eating back my BMR calories?
carrieross733
Posts: 27 Member
I am a 30yr old female. I weigh 259lbs and I am 5'7 . I do t25 5 days a week.
I have another app that I downloaded ( my net diary) which tells me that I need to be eating at my BMR level, which is at 1935 or so. It tells me that if I go below that, that its dangerous? My calorie level is set to 1745ish.
I guess I just don't fully understand the whole deficit thing. Is the information that the other app is giving me correct?
I have another app that I downloaded ( my net diary) which tells me that I need to be eating at my BMR level, which is at 1935 or so. It tells me that if I go below that, that its dangerous? My calorie level is set to 1745ish.
I guess I just don't fully understand the whole deficit thing. Is the information that the other app is giving me correct?
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Replies
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Can you provide all the other information the other app is providing? It sounds like you entered a 2 pound weight loss/week in MFP. Is this correct?0
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Take the BMR thing with a grain of salt. It's not so important when you have a ways to go. Just set a level you can live with for awhile.0
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I've read in the MFP forums that for severely overweight people it is sometimes OK to eat below BMR. Most online calculators put my BMR around 2100, but MFP puts my calorie goal at 1600 to lose 2 lb/week.0
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Trust the MFP number, its pretty accurate...and in a few weeks you'll know by progress how your doing.
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I had never heard the "Eat at/above BMR" thing prior to this forum. I started eating at 1720 calories with a BMR of 1975 (according to MFP). I'm now eating 1840 with a BMR of 1874. I will be eating above my BMR in about 5 weeks or so. I've lost ~23lb over ~10 weeks and I haven't hit "starvation mode" yet (the common fear of eating below BMR).
I can't find any scientific or medical sources for why I should eat above BMR. Only forum posts on websites like this, reddit, or others. Rather than conjecture, I'd love to see a study, or a webMD article with links for why eating below BMR is dangerous.0 -
carrieross733 wrote: »I am a 30yr old female. I weigh 259lbs and I am 5'7 . I do t25 5 days a week.
I have another app that I downloaded ( my net diary) which tells me that I need to be eating at my BMR level, which is at 1935 or so. It tells me that if I go below that, that its dangerous? My calorie level is set to 1745ish.
I guess I just don't fully understand the whole deficit thing. Is the information that the other app is giving me correct?
No, the "you must eat above BMR" is nonsense. Among other things, you don't know what it is, really -- different calculators give different numbers and they tend to overestimate for people above average body fat (which is most people who need to lose substantial weight). I lost my first big chunk of weight eating below BMR (and my MFP goal, pre exercise, was below BMR until I switched to a different method of calculating calories where you don't eat back exercise).
That said, for most people who are exercising, their reasonable deficit will be above BMR. If MFP gave you 1745 to lose 2 lbs/week, you are expected to add in calories when you exercise which would put you above the estimated BMR, probably.0 -
_Terrapin_ wrote: »Can you provide all the other information the other app is providing? It sounds like you entered a 2 pound weight loss/week in MFP. Is this correct?
Yes I did0 -
nordlead2005 wrote: »I had never heard the "Eat at/above BMR" thing prior to this forum. I started eating at 1720 calories with a BMR of 1975 (according to MFP). I'm now eating 1840 with a BMR of 1874. I will be eating above my BMR in about 5 weeks or so. I've lost ~23lb over ~10 weeks and I haven't hit "starvation mode" yet (the common fear of eating below BMR).
I can't find any scientific or medical sources for why I should eat above BMR. Only forum posts on websites like this, reddit, or others. Rather than conjecture, I'd love to see a study, or a webMD article with links for why eating below BMR is dangerous.
Wow. That's good to know. I had never heard anything about it before that app either. Thank you0
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