Earning Calories With Exercise??

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Should I not be relying on exercise to earn me more calories? At this moment, I'm going over my calorie goal because I'm earning more with exercise. Is that the right thing to do? Or no matter what the exercise should I stick to that calorie goal?
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  • corwinwilkins
    corwinwilkins Posts: 1 Member
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    It's what I do. I'm on 1700/day allowance and when I hike I regularly burn 3-4K. I like being negative at the end of each day. It just accelerates your losing.
  • SimoneBee12
    SimoneBee12 Posts: 268 Member
    edited June 2015
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    It really depends on a lot of things, most importantly, how accurately you're logging your calories and exercise. Can you give us more information about yourself? Height, age, weight, current calorie goals, the amount of exercise you're doing, how you are calculating calories burnt. All of that.

    I eat some of my calories, but not most of them because I'm simply not hungry. If you are super hungry all the time, maybe you original calorie goal is too low. I know a lot of people on here eat about 50% of their exercise calories, which is fair, because it definitely would make people hungry. Its really about making sure you are getting enough fat and protein to stay healthy.
  • diannethegeek
    diannethegeek Posts: 14,776 Member
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    I'm just going to drop this link here, because I think it's a really good explanation of why the exercise calories are there: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/818082/exercise-calories-again-wtf
  • FitOldMomma
    FitOldMomma Posts: 790 Member
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    I eat back about half of my exercise calories most days. But you have to be careful, MFP seems to over estimate calrie burns. And, unless you are meticulous with weighing/measuring your food it is just as easy to under estimate your daily intake of calories. Ultimately your scale will tell you when you have the correct formula.
  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
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    I only eat back about a third, because I don't really trust the numbers for the burns, but yes. I eat them back. That's the way MFP is designed to work.

    This applies only if you're strictly using MFP to generate everything, including your calorie intake and manually entering your calorie burns. Things like fitbits and using external TDEE calculators make this a complicated question.
  • whmscll
    whmscll Posts: 2,254 Member
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    Some days I eat ALL of my exercise calories back. But my daily goal is only 1300 calories, so even if MFP's calorie burns are too high and I'm eating too much by eating all of my exercise calories back I'm still at a deficit, especially for the week. If my exercise is an hour of high intensity boot camp or 5 hours of hiking in the mountains I don't eat all of those calories back. If I'm just walking for an hour, yeah, I'll eat all of those back. Have lost a pound a week for the last 4 weeks.
  • Jruzer
    Jruzer Posts: 3,501 Member
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    The rule of thumb around here seems to eat back around 50% of your exercise calories. That's not a set in stone rule or anything. I eat nearly all mine back. Some people eat less than that. You might have to play around with it a bit to find the right mix for your body. The exercise calorie amounts, that is.

    Me too. My casual observation is that men are more likely to eat all of the exercise calories than women. I won't speculate on possible causes.
  • 7lenny7
    7lenny7 Posts: 3,493 Member
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    Calorie deficit = Calories Burned - Calories Consumed.

    If you increase your calories burned by a certain amount, you can increase your calories consumed by the same amount and still get the exact same calorie deficit, so you're still on track with your plan.

  • besaro
    besaro Posts: 1,858 Member
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    i eat my exercise calories back. every. single. one. lost 100 pounds. Remember, everything is estimation +/-
  • CSARdiver
    CSARdiver Posts: 6,252 Member
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    What are your goals?

    I eat back the protein and eat some of the carbs depending on how I'm feeling and if I have a longer/more difficult workout ahead, but operate with a good deal of padding between CI and CO. Typically overestimate my CI and underestimate my CO to compensate of errors.
  • enterdanger
    enterdanger Posts: 2,447 Member
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    I try not to eat mine back during the week. I like to "bank" them for the weekend. But yes, ultimately, I generally eat them back.
  • TimothyFish
    TimothyFish Posts: 4,925 Member
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    If you are calculating your exercise calories correctly, you should eat all of them, so your calorie deficit stays constant. Many people eat about half because many of the tools that calculate calorie burns are overly optimistic and include BMR in the number it spits out. Since MFP is already accounting for BMR, BMR should not be included.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,874 Member
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    Should I not be relying on exercise to earn me more calories? At this moment, I'm going over my calorie goal because I'm earning more with exercise. Is that the right thing to do? Or no matter what the exercise should I stick to that calorie goal?

    well, suffice it to say when you move more you burn more...so if you have otherwise not accounted for exercise calories, it would make perfect sense to "earn" more calories with exercise...you are going beyond what you told the calculator was your activity level by doing more....

  • ihad
    ihad Posts: 7,462 Member
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    I'm just going to drop this link here, because I think it's a really good explanation of why the exercise calories are there: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/818082/exercise-calories-again-wtf

    That is an excellent reference. This may provide some helpful perspective too:

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/ihad/view/mfp-101-logging-exercise-734937
  • numinousnymph
    numinousnymph Posts: 249 Member
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    It's what I do. I'm on 1700/day allowance and when I hike I regularly burn 3-4K. I like being negative at the end of each day. It just accelerates your losing.

    how long and how strenuous of a hike is it to burn that many calories? :open_mouth:
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,268 Member
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    It's what I do. I'm on 1700/day allowance and when I hike I regularly burn 3-4K. I like being negative at the end of each day. It just accelerates your losing.

    Losing more than just fat as well...you will run out of gas soon enough if you are truly burning all those calories...even a fraction like half and you will find yourself tired, lethargic and in about 5 months...malnourished with thinning nails and brittle hair...

    and yah how long do you hike and how much are you carrying for those burns...wow
  • princessbride42
    princessbride42 Posts: 67 Member
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    I eat them all back. I use a heart rate monitor to count them. If I don't plan to eat them back for some reason, like I overate the day before or something, I either log them on a previous day or don't log them at all. For me its hard to leave calories uneaten.
  • deltayork
    deltayork Posts: 71 Member
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    I will eat a few back, but not all. It really depends on the intensity of exercise for me. If it's a regular workout where i burn 400 or so calories I don't eat them back. But, If i'm doing Les Mills Grit (HIIT workout) and a double session, I'll definitely eat more (mostly extra carb for enegery before workout and protein after for recovery).
  • kami3006
    kami3006 Posts: 4,978 Member
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    If I didn't eat mine back I would never get that deadlift off the ground.