Do you burned cardio calories?
LyssaRonnell
Posts: 182 Member
Does anyone else not log cardio workouts that add burned calories to their diaries? I do cardio along with strength training, but I would rather not have that added towards my availible calories. What are everyone's thoughts?
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Replies
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For me, it depends on how many calories it is. If it's 100-200 calories, I don't worry about it. If it's edging nearer to 400-500+, then I would log and eat back some of those calories.2
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If I'm feeling hungry, I log the workout out in order to eat back the calories, at least partially... sometimes completely.
If I'm feeling fine, I don't bother logging the workout and kind of leave it as a fail-safe, in case I underestimated any food calories I logged throughout the week.
I'm talking about short 20-30 minutes - moderate pace workouts though, nothing too intense.
I think we all have to find our own way of doing our own thang. Within sensible and responsible guidelines, of course!1 -
If your weight loss rate is slow, and your exercise not long or intense, that's fine.
If your weight loss rate is very aggressive, and your exercise is long and relatively intense, not eating back at least some of the calories isn't a good plan - equivalent to severely undereating, so unhealthy.
In between those two extremes, it's a judgement call.
I estimated mine carefully, and ate pretty much all of them back, while losing 50+ pounds in just less than a year.
I'd recommend eating half of them to start, and adjusting after a few weeks if necessary.4 -
I log them, they form the majority of my exercise cals and I go pretty hard so I need/want to be able to eat those back.1
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Why ever not? When I get through with a run, I'm starving. Hell yeah I want to eat those calories back.6
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I log it, so I can keep track of my workouts, and I log the guesstimated calories, because, well, I like to see how hard I'm working.0
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LyssaRonnell wrote: »Does anyone else not log cardio workouts that add burned calories to their diaries? I do cardio along with strength training, but I would rather not have that added towards my availible calories. What are everyone's thoughts?
If you don't want to eat back calories from exervise, don't use MFP numbers, use a TDEE calculator7 -
My exercise is very high volume and very varied - eating back my calories in the MFP method works fine for me.
You haven't mentioned your exercise volume or your rate of loss selected so there's no context. It could have little significance, it could be a huge mistake to ignore them. Exercise is a perfectly valid calorie burner and I don't really see why people see it as special or optional (unlike BMR and activity levels).
As a general concept the idea that when you move more you need to eat more makes perfect sense and is a valuable life lesson. As is the obverse - when you move less you need to eat less.0 -
I don't do that. I love food and logging cardio means more food. I take advantage of this and love that I'm able to lose weight without having to live on poverty calories.
Like others said, it's okay to not eat back light or short cardio if you aren't set to lose aggressively. Otherwise, you're setting yourself up for a host of problems you can do without.6 -
Mine were logged and eaten 100%.
I need those calories to fuel my workouts.
If I don't eat my exercise calories my everyday activity slowly drops to compensate and that affects my NEAT.
I lost weight and exercised for the health benefits so why wouldn't I eat back the calories I needed.
Cheers, h.6 -
Thanks guys, everything you all said really helps. I've been strength training as well, so I see I really need to log my burned calories to really make sure my body is fueled through all of that and the cardio.3
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I usually don't log "cleaning, light" or "cooking, food preparation", which are available entries, even though I do most of the cleaning, cooking, and food prep. I do log other outdoor chores and eat most of the calories I log.1
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LyssaRonnell wrote: »Does anyone else not log cardio workouts that add burned calories to their diaries? I do cardio along with strength training, but I would rather not have that added towards my availible calories. What are everyone's thoughts?
My thoughts are that if I didn't account for my exercise calories in one way or another then I would be substantially under eating most of the time.3
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