Medium to high activity

Edd1752017
Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
edited November 2024 in Health and Weight Loss
If my activity is from medium to high , I am trying to lose a lot of body fat , should I eat more than 2500 calories a day , this means good calories

Replies

  • malibu927
    malibu927 Posts: 17,562 Member
    What are your stats? Where are you getting 2500 calories from?
  • Silentpadna
    Silentpadna Posts: 1,306 Member
    Edd1752017 wrote: »
    If my activity is from medium to high , I am trying to lose a lot of body fat , should I eat more than 2500 calories a day , this means good calories

    What's a "good calorie"?
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    This is today , do I get to eat more or should jus skip dinner
  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    malibu927 wrote: »
    What are your stats? Where are you getting 2500 calories from?

    This^^^ your stats, height, weight, age, goal.
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    H 5,7
    W 240 lbs
    A 34
    Goal W 175 lbs
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    Calories are simply units of energy - they aren't good or bad.

    Your calorie goal is personal to your current stats and the rate of weight loss you selected - none of which you have shared.
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    ccv177xcfki0.png
    I guess you mean this
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    edited May 2017
    2500 seems reasonable then. Treat it as a start point from which you can adjust if required based on weight loss results over time.

    Remember a couple of things that catch people out:

    The activity setting reflects your lifestyle and job only - it excludes exercise. For example if you have a desk job but do a whole load of exercise you are still sedentary activity setting.
    If you have a very active job but do no exercise you are still very active setting.

    Your calorie goal is actually 2500 + exercise calories - when you exercise you log it (try to make your estimate reasonable) and you get credited with more calories to preserve the calorie deficit/rate of loss you selected.

    Good luck.
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    Thanks , now everything make more sense .
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    Today went like this , am I doing it right ? 2n4jf0crxcyb.png
    xha3v5zrgbat.png
  • malibu927
    malibu927 Posts: 17,562 Member
    Edd1752017 wrote: »
    Today went like this , am I doing it right ? 2n4jf0crxcyb.png
    xha3v5zrgbat.png

    If you read @PAV8888's reply above this, you'll see you aren't.

    Drop your activity level to sedentary or(and) move more. You are not meeting what MFP believes is your maintenance calories (and by quite a lot). You are currently eating at a level that will have you gaining a pound in five weeks.
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    I will try tomorrow, thanks , still figuring this one out
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    Did it again , this time I have adjusted the activity level , but there's no difference
  • allyphoe
    allyphoe Posts: 618 Member
    There is a difference - your suggested calories prior to exercise adjustment went down by 800.

    The next thing to adjust is how much food you eat. Alternatively, keep on keeping on for a couple of weeks; sometimes devices take a while to become accurate. Maintenance for me is ~2,100 calories plus intentional exercise, and I'm 100 pounds lighter than you are.
  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,351 Member
    edited May 2017
    Edd1752017 wrote: »
    Did it again , this time I have adjusted the activity level , but there's no difference

    OK.
    A quick update since I now see the number of steps you're basing this on.
    There exists an issue somewhere in your setup, and more specifically I would look into your settings for your UA activity tracker (or other device) that is counting your ~8.5K steps).

    8.5K steps is past the limit of calories that is included in the activity factor that MFP calls "lightly active". Past the limit. In other words most people would be getting a positive adjustment from that level of steps if they had selected "lightly active" on MFP.

    I am assuming that "not very active" is what is colloquially known as "sedentary", which means that somewhere between 3,500 and 5,000 steps you should be seeing an increase in available calories as opposed to a decrease in available calories like you are seeing.

    In other words there is something wrong with your setup and more specifically I suspect that your settings in whatever app is counting your steps are the ones that are wrong.

    Alternatively you are using an app that is producing results that do not agree with the widely supported base settings MFP is using.

    (What I am trying to say: MFP NEAT is BMR x AF=1.25. But 8.5K steps is closer to an AF of 1.5. The step counting app is giving calories for an AF of ~1.125 which is clearly wrong given the activity. So it has to either not be using Mifflin St Jeor BMR as its base, or it is mis-configured, or something else unusual is taking place)

    Note too that the above discussion has to do with your settings as a general discussion. Individual results will vary and only your own trending weight loss results will tell you whether the base settings are reflective of reality for you or not.
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    Ok , a friend told me to get my TDEE and input that into my calorie goal and do a 40 carb 40 protein 20 fat for macros , my activity level is just Active , I remove the tracking of the steps , this is what we come up today axpj3zhwhdik.png
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
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  • Packerjohn
    Packerjohn Posts: 4,855 Member
    Edd1752017 wrote: »
    This is today , do I get to eat more or should jus skip dinner

    This shows almost 700 calorie out of 2100 are high calorie, nutrient dense foods (soda, donuts, Doritos). If this is normal, might want to work to get 80-90% of your calories from nutrient dense foods.
  • Edd1752017
    Edd1752017 Posts: 13 Member
    If I use my TDEE as a guide line and consume 500 less than I am supposed to , would that create a calorie deficit, of course keeping in mind the macros right
  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member
    Edd1752017 wrote: »
    If I use my TDEE as a guide line and consume 500 less than I am supposed to , would that create a calorie deficit, of course keeping in mind the macros right

    yes thats generally how its done.
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