how to exactly lose weight.
limzzz
Posts: 21 Member
I know you can lose weight by eating healthy and working out but, I was wondering if you had to eat your calories but lose more than you eat?
(I'm sorry if that doesn't sound right I'm confused.)
(I'm sorry if that doesn't sound right I'm confused.)
0
Replies
-
You need to consumer fewer calories than you burn. Working out helps create the caloric deficit needed to lose fat, but your focus should be on calories consumed. The goals given when you set up your profile reflect that.0
-
From what i experienced... diet is 90% of it. The exercise is just icing on the cake. Burn more than you take in. If you do that, you will lose weight.1
-
MissusMoon wrote: »You need to consumer fewer calories than you burn. Working out helps create the caloric deficit needed to lose fat, but your focus should be on calories consumed. The goals given when you set up your profile reflect that.
This.
Just keep in mind that your body burns calories all day long, not just while you are exercising. A few quick definitions:
BMR - basal metabolic rate - # of calories your body burns just to keep you alive. Think of these as "coma calories" or what you'd burn just lying in bed all day long.
NEAT - non-exercise activity thermogenesis - # calories your body burns while doing activity other than exercise. Think of these as your lifestyle calories--what you burn while brushing your teeth, washing dishes, walking to your car, etc.
TDEE - total daily energy expenditure - total # calories your body burns all day long. This includes the above plus exercise. This is the calorie number you need to eat less than in order to lose weight.4 -
To lose weight you have to consume fewer calories than you burn. This does not require exercise, even though exercise is good for you for health reasons.
Find your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (Google "TDEE Calculator"). Use several different calculators and see if they generally agree. Be conservative with your "activity level." Most people select "sedentary." I do, and I walk 10,000 steps a day.
Subtract 20% from this number, and eat that much per day. Reevaluate every 10 pounds lost.
If you do exercise, I recommend you don't factor that in to the above. Ignore the estimated calories burned.1 -
Eat less, move more.0
-
So eat less than your TDEE but not lower than your BMR? With my calculations that is only a deficit of 250 cal a day. I was hoping for a larger deficit0
-
You lose weight by eating less. Eating healthy doesn't guarantee it unless you're in a calorie deficit.0
-
anitagirl8 wrote: »So eat less than your TDEE but not lower than your BMR? With my calculations that is only a deficit of 250 cal a day. I was hoping for a larger deficit
If you don't have a lot to lose then a 250cal deficit seems right. The less you have to lose, the smaller the deficit is.
You can also help create a bigger one by exercising, if you'd like.1 -
anitagirl8 wrote: »So eat less than your TDEE but not lower than your BMR? With my calculations that is only a deficit of 250 cal a day. I was hoping for a larger deficit
You are most likely right. But this would also mean that you don't have a lot to lose. The smaller amount of fat, the slower it will go off.0 -
Your body burns calories through out the day.. even while are reading my post. ;-)
This site has a tool that can compute how many calories you need to eat & burn to lose certain pounds (2 lbs is max) per day. Take this number as a reference only.
Spread your food intake through the day as your body gets fed continously. Make it a point to exercise daily, even brisk walks are fine during those days when you have a tight schedules & can't spare a minute for actual exercise.
Finally as your body sheds pounds it needs lesser pounds than before, hence adjust your calories as you drop few pounds... I adjust every 7-10 lbs lost. All the best.
2 -
So my BMR is 2169 and my TDEE is 2601. I divide my TDEE by 20% and eat that many calories?0
-
So my BMR is 2169 and my TDEE is 2601. I divide my TDEE by 20% and eat that many calories?
Minus 20%, don't divide.
With the numbers you gave, your calorie allowance would be 2080.
If you plug your information into MFP, the number may differ because the TDEE - 20% amount already takes your exercise into consideration whereas MFP's formula does not.1 -
So basically then just lose 2080 calories a day and I'll lose the weight?0
-
@limzzz If you keep to 2080 calories a day, you should lose the weight.
However, you need to log your food and weigh it. This is when a food scale comes in handy.
Loads of people really suck at eyeballing and always underestimate sizes.1 -
So basically then just lose 2080 calories a day and I'll lose the weight?
Yep, if your TDEE is around 2601 and you eat around 2080 calories per day, then your weight loss should likely be on average 1 lb per week. Note that this number varies from week to week: you might lose 4lb in the first week, nothing in the 2nd week, etc. Just stick with it and be patient, and you will lose the weight.1 -
samanthaluangphixay wrote: »@limzzz If you keep to 2080 calories a day, you should lose the weight.
However, you need to log your food and weigh it. This is when a food scale comes in handy.
Loads of people really suck at eyeballing and always underestimate sizes.
Thank you, I understand now. I do have a scale I bought about three days ago and have used it every meal.
2 -
Also...if you want extra calories, you can exercise and then eat back half the calories you burn.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K 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
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions