To Eat or Not to Eat that is the question.
sgeorgopoulos07
Posts: 1 Member
Hi! I've just purchased a fitbit flex. I'm all synced up with my fitness pal and super happy about it. However, I'm a little scared, I've noticed that most days it's adding additional calories to eat...not a small amount either...like 500-600!! Who has a fit bit? Should I eat these Calories or shouldn't I? That is the question!!
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Replies
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Eat them.0
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I don't do the gadget thing, but try eating them. Eat as much as you can while still being able to lose!!0
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1) You should only wear it when exercising.
2) You need to eat back a portion of exercise calories.
3) What % you eat back is based on how accurate you believe your estimates are. With a Fitbit or other HRM device, it should be fairly accurate. Maybe start with 75-80%, and adjust from there.
4) You don't have to eat all or even most of the calories back, if you don't want to. This is assuming you are properly fueling your workouts, and getting adequate RDA minimums for protein and fat. As long as your energy levels recover properly, you should be fine.
5) As a general rule, the leaner you are ( closer to goal weight ), the more of them you should/will have to eat back in order to keep your energy levels up.0 -
I wear mine all the time (not just during exercise) and love it. Doing challenges with my friends and family has really helped!
A few days a week I stick to 1200 calories. A few days a week I eat the extra calories. Once in a while I eat the whole shebang... TDEE all the way. It's working beautifully.0 -
Also make sure that your activity on MFP is set as sedentary.0
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1) You should only wear it when exercising.
2) You need to eat back a portion of exercise calories.
3) What % you eat back is based on how accurate you believe your estimates are. With a Fitbit or other HRM device, it should be fairly accurate. Maybe start with 75-80%, and adjust from there.
4) You don't have to eat all or even most of the calories back, if you don't want to. This is assuming you are properly fueling your workouts, and getting adequate RDA minimums for protein and fat. As long as your energy levels recover properly, you should be fine.
5) As a general rule, the leaner you are ( closer to goal weight ), the more of them you should/will have to eat back in order to keep your energy levels up.
No.
Fitbits are designed to be worn all the time. Even when sleeping, if you want to track your sleep patterns. I usually take mine off at night, but I put it on when I'm getting ready in the morning and take it off before bed. But I started off tracking sleep and found out that I normally have 97% or better sleep patterns. I'm a heavy sleeper.
OP: try eating back half and see what happens. If you are losing faster than you should, eat back more. If you are losing slower than you should, eat back less.0 -
What do you have your activity level set to in MFP? How many steps a day are you averaging? If you're set to sedentary but you're not, that would be one reason why you get a lot of calories added.
My suggestion: build in a buffer. Assume a 5-10% error rate until you have some results. Such as if Fitbit shows you burn an average of 2500/day, then assume this can be off by 5-10%. Which would mean your true burn is 2250-2375. So leave 125-250 of those calories, feel free to eat the rest.
Over time you should be able to judge based on success. If you are set up for 1 pound a week loss, and you're leaving calories behind and averaging a faster loss: you can eat more of your calories. (This assumes accurate logging, of course.)
Love my Fitbit, and have found it to be fairly accurate on my calories burned.0 -
Ps-Fitbits are designed for all day wear. Just take the Flex off to charge occasionally. You do not have to set MFP to Sedentary, that's up to each person. If you normally do not get extra calories from Fitbit (and have negatives disabled) then you're not being as active as MFP thinks you are.0
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Also, enable negative calorie adjustments on MFP for those days you don't work out MFP possibly overestimates your calorie goal.0
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If (and only if) you enable negative calorie adjustments, eating back your Fitbit adjustments means you're eating TDEE minus deficit: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/account/diary_settings
Ignore your Fitbit calorie goal and follow MFP's, eating back your adjustments. No need to log any step-based activity—your Fitbit is tracking it for you. Log non-step exercise (like swimming or biking) either in Fitbit or in MFP—never both. Exercise logged in MFP overwrites your Fitbit burn during that time.
You can learn more in the Fitbit Users group: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1290-fitbit-users0 -
I wear mine from the second I wake up, to when I go to bed. I like seeing how many steps I make, and it also helps me know how many calories I've burned. I eat my exercise calories because I like treats before bed. Also, if I don't, I will be way to hungry and can't sleep.0
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I have the fitbit charge HR, and it is very accurate, for me. It usually gives me between 500-700 extra calories and I eat them, haven't had a problem with it.0
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I have the Fitbit charge HR and I have tracked the past six weeks of calories burned and it was right on. I think it will depend upon what kind of exercise you do and how accurate you are with logging your food.0
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