What should I do with leftover calories?
boxedwineisjustfine
Posts: 15 Member
After exercising I have 400-500 calories leftover. For weight loss, should I aim to have a deficit or should I be eating to make up for them? TIA!
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Replies
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By the letter of the law, you should be eating to make up for them. MFP already has you at a deficit... the exercise just makes the deficit larger. Eating back those calories keep on you plane.4
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If your calorie goal comes from MFP, the intention is for you to eat those calories.
Your initial goal from MFP, before the exercise calories, already puts you at a deficit (assuming you told MFP your goal was to lose weight).1 -
heatheralamode wrote: »After exercising I have 400-500 calories leftover. For weight loss, should I aim to have a deficit or should I be eating to make up for them? TIA!
Eat them, MFP gives you a deficit before exercise.1 -
heatheralamode wrote: »After exercising I have 400-500 calories leftover. For weight loss, should I aim to have a deficit or should I be eating to make up for them? TIA!
Your calorie goal already gives you a deficit, so not eating your exercise calories would make your deficit bigger (often too big). Calorie burn estimates can be off though, so many start out eating back half, and then over time if they are losing weight too fast or too slow, or find they are too hungry or their performance is suffering, will tweak from there.5 -
The calorie goal MFP gave you assumes that you will eat more calories when you exercise - you are already at a deficit, and exercise makes that deficit greater. This might be helpful, or it might lead to you under-eating - it depends on your personal numbers. The standard recommendation is to eat a percentage of your calories over the course of 4-6 weeks and adjust if you don't lose at the expected rate.
Alternatively, some people like to "bank" exercise calories for the weekend or another higher calories day, and average our deficit out over the week. Again, it just depends on how you want to do it.2 -
Thanks guys! That’s what I wanted to hear ;D6
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Eat them. I had some left over last night so I treated myself to a cup of drinking chocolate.0
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Eat them. I had some left over last night so I treated myself to a cup of drinking chocolate.
Are drinking chocolate and hot chocolate the same thing? I had never heard the term "drinking chocolate" before and it intrigues me
Sorry to briefly hijack your thread OP but variations in chocolate consumption is too important for me to ignore!4 -
Eat them. I had some left over last night so I treated myself to a cup of drinking chocolate.
Are drinking chocolate and hot chocolate the same thing? I had never heard the term "drinking chocolate" before and it intrigues me
Sorry to briefly hijack your thread OP but variations in chocolate consumption is too important for me to ignore!
Yep the same. Although I think technically drinking chocolate should be literally chocolate melted into milk, none of this powder nonsense.3 -
I have to eat my extra calories or I feel like I'm going to faint...especially if I have extra calories leftover because I'm exercising.0
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first make sure your workout calories are measured accurately. You don't want to celebrate by eating 500 back when you only burned 250.
That said, once you figured out what you can eat back.... protein shake after protein shake... also lots of fiber8 -
And just for the record, I swear exercise calories are the most delicious!5
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darrenbeckworth wrote: »first make sure your workout calories are measured accurately. You don't want to celebrate by eating 500 back when you only burned 250.
That said, once you figured out what you can eat back.... protein shake after protein shake... also lots of fiber
Absolutely no need for protein shakes, particularly if protein needs are already met.7 -
If I've got 400-500 calories left over, it's time for peanut butter or ice cream. Or even peanut butter ON ice cream.4
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Give them to me and my poverty cals3
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I eat them back if I think I need them. Either if my body is craving them or I need them for recovery. I don't eat back my calories as a rule because I'm a hiker. I can burn 1500 in a day. And I can't eat those as well as my daily allowance (tdee is 1650 on a sedentary workday) in one meal. I tend to have breakfast, light lunch and maybe a sugary snack whilst walking so I'm left with over 2000 calories for dinner. Not going to happen, I'll make myself sick. I tend to live by the mantra "listen to your body"0
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I bank them .. This way come the weekend I dont feel guilty when I shoot several hundred over my goal by enjoying a couple of treats.
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If I know I'm going to exercise a lot, like 800 calories, I will prepare and plan to eat bigger meals that day or the day before. This way I eat back the calories to fuel the work out. If you work out at night, of course you probably won't want to eat a big meal afterwards. For me that has caused problems. I would wake up from 2-4 am from hunger and it would be hard to "catch up" the next day. For me a recipe for disaster since I work with people and I must be alert and pleasant. (No cranky, hungry or low energy).0
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Eat them or bank them for a higher calorie day0
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