"So the more you exercise, the more you can eat!" <-- too many calories?
footshoe
Posts: 7 Member
I'm sorry but I think this thing is suggesting I eat WAY too many calories to lose weight and definitely not enough protein.
298lbs, male, 34, 2699 calories a day seems like a bit much, I am thinking a more well rounded 2500 calories with a bit more protein than the suggested 135g. I've tried multiple calculators and some even suggest upwards to 3000, seems kind of ludicrous. The more I look into it the more confusing it gets, the more unsure I am about how to proceed.
298lbs, male, 34, 2699 calories a day seems like a bit much, I am thinking a more well rounded 2500 calories with a bit more protein than the suggested 135g. I've tried multiple calculators and some even suggest upwards to 3000, seems kind of ludicrous. The more I look into it the more confusing it gets, the more unsure I am about how to proceed.
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Replies
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https://www.iifym.com/iifym-calculator/
This calculator will help you heaps. Keep in mind that if you input your exercise details that it will take that into account for your calorie intake and you shouldn't "eat back" the extra exercise calories that MFP gives you.3 -
You could experiment with following those numbers for a few weeks and see what your results are. You can always adjust as you go.4
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Hmm you sure that's not your maintenance?
I started out at 292lb and my maintenance was 2760 per day
I ate 2000, did some exercise (did not eat those back) and dropped 2.7 per week for 23 weeks straight1 -
thanks for the replies everyone, I will play with the numbers as the weeks go on and see how everything works out, the "eat back" calorie feature seems like a fatal flaw that will be the deciding factor of whether I continue with this app or not1
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chucktonywhite wrote: »thanks for the replies everyone, I will play with the numbers as the weeks go on and see how everything works out, the "eat back" calorie feature seems like a fatal flaw that will be the deciding factor of whether I continue with this app or not
it's not a flaw
the calories you have set to lose weight does not include additional, intentional exercise
so when you exercise if you don't eat the calories back you will have a bigger deficit
That's what happened in my case - I was set to drop 2lb per week. I did approx 2400 in additional
exercise per week and ended up losing 2.7lb on average because I wasn't eating back
Thousands of people have had huge success using this app and you will too if you don't try to second guess it4 -
chucktonywhite wrote: »thanks for the replies everyone, I will play with the numbers as the weeks go on and see how everything works out, the "eat back" calorie feature seems like a fatal flaw that will be the deciding factor of whether I continue with this app or not
I love the eat back feature because the amount of exercise I do varies from day to day but each to their own. I just work out my NEAT (calories burned before any deliberate exercise) and add any exercise I do along the way. From this I now have a pretty good idea of total calories burned and the app will adjust my needed calories depending on the goals I have set.
If you are consistent with your exercise then use an online calculator to work out your TDEE which is your total energy burned. Deduct 500 calories from that number for 1 pound a week loss and enter that number for your daily calories but don't add any exercise you so. Seriously, once you work out how this app works you will struggle to find any better.1 -
Adding to the above, your tracking (the weighing and measuring of food & choosing the correct entries from the data base, and the apps that estimate calorie burn) will have an enormous impact.0
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If you tell the truth to MFP and accurately describe your activity level, honestly and accurately describe your food and exercise, and eat to the macros your food diary indicates, you will loose weight and you won't have to fool with any TDEE calculator.
If you refuse to use the tools of myfitnesspal, why not just rant about your tdee confusion on facebook?5 -
Also, you can fiddle with your macros all you like, it just starts you out there. But if you know you feel better with higher protein, higher carb, lower fat, or super high carb, mid fat, mid protein (maybe you run a ton and are just starving for carbs?), or whatever macro blend fits your lifestyle, you can do whatever you like macro wise. Just go into goals and change the macro settings.0
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why is it ludicrious - i'm 5'3", 154 and I MAINTAIN on 2500 cal a day - you weight 150lbs more than me and you think that 100 extra cals a day is crazy high...you don't have to excessively cut calories to lose weight7
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