Burning more than consumed ??????

amandavictoria80
amandavictoria80 Posts: 734 Member
edited September 27 in Food and Nutrition
I keep hearing and reading that in order to loose weight, a person needs to burn more calories than they consume.

I am so confused when I hear this! This concept means I would either have to burn more than 1300 calories (my intake) per day or practically starve myself.

Can someone please clarify this for me! :) Thanks!

Replies

  • janalayn
    janalayn Posts: 510 Member
    Um check out the threads on starvation mode ... MFP calculates your calories based on your weight loss goal....you eat back your exercise calories and keep your NET calories above 1200. Your body has to have a minimum number of calories to survive and function properly.
  • raychybabe
    raychybabe Posts: 121 Member
    you have a resting calorific rate - i.e.: the number of calories your body would burn if you were to lie still on a bed and not move or do anything. That's how many calories your body needs just to run its essential functions.
  • robertf57
    robertf57 Posts: 560 Member
    Amanda,

    You are burning calories constantly. You can use a BMR calculator to calculate what you body burns when at rest and estimate the calories you additionally burn based upon your normal activity. If you exercise you burn even more calories. My Fitness Pal will do these calculations for you when you set it up and give you a target calorie consumption for the day. It is as simple as that. Don't starve yourself. Just follow the plan. You can tweak your program as you gain experience, increasing your calories from fresh foods and perhaps adjust your macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, proteins....) to help you in your journey.

    Good luck!
  • tsgaddy
    tsgaddy Posts: 96 Member
    You would have to burn that much if you LITERALLY did nothing all day (which is nearly impossible), but since you may burn about 2000 just from normal activity (walking upstairs in your home, heading to the rest room, reaching for things, breathing, etc) you would not need to burn an additional 1300 calories.
  • gcineas
    gcineas Posts: 121
    So during the day just hanging out and doing nothing your body burns calories. Me if I just stayed in bed all day, I burn around 1600 cals. That means without working out if I eat less than 1600 cals I can lose weight. Working out is just icing on the cake. So you need to figure out how many calories you burn without doing anything and aim for a calorie goal below that!

    I hope this answered your question.. the idea is that people burn calories without doing anything!
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
    It's a common statement, and quite true. But it's a bit vague and people don't always use it in the right way.

    You do have to burn more than you consume, but exercise is not the only form of burning cals. With this statement, you have to consider ALL of the calories you burn, not just what you burn through purposeful exercise.

    Your total energy expenditure (what you burn each day) includes BMR + activity level + purposeful exercise. BMR is what you burn just existing, as if in a coma. Activity level accounts for normal daily activity like work, watching tv, cooking dinner, brushing teeth, etc. Then you have purposeful exercise.

    MFP is designed differently than other counters/plans. Other plans use your exercise to create the deficit, keeping your daily cal goal static. With them, you would not eat back exercise calories.

    MFP is different. It was designed with the idea that many people can't exercise regularly, or at all, due to physical limitations or time. They also recognized that most people set up an exercise plan, but as we all know, that's not necessarily what actually happens every day. So they built the site to allow for weight loss with or without exercise.

    MFP creates a BUILT IN CALORIE DEFICIT, based on your loss per week goal, regardless of exercise. So when you log exercise, cals are added back in to keep that deficit stable. If you don't replace those cals, you've made your deficit larger than you (presumably) intended. A larger deficit does not necessarily mean faster/more weight loss; it is usually unhealthy and unsustainable and most often backfires. It is important to fuel the body properly, or it may begin to slow metabolism and burn muscle as fuel.

    May also help to read this:

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/186814-some-mfp-basics
  • tsgaddy
    tsgaddy Posts: 96 Member
    Um check out the threads on starvation mode ... MFP calculates your calories based on your weight loss goal....you eat back your exercise calories and keep your NET calories above 1200. Your body has to have a minimum number of calories to survive and function properly.

    Please for the love of Bob, DO NOT read the threads on "starvation mode". It's a highly debatable (and lawd knows it's been beaten to death here) concept and the end result after every starvation mode vs no starvation mode MFP debacle is that people who don't already have a formed opinion on the matter leave even more confused.
  • Skydemon53
    Skydemon53 Posts: 33 Member
    You burn calories just by being alive! You burn calories while you sleep, watch tv, or sit at a desk. Of course you burn more calories the more active you are. For me, I average about 2050 calories a day doing my normal routine things. I want to lose about a pound a week, so I subtract 500 calories from my 2050 and get 1550. If I exercise more than usual, I burn more calories, but to maintain that 500 calorie reduction, I eat more (you have to feed those muscles).
  • perribrook
    perribrook Posts: 2
    As I understand it, a woman needs around 1900 calories per day just to maintain body function. If you only eat 1300 cals a day that already creates a deficit of 600 Cals, so you should already lose weight with such a low calorie intake. I hear there are around 3500 calories in a lb of body fat, so everytime you reach 3500 calories of deficit, you should lose a lb. Any exercise also reduces the amount of calories you have eaten also reduces the number of calories your body can store for you, so 300 calories of exercise (half an hour at the gym) + 600 calories you didn't eat, will make 900 calories lost to your body, and a lb lost every four days (In theory ;O) )
  • taso42_DELETED
    taso42_DELETED Posts: 3,394 Member
    I replied to you in the other thread as well. Copying it here:

    You burn a few thousand calories just from being alive and doing your daily activities. Just as a random example, a 30 yr old woman, who is 5'5", 140 lbs and lightly active, burn appx 1868 calories per day. (this is per http://www.webmd.com/diet/healthtool-metabolism-calculator; other online calculators may vary, but they should be in the same ballpark).

    Now suppose she exercises and burns 300 more calories today.

    1868 + 300 = 2168 total calories burned that day

    So, on this day, if she eats less than 2168 calories, she will have burned more than she ate. Tada.

    If she was shooting for 1 lb lost per week, that should be a 500 calories per day deficit. 2168 - 500 = 1668. Assuming the 300 calories is typical, this fictional woman should be eating 1668 calories per day to lose a lb per week.

    See this link for a more in depth explanation.
    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/61706-guide-to-calorie-deficits
  • starsnyc21
    starsnyc21 Posts: 436 Member
    Somebody posted this article eariler and I saved it. It goes into detail about your BMR and how your body is already burning calories before you even workout. It may answer your questions.

    http://www.active.com/fitness/Articles/How-Does-Your-Body-Burn-Fat.htm?cmp=17-7-692
  • Tiggermummy
    Tiggermummy Posts: 312 Member
    your body needs a mimimum number of calories to keep you alive & breathing - this is called your BMR = Basal Metabolic Rate
    so if you stayed in bed and didn't move all day your body would still burn this number of calories.

    So I am 5ft 4 and weigh about 199 - so my BMR = 1635

    the number of calories you need is based on this figure but it does depend on how active you are normally

    so if you sit in an office all day i.e a seditary life style you multiply your BMR figure by 1.2

    so for me = 1962 calories per day - if i did no more exercise and just ate this number of calories I wouldn't loose weight, but I wouldn't gain anymore either.

    but to loose weight you need to lower your calorie intake to less than this figure.

    1lb of fat = 3500 calories so if you lower your calories intake by 500 calories per day at the end of 7 days you should have lost 1lb.

    Depending on how much you have to loose will reflect a realistic target of weight loss. if you have 30lbs or more then loosing 2lb a week should be doable, if you only have 10b to loose then 0.5-1lb a week should be target.

    so if i take my 1962 - 500 = 1460 calories per day - based on my seditary lifestyle.

    But if I then start doing more exercise this will use up more calories than I counted orgionally so I get to eat more to balance the equation

    Calories in - calories burnt in exercise = Total Net Calories eaten

    Couple of examples

    Eat 1462 calories - Burn 140 calories power walking for 20 minutes = total Net calories eaten 1322

    so I could if I wish eat the "extra" calories from my walk.

    The important thing to remember is for women the minimum NET calories should be at least 1200 for men 1500

    you will find lots of differing opnions on if you should eat back exercises calories or not, it is something you should read up on and then make your own choice on what suits your body.

    hope i have made it clearer
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