nadenchris wrote: »Yes, this is correct. You need to eat to burn. When you don't eat enough calories your body starves...literally so it retains most of the nutrients in the form of fat to ensure you don't die. To break that cycle, eat the calories listed, play around with the macro-nutrients until you find an optimal breakdown (35% Protein, 30% Carbs, 35% Fat) and drink plenty of water.
0 -
I do 80% protein and plenty of water.
Gym 5 times a week (2h)
Lose 1-2kg per week.
0 -
Thanks everyone!!!!0
-
Most likely you are not tracking accurately. Are you weighing all food on a food scale...not only just meat and veg, but condiments and semi-solids? If the answer is no. Get a food scale and report back on how many calories your are consuming. If the answer is yes...eat more.0
-
What types of foods are you eating? Are you getting the proper amounts of protein, fiber, fat, carbs., etc? Are you weighing your food? There may be a good chance that you're actually eating more than you think you are. Are you accurately logging? Are you following a particular meal plan?
Answering these questions might help get some insight into what's going on nutrition-wise for you. Since you've gotten to the point where you need to lose 100 pounds, I'm sure you're able to hit a 2000 calorie target.
Also...nadenchris wrote: »Yes, this is correct. You need to eat to burn. When you don't eat enough calories your body starves...literally so it retains most of the nutrients in the form of fat to ensure you don't die. To break that cycle, eat the calories listed, play around with the macro-nutrients until you find an optimal breakdown (35% Protein, 30% Carbs, 35% Fat) and drink plenty of water.
What? Could I get some science to go with my breakfast this morning?
0 -
MFP will give you more calories to eat according to your age and activity level. If you are finding you can't eat the calories you are given try adding a handful of nuts or add an avacado to your salad _ still heathy options but high calorie. Good luck!0
-
SconnieCat wrote: »What types of foods are you eating? Are you getting the proper amounts of protein, fiber, fat, carbs., etc? Are you weighing your food? There may be a good chance that you're actually eating more than you think you are. Are you accurately logging? Are you following a particular meal plan?
Answering these questions might help get some insight into what's going on nutrition-wise for you. Since you've gotten to the point where you need to lose 100 pounds, I'm sure you're able to hit a 2000 calorie target.
Also...nadenchris wrote: »Yes, this is correct. You need to eat to burn. When you don't eat enough calories your body starves...literally so it retains most of the nutrients in the form of fat to ensure you don't die. To break that cycle, eat the calories listed, play around with the macro-nutrients until you find an optimal breakdown (35% Protein, 30% Carbs, 35% Fat) and drink plenty of water.
What? Could I get some science to go with my breakfast this morning?
No science before coffee.0 -
mszulborska wrote: »I do 80% protein and plenty of water.
Gym 5 times a week (2h)
Lose 1-2kg per week.
80% protein?
0 -
mszulborska wrote: »I do 80% protein and plenty of water.
Gym 5 times a week (2h)
Lose 1-2kg per week.
80% protein doesn't guarantee weight loss. Also.... 80%?
0 -
MOAR PROTEIN!&(!Y$(*0
-
AGE: 44
HEIGHT: 5'4"
SW: 281
CW: 231
GW: 125
Calories: 1,525 per day
Exercise: four 30 minute work outs per week (avg)
RATE OF LOSS: 1.8 lbs per week (avg)
If you are putting down good workouts in your GOAL setting page, MFP will allot more calories for fuel to burn. Take an honest inventory of your actual workout frequency and level of intensity and reset your exercise goals. I originally put down 30 minutes a day every day, and I ACTUALLY only do four 30 minute workouts per week on average, some more weeks than others depending.
Also, check your food portions and how you are logging them. I weigh most things for the most accuracy and try not to estimate. I also don't always take the MFP food counts at face value, some of them are just plain wrong. Do your own research.
You will see a pattern over time (and it does take time) how you are loosing and how your actual consumption and activity affects your rate of loss. For example, I am seeing that I loose steady for 2 weeks, don't move much for 2 weeks and then drop 4 or 5 lbs the next week. For me water retention and sodium intake affect my rate of loss on the scale the most. I have learned to not let it bother me because I am still averaging over 1.5 lost per week since I started last Oct 3rd.
Hang in there, be patient and work your program. You can do this! -Nancy
0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 430 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions