Is cleaning the house a good way to burn calories? Do you count it?
Missycvt
Posts: 422 Member
I've been cleaning all day. Garage, driveway, bathrooms, living room, kitchen, etc...I know that MFP has an exercise input for cleaning and I'm curious as to who counts this and who doesn't consider it as heavy calorie burn? At least for the day of...
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I'm sure if you accompany it with exercise it is always better but does anyone else feel that it is necessary to consider cleaning an exercise for weight loss?1
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If you wanna burn some calories via cleaning, pick up that bar and do some real cleaning.. throw in a jerk as well and you'll be good.
Don't bother counting house work as exersice. They don't burn that much.5 -
The only way I would 'count' them is if I wore an activity tracker and let that handle my activity via adjustments for more and less active days.7
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I would not.1
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Activity levels assume that cleaning house, shopping, etc. are part of your normal energy expenditure. I would look at the extra calories burned from in-depth cleaning as bonus, and not count it as exercise.2
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I'd say if you generally don't do housework and you're doing some heavy chores. I usually have a cleaning lady come. Now, if I were doing spring cleaning on my own, where I was moving furniture, climbing on ladders to do windows, scrubbing grime from shelves that have not been scrubbed in a long time, going out and weeding the stuff coming up between the patio stones... yes, I'd probably log that. Just pushing a mop and broom and some light dusting? Not so much.2
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I don't count things that I would normally do anyway in my day to day life such as housework, yard work, grocery shopping, preparing meals, etc. I only count things I do specifically for the purpose of losing weight or getting into shape.3
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No. Things even out. You will have some days that are more sedentary than others.3
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I've been cleaning all day. Garage, driveway, bathrooms, living room, kitchen, etc...I know that MFP has an exercise input for cleaning and I'm curious as to who counts this and who doesn't consider it as heavy calorie burn? At least for the day of...
I consider it exercise if I am doing it for a long amount of time. I don't normally clean for hours at a time every single day so yes I think cleaning for hours is exercise because it is NOT my usual routine to clean that much.1 -
Relax_Its_Just_Burpees wrote: »If you wanna burn some calories via cleaning, pick up that bar and do some real cleaning.. throw in a jerk as well and you'll be good.
Don't bother counting house work as exersice. They don't burn that much.
That's false. If you do it for hours it can burn a lot. You can exercise for an hr and burn 500 calories so if you clean for 5 hrs you better believe you can burn at the very least 500 calories. Even with a low intensity you are moving for 5 times the amount of time.2 -
I don't count my daily life as exercise, but if I spent an entire day doing heavy cleaning, I'd probably not use the "sedentary" calculation at MFP for that day. I'd check to see what lightly active or active calories would be. I wouldn't call it exercise, but it's definitely activity.1
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I count it if it's not my normal activity. Like day to day cleaning I don't count. Of I go crazy and really clean I do. I don't eat all of the exercise calories though.1
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I wouldn't count it, I just take those days as an added bonus.1
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I don't count regular chores1
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I wouldn't call it a "good" way to burn calories. Does it burn calories? Yes. Is it more than sitting about? Yes. Would I recommend it as a good way to burn calories? No... though I'd recommend you do it because ya'know. Clean house.5
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I don't normally but on the rare days when I tear into it at a fever pitch I would. Those times I break a sweat and feel fit to collapse afterwards it's definitely more of an exercise.1
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Nah- Ill just enjoy a bigger deficit. If its heavy duty garage work I just reward myself with a beer and call it a day.
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nope.
then again- I don't clean- so there is that.3 -
The only times I've counted it was when heavy lifting, boxes, footlockers and more than 10 trips up and down the stairs where done. Otherwise no. I do count snow shoveling (800ft driveway ) and raking (a few acres)1
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I just let my fitbit measure my steps so I don't log it as a specific activity, just part of my daily adjustment.2
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I think it's a good way to get an extra "hidden" burn. I personally would not count that in my exercise diary. But that's my personal preference.
However, the number of times I see people on my feed who count things like cooking or cleaning as exercise and then go on to complain that they're not losing weight seems pretty high in comparison to people who only count the planned exercise.3 -
I think it's a good way to get an extra "hidden" burn. I personally would not count that in my exercise diary. But that's my personal preference.
However, the number of times I see people on my feed who count things like cooking or cleaning as exercise and then go on to complain that they're not losing weight seems pretty high in comparison to people who only count the planned exercise.
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I have a wife so why would I clean the house?
#Joking!
It's a good thing to swap inactivity for being active but no I wouldn't log it as exercise.1
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