Friend suggests 1200 calories. Is this too little?

MFP suggests 1610 cals but my friend tells me I'll never lose eating this much, I'm pretty heavy and I've listed myself as a sedentary lifestyle

I feel like 1200 is something I will lose weight fast with but won't stick to

Any advice
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Replies

  • KateTii
    KateTii Posts: 886 Member
    Go with what MFP suggests. A lot of people see "1200" almost like a buzz word. Your gut is pretty much spot on, faster results but less likely to be long-term results.

    Get a food scale, weigh and log your food - remember, it was the tortoise, not the hare that won the race!
  • Yi5hedr3
    Yi5hedr3 Posts: 2,696 Member
    Keep carbs below 100 grams/day. 1200 cals is fine. :)
  • dizzybee83
    dizzybee83 Posts: 6 Member
    Ooooo good advice Thankyou :)

    I don't think many people need just 1200 especially when working out
  • WhatLouAte
    WhatLouAte Posts: 155 Member
    MFP has already put you in a deficit with 1610, so go with that.
  • scottish_laura_13
    scottish_laura_13 Posts: 69 Member
    go with the 1600, if you start with 1200 you cant cut you calorie intake at any point as there's nowhere healthy to go
    also you will burn more if you are active
    if its a mind set issue set your target at 1500 and if you go over its not bad :)
  • dearmrsowl
    dearmrsowl Posts: 151 Member
    Go with what MFP suggest and see how you're doing with it. When I started about 35 lb ago I also netted at around 1600, now I obviously need less to see some movement on the scale and to lose inches. If you update your weight, MFP will, overtime, adjust the allotted calories for you.
  • dizzybee83
    dizzybee83 Posts: 6 Member
    Thankyou for your replies. Do many people stick to the 1200 cal mark? Is it even advisable?
  • FabianMommy
    FabianMommy Posts: 78 Member
    Personally, I'd rather start off with advice such as on MFP that calculates what you should be having rather than that of a friend who probably isn't a fitness and nutrition expert. Give it a month on 1600 then if you aren't getting the results you want, you can lower your calories. If you start on 1200 then you really have nowhere to go to lower if needed and you don't want things like your hair to start suffering because you aren't eating enough. Or shoot for 1500, you really shouldn't need to go much lower than that unless you don't have much weight to lose - just a few pounds. Make sure you are accurate with your intake, weigh and measure for best results.
  • zoeysasha37
    zoeysasha37 Posts: 7,088 Member
    1200 is often too low for many ( unless the person is really tiny, old, short)
    1600 is much more sustainable. You will lose weight as long as your at a deficit. To make sure your really at a deficit, its important to use a food scale
  • sheermomentum
    sheermomentum Posts: 827 Member
    edited January 2016
    Plenty of people stick to 1200 plus exercise calories. Plenty of people eat more. The NIH recommends at least 1000 for women, and 1200 is a number that appeared up in a popular diet book in the 1920's, and just kind of stuck in the popular mind. MFP calculates the allowance based on the height, weight, activity and weight loss goals that YOU put in, so the math should match your personalized goals. I'd agree with giving it a shot and seeing how it goes for you before making any changes.

  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    LOL is your friend a TDEE calculator …????? I am guess no, so listen to MFP and forget what your friend is saying….people think they know fitness and nutrition because they googled some dumb article in woman's world about miracle soups and 1200 calories diets that fit all ...
  • MelaniaTrump
    MelaniaTrump Posts: 2,694 Member
    If I could only eat 1,200 cals a day, I would get so hungry I would google: how to cook my cats
    I'm 5'2.
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    Unless your friend is a registered dietitian... NEVER listen to your friends when it comes to diets... ever.
  • BoaRestrictor
    BoaRestrictor Posts: 194 Member
    It depends on the person honestly, you can't look at anyone and say you should eat X calories without knowing their weight/height/activity level/exercise habits because it all plays a role. MFP is pretty accurate, so eat what MFP gives you. You'll lose weight.
  • momoftwins985
    momoftwins985 Posts: 653 Member
    I tried doing 1200 in the beginning. Absolute hell. Temptation to chew my hands off was a regular lol stick with what the app says
  • mrscartguy
    mrscartguy Posts: 3 Member
    MFP has me at 1200 calories and it is tough. I go over every day and I am hungry!!!!
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    mrscartguy wrote: »
    MFP has me at 1200 calories and it is tough. I go over every day and I am hungry!!!!

    What did you enter as your goal rate of loss for each week?
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    I would definitely use what MFP told you for calories and ignore what friends advise.
    As you lose weight you will lower the amount of calories you eat. You may eventually get to the point where 1200 is your calorie goal but why start with the absolute minimum when you do not have to?
  • mrscartguy
    mrscartguy Posts: 3 Member
    janejellyroll - I put in for 1.5 lbs a week. Is that to much? Should I change it? I am new to this.
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    mrscartguy wrote: »
    janejellyroll - I put in for 1.5 lbs a week. Is that to much? Should I change it? I am new to this.

    The more aggressive your goal, the fewer calories MFP will give you. If you want to eat more calories, choosing 1 pound a week as your goal will give you more. Choosing .5 a week will give you even more.
  • robininfl
    robininfl Posts: 1,137 Member
    MFP calculated my daily calories at 1,200 only...I am 5'9", 47 years old (not tiny, old, short as thorsmom implies) but only trying to lose about 5 pounds (office job so I chose "sedentary" as lifestyle). I synched mapmyrun so that the workouts come over and it calculates the goal as 1,200 plus workouts which is probably close enough, 1600/day or so.

    If you are bigger, farther away from your healthy weight, your body burns more calories just by existing, and your exercising burns more calories, and running a bigger deficit isn't healthy or sustainable, you want your body to slowly burn off fat and build some muscle, not freak out. Eat more and log it so you have data, see how it goes, if you are losing slowly over time that's the right amount, especially if your measurements are shrinking; but that "right amount" will get smaller as you do, your eventual maintenance amount may be smaller than what you can eat now and lose weight eating.
  • scottish_laura_13
    scottish_laura_13 Posts: 69 Member
    mrscartguy - maybe change it to 1lb a week, mfp gave me 1260 to lose 2lb a week but I changed it to 1.5 and now I get 1360 and I don't feel bad when I go over 1200, but honestly there's days where im under 1100 and not hungry and days where I hit 1400 and im starving
    the whole point is to make a lifestyle change and to keep to a diet/calorie counting way of life that works for you, it might be slower to lose by increasing ur intake a bit but its likely more sustainable in the long run
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,713 Member
    I don't believe in crash diets with the goal of upping food intake at a later time. If you want to weigh x, eat as much food as somebody who already weighs x should eat. Your body will naturally gravitate towards that body weight over time, and when you get there you won't need to adjust your food intake at all, it'll already be a lifestyle.

    (There's no way on God's green earth I could get away with 1200 for an extended period of time. My lunches alone typically hover around 1000 (on a 2k limit).)
  • KareninCanada
    KareninCanada Posts: 962 Member
    MFP put me at 1200. I set it to 1500 manually, and still go over once in a while. If I were working out regularly then it would be higher than that.
  • thelizabeff
    thelizabeff Posts: 3 Member
    I can't speak in general facts, only anecdotally: I told MFP I wanted to lose 1.5 pounds a week, and it set me to 1200. Even after adding back in exercise calories, every morning I woke up exhausted, and every day I felt like I was starving and wanted to rip everyone's face off. My skin even looked terrible. So I decided to eat more and just be more patient and realistic about shedding the bit of extra weight I have left to lose.
  • NewMeSM75
    NewMeSM75 Posts: 971 Member
    My goal is 1200 but I'm tiny, old and short. Lol. It's sustainable for me but wouldn't advise it if mfp has you at a higher goal. Why make yourself miserable for no reason. If you're losing at 1600 and you feel satisfied, that's a win. Go with it. :)
  • AskTracyAnnK28
    AskTracyAnnK28 Posts: 2,817 Member
    I think 1200 is ok if you don't have much to lose, your tiny and you're relatively sedentary (just my opinion).

    MFP defaulted me to 1200 calories, but the Scooby calculator gives me 1355. I eat somewhere in the middle of that.
  • Danimri84
    Danimri84 Posts: 262 Member
    I'm 5'7" and have 60 pounds to lose. MFP set me at 1280 and I typically don't have a problem with it. I did this a few years ago and it was the same. Lost 70 pounds. But I wasn't hungry on it. If you are constantly feeling hungry, you probably need more. I also don't freak if I go over my calories by 100 every now and then.
  • blankiefinder
    blankiefinder Posts: 3,599 Member
    Some people are terrible loggers so they think they have to eat 1200 calories to lose weight, when in actuality they are eating much more than they think.
  • elaineamj
    elaineamj Posts: 347 Member
    I'm only 5ft so at 1lb a week, MFP defaulted me to 1200 calories. According to Scooby, my TDEE is only 1687 (with no exercise). I have been going with the 1200 calories + eating back half my exercise calories. So averaging about 1350-1400 calories a day. I do look at it over a week so I can bank calories for bigger meals.