Hungry day after exercise - leads to fat storage???
tayla78
Posts: 25 Member
Hi, I don't know what if this is a silly question or not...
I have been increasing my exercise over the last 4 months and particularly over the last 3 weeks. I have been walking briskly for approximately 2 hours every second day. I have found that on the day I exercise I eat about half my exercise calories back but the day after I am so hungry that I eat about 400 extra calories and could happily eat a lot more.
So I guess I'm wondering if this is ok and my body just needs some extra fuel or if this pattern of eating will just lead to fat storage? Should I be eating more on the day I exercise and not on my days off?
I have been increasing my exercise over the last 4 months and particularly over the last 3 weeks. I have been walking briskly for approximately 2 hours every second day. I have found that on the day I exercise I eat about half my exercise calories back but the day after I am so hungry that I eat about 400 extra calories and could happily eat a lot more.
So I guess I'm wondering if this is ok and my body just needs some extra fuel or if this pattern of eating will just lead to fat storage? Should I be eating more on the day I exercise and not on my days off?
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Replies
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I would say as long as in long run you are at maintenance or deficit you are fine. You might burn 1000 extra cals, for example, from exercise and ate that day 500 back, then you have 500 still left. You can ate them back next day too, you don't have to ate them back all at the same day. Day is just a human made concept. Your body does not work that way and does not reset at midnight.0
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In your case you could aim for a weekly calorie deficit rather than a daily one. Or just aim to eat maintenance calories the day after, and keep a deficit every other day. High fibre low gi foods, and high protein are good for keeping hunger under control.0
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Maybe try eating 80 % of your exercise calories back instead of half?0
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Well if you are following the MFP method, you are suppose to eat your exercise calories. So your deficit should be the same. But I would agree to only eat a portion of them (50-75%) is what I recommend.0
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Agree that a weekly deficit may be best. If your weekly # comes in under or at target, then you don't have to worry about fat storage. Your body doesn't have a 24 hour reset mechanism, though targeting a daily goal does help a lot of people stay compliant with their diet and therefore successful.
Are you familiar with the apps and the weekly net calorie nutrition bar charts available? These can display your weekly nutrition either for the past seven days, or you could setup your account to "start" on your chosen fixed day of the week, like Monday0 -
You won't gain fat unless you eat over your maintenance calories.
Go to http://scoobysworkshop.com/calorie-calculator/ and enter your info there, with lightly active, and eat what it tells you every day.0 -
Thanks everyone! I'm just going through all your ideas and also figuring out my weekly calorie count. I appear to be under when looking at the whole week.
My main reasoning for only eating back half of my exercise calories was I wasn't sure how accurate the estimate was. Some activities seem to have a very high estimate (such as walking on the treadmill, particularly on an incline) and others seem to be very low (such as walking with a pram). I know I feel like I have used more energy when I am outside pushing the pram rather than on the treadmill so I didn't want to overestimate and then eat back too many calories.0 -
You won't gain fat unless you eat over your maintenance calories.
Go to http://scoobysworkshop.com/calorie-calculator/ and enter your info there, with lightly active, and eat what it tells you every day.
Thanks for this, the goals set on MFP are very similar to this calculator. I have added extra calories to mine to allow for BF baby.0 -
My real authority is my weekly number. Your body does store surpluses and expend deficits but it's not an orderly, real time, line item affair like your ATM! I'm often quite hungry a day or two after really long bike rides or hikes because it's just not practical to pack a lot extra to eat on the bike or the trail. No need to fear it is turning to fat if you are still within a weekly deficit.0
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What effect are the calories having on your weight loss?0
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