My 1200 kcal experiment
Replies
-
so isn't then MFP also - insane/ludicrous/idiotic etc (+ all other things Ive been called) to propose this low caloric intake, I mean, I will be without nutrition, since nutrition is a function of calorie intake...yeah, it's true because somebody stated it here ;-) and then shrivel up and die...0 -
missiontofitness wrote: »I think you're underestimating what you're missing for nutrition. Nutrition is more than just taking vitamins. As a male, you can't possibly hitting your macros for fats and proteins on 1200 calories a day. I know because as a petite female who is moderately active, I often am below on protein at 1200 calories (an my goal is around 80 grams). So, how as a 200+ lb. male can you be meeting those macros?
Why does a 200+ male have to be on a VLCD diet to make up for a couple of days of going over calories after a fast day?
I aim for 90g protein and 90g fat each day, I'm fat adapted with a body fat of around 16-19%, my current weight is 95kg i.e. I carry around 17 kg of fat (17x9'000= 153'000kcal),
so I also want to find out what happens being fat adapted with a lot body fat stored and at the same reduce my calorie intake to 1200 kcal / day
Seasoned MFP vets, please correct me if I'm wrong. But given that fat contains 9 calories per gram, and protein 4 calories per gram....
90g of fat = 810 calories.
90g of protein = 360 calories.
1,170 calories each day are used up by just these two macros? That doesn't seem very balanced, and isn't leaving you many calories of wiggle room for other macro/micronutrients. How long do you intend to do this? I'm still not jazzed on the 1,200 intake for a male....I'm sure you could still be in ketosis while upping your cals to a healthier level.
please read my first post, but to summarize: 2 weeks on low carb diet and I have around 16...19% body fat. Your body only need fat and protein, glucose it can create itself (there is no such thing as essential carbohydrates)
and for the xth time (which people does not seems to understand)_
- this is NOT a long term thing
- normally I would not go below my BMR in calories
So what I found out so far - one week now (which is not very surprising):
- I had to cut down on my exercises
- I'm tired, i.e. slept more (+ 1...2 h per day)
- Some cravings but manageable
- Felt in general quite ok, not depraved or anything
- It's easier during the week when working, weekend will be tough though
Day 1 96.6 kg 1207 kcal
Day 2 95.9 kg 1241 kcal
Day 3 95.4 kg 1249 kcal
Day 4 94.9 kg 1258 kcal
Day 5 94.6 kg 1379 kcal
Day 6 95.2 kg 1709 kcal
Day 7 93.6 kg
=> -3 kg in one week (some fat/water and LBM)
On day 5 my wife bought me a snack (kebab), which prob reflected the day 6 weight increase
and as you see I failed the experiment on day 6 when I ate 500 kcal above my target, to peoples distress I will continue though ;-)
0 -
missiontofitness wrote: »
I don't even know how to approach this. Minus reiterating for the millionth time that a goal of 1,200 (regardless of what he's actually consuming if he's not weighing/logging properly) for a guy is not advisable. Would really like to know what he's doing with those exercise cals, though.
normally I eat back my exercise calories (I explained it in an earlier post), during these 2 weeks I do not eat back
0 -
What vaguely interests me in this thread is that you seem to believe that people are concerned about you...you have clearly made a decision to do something and that's fine ..no skin off my nose
Most people post to ensure that noobs and lurkers realise that your "experiment" is pointless and ill thought-out and has no results of interest to anybody but you ...
Will it do long term harm? No
Is it worthwhile? No
Does it progress anybody's understanding of weight loss, health, nutrition beyond what we already know? No
Does it give you a reason to continue to post your odd little updates? Yes
Great, keep it up ...it is mildly interesting watching someone else try to be ...I'm not sure what you're aiming for tbh ...noteworthiness?0 -
What vaguely interests me in this thread is that you seem to believe that people are concerned about you...you have clearly made a decision to do something and that's fine ..no skin off my nose
Most people post to ensure that noobs and lurkers realise that your "experiment" is pointless and ill thought-out and has no results of interest to anybody but you ...
Will it do long term harm? No
Is it worthwhile? No
Does it progress anybody's understanding of weight loss, health, nutrition beyond what we already know? No
Does it give you a reason to continue to post your odd little updates? Yes
Great, keep it up ...it is mildly interesting watching someone else try to be ...I'm not sure what you're aiming for tbh ...noteworthiness?
welcome to the internet :-)
people have a choice to read, to comment, and not to...;-)
maybe I expected a little more "scientific" discussions, but so far mostly empty statements which are supposed to be based on "conventional wisdom" and "common sense", sorry that might convince some people but not me...
E.g. I even mentioned that MFP recommends me to eat 1340kcal/day to lose 1kg/week, nobody even questioned that...does that mean that MFP is completely false? You wrote that I will not get enough nutrition on 1200kcal (which you based on what...nothing?), i.e. I will not magically get it either on 1340kcal - what's your stand on that?
No I really do not think that people care about me, so you can stop to be "vaguely interested"...
0 -
https://myfitnesspal.desk.com/customer/portal/articles/1375583-a-message-about-myfitnesspal-s-updated-nutrition-goals
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/files/docs/guidelines/ob_gdlns.pdf
And MFP technology glitches are frequent and somewhat irritating0 -
missiontofitness wrote: »I think you're underestimating what you're missing for nutrition. Nutrition is more than just taking vitamins. As a male, you can't possibly hitting your macros for fats and proteins on 1200 calories a day. I know because as a petite female who is moderately active, I often am below on protein at 1200 calories (an my goal is around 80 grams). So, how as a 200+ lb. male can you be meeting those macros?
Why does a 200+ male have to be on a VLCD diet to make up for a couple of days of going over calories after a fast day?
I aim for 90g protein and 90g fat each day, I'm fat adapted with a body fat of around 16-19%, my current weight is 95kg i.e. I carry around 17 kg of fat (17x9'000= 153'000kcal),
so I also want to find out what happens being fat adapted with a lot body fat stored and at the same reduce my calorie intake to 1200 kcal / day
Seasoned MFP vets, please correct me if I'm wrong. But given that fat contains 9 calories per gram, and protein 4 calories per gram....
90g of fat = 810 calories.
90g of protein = 360 calories.
1,170 calories each day are used up by just these two macros? That doesn't seem very balanced, and isn't leaving you many calories of wiggle room for other macro/micronutrients. How long do you intend to do this? I'm still not jazzed on the 1,200 intake for a male....I'm sure you could still be in ketosis while upping your cals to a healthier level.
please read my first post, but to summarize: 2 weeks on low carb diet and I have around 16...19% body fat. Your body only need fat and protein, glucose it can create itself (there is no such thing as essential carbohydrates)
and for the xth time (which people does not seems to understand)_
- this is NOT a long term thing
- normally I would not go below my BMR in calories
So what I found out so far - one week now (which is not very surprising):
- I had to cut down on my exercises
- I'm tired, i.e. slept more (+ 1...2 h per day)
- Some cravings but manageable
- Felt in general quite ok, not depraved or anything
- It's easier during the week when working, weekend will be tough though
Day 1 96.6 kg 1207 kcal
Day 2 95.9 kg 1241 kcal
Day 3 95.4 kg 1249 kcal
Day 4 94.9 kg 1258 kcal
Day 5 94.6 kg 1379 kcal
Day 6 95.2 kg 1709 kcal
Day 7 93.6 kg
=> -3 kg in one week (some fat/water and LBM)
On day 5 my wife bought me a snack (kebab), which prob reflected the day 6 weight increase
and as you see I failed the experiment on day 6 when I ate 500 kcal above my target, to peoples distress I will continue though ;-)
This is one of those instances where correct spelling is important...0 -
jaggerhawks wrote: »
Thanks, sweetie. You know that I had the stats of a swimsuit/figure fitness model for years, hmmm? I also used to have the time to work out 15 hours a week.
The reasons not to do it are mostly about building long-term habits and not dipping below certain minimums--which is why I said that you need to hit those minimums.
In general, people here are VERY suspicious of fast weight loss, even though both pre-bariatric surgery and post-bariatric surgeries are quite restrictive. I suspect that a lot of people are reformed yo-yo dieters? I don't know. The reasons aren't medical, that's for sure.
Anyway, I usually gain weight when I get pregnant and lose it very fast when I give birth, and the faster I lose it, the easier maintenance is for me. So that's why I have zero problems with rapid weight loss as long as it's done sensibly.
OP is admitting it's a short-term crash diet, which is not going to get much support from anyone here (me included) because as soon as you stop crash dieting, you'll regain it again.0 -
Pretty close to fasting it is 50% of your daily requirements to maintain, yikes.
If you are doing Keto, why are you also throwing in IF? Neither of which is required for weight/fat loss.
with only your 40ish lbs to lose your goal should have been to lose 1 lb/week, and down to 0.5 for the last 10 or so.
That said, since you are only looking at such a large deficit over two weeks, the worst that will happen is a large % of the 2-5 lbs will come from lean muscle, not just fat. If you are okay with that, have at it.
IF comes more or less natural to me since I cannot eat breakfast...
After more than 15 years of testing different diet lifestyles, keto/low carb is the only that works for me, my willpower is simple not strong enough to eat in moderation on a carb-based diet, i.e. it always end up in a glorious binge...
See, THIS is what's troubling to me. You WILL need to figure out a way to eat some carbs if you love them. Long-term deprivation will never work!0 -
Iron_Feline wrote: »I've seen quite a few manorexic Brits around here. Do they have a different aesthetic for the male body than we do here in the states?
eta: not only do they want to be super skinny, they also seem to want as high a percentage of body fat as possible at the same time. Is skinny-fat the fashion in the UK now?
Last time I was over there, there just wasn't the same kind of fitness culture as there was in the US and Canada at the time. I saw a lot of people hiking, maybe, or playing football/soccer, but otherwise, not so much. There weren't even a ton of gyms, or not on the scale that there is here. Might be different now.
lol lol lol
This was absolutely true a few years ago, tell I'm wrong0 -
https://myfitnesspal.desk.com/customer/portal/articles/1375583-a-message-about-myfitnesspal-s-updated-nutrition-goals
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/files/docs/guidelines/ob_gdlns.pdf
And MFP technology glitches are frequent and somewhat irritating
thanks! now we are getting somewhere ;-)
after reading the guideline (from U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES), I was wrong, I'm not doing a VLCD (<800kcal/day) but a LCD - 1200...1500kcal/day which the guideline is recommending for weight loss. Also for the record I don't think BMI is a good measure, but ok lets see...
so if I follow the guideline (Chapter 4 - treatment guideline) you sent me and as my BMI is 26.3 (189cm/94kg), they state on page 74: "A patient may choose a diet of 1,000 to 1,200 kcal for women and 1,200 to
1,500 kcal for men..."
so, it turns out that I am in line with the guideline you sent me, so now I am really confused since you wrote that I would not get enough nutrition etc...care to elaborate on this?
0 -
MamaBirdBoss wrote: »See, THIS is what's troubling to me. You WILL need to figure out a way to eat some carbs if you love them. Long-term deprivation will never work!
depends what you mean by long term, I have done (this time) low carb since december, and I am not feeling depraved...we are all different, maybe it doesn't work for you
also I normally eat carbs, somewhere between 50...100g, mostly from vegetables and berries
0 -
Krystle1984 wrote: »This is one of those instances where correct spelling is important...
yes sorry about that, doing my best, english is (as you know by now) not my native language + I am dyslexic...
0 -
Krystle1984 wrote: »This is one of those instances where correct spelling is important...
yes sorry about that, doing my best, english is (as you know by now) not my native language + I am dyslexic...
I only pointed it out as I assumed you meant deprived, which means something very different to depraved...0 -
Krystle1984 wrote: »I only pointed it out as I assumed you meant deprived, which means something very different to depraved...
I dunno, I can get pretty depraved when I'm deprived...0 -
Krystle1984 wrote: »Krystle1984 wrote: »This is one of those instances where correct spelling is important...
yes sorry about that, doing my best, english is (as you know by now) not my native language + I am dyslexic...
I only pointed it out as I assumed you meant deprived, which means something very different to depraved...
lol yeah...:-)
0 -
I think the reason there is not much "scientific" discussion is because there is nothing scientific about this. It's one person doing a short term diet of fairly random parameters, with no control comparison, no blood tests or independently tested health markers recorded, and utilizing self-reported conformity and results. Whether over these two weeks you lose or gain weight, feel awesome or awful, get rushed to the hospital or grow a third eye on the back of your head, doesn't tell us anything. I'm not even sure you will be able to draw any meaningful conclusions about yourself from it. Other than your ability to stick to a 2 week eating plan that most people using "conventional wisdom" and "common sense" believe is unhealthy.
TBH I don't really care if it is healthy for a grown man to eat 1200 cals a day for two weeks. It sounds unpleasant and unnecessarily difficult to me. If I can eat more food with more calories and more nutrients and be a healthy weight, I'll go with that. There are plenty of things that are difficult about life, I don't want to add something as basic and pleasurable as eating to that list. In all sincerity, good luck, I hope you get whatever it is you are trying to get out of this.0 -
I was scrolling through and I think I accidentally clicked "abuse" on someone's post...oops0
-
-
OP should be about 4 months into this experiment; I'm curious if there's an update.0
-
He ded.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 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
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions