Exercise and losing weight
karen_hunter11
Posts: 20 Member
Hello another question. I've seen and heard plenty of ladies mention they lost quite a bit of weight without exercising. (Personally I've never been this lucky) however I keep seeing "you have to burn more calories than you take in". How does one lose weight if they aren't exercising to burn more calories than they take in? I can cut my calories why down and until I incorporate some exercising a few times a week I don't much of anything. Just curious how others are so lucky to not have to exercise to lose weight?
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Replies
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It's not luck--it's a choice. You can lose weight without exercising, just make sure you're in a calorie deficit. Exercising gives you more calories to eat, so many prefer to exercise. You'll also look better once you've lost the weight.4
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karen_hunter11 wrote: »Hello another question. I've seen and heard plenty of ladies mention they lost quite a bit of weight without exercising. (Personally I've never been this lucky) however I keep seeing "you have to burn more calories than you take in". How does one lose weight if they aren't exercising to burn more calories than they take in? I can cut my calories why down and until I incorporate some exercising a few times a week I don't much of anything. Just curious how others are so lucky to not have to exercise to lose weight?
Your body burns calories all day for beating your heart, moving your diaphragm to take a breathe, walking around, digesting food, repairing cells, vacuuming the living room, etc etc. So you can eat less than you burn without exercising. For very small and sedentary women, this can be difficult, but not impossible.
Your BMR is the number of calories your body would burn if you lay motionless all day, like you were in a coma.
Your NEAT is the number of calories your body burns in a typical day, not including purposeful exercise. This is what MFP uses. So NEAT would be BMR + calories burned just going about your normal day. You need to eat less than this to lose weight without exercise. If you set up your profile correctly and got a calorie goal from MFP to lose weight, that goal will have you eating less than you burn without exercise.
If you exercise, you need to log that and it will give you more calories to eat.
If you'd like, you can post your height, weight, and goal weight and make your diary temporarily public and fresh eyes might be able to spot where you might be running into trouble. Obviously, not everyone is comfortable doing that though!8 -
Exercise isn't the only way the body burns calories, the majority of energy spent is done so just keeping us living on a daily basis (breathing, thinking, digestion, and other basic functions).
Weight loss does occur when your energy output (calories burned) is more than your energy input (calories consumed), this is fundamentally referred to as being in a calorie deficit and is the entire driving force for weight/fat loss. It's not that the people you see that have been successful losing weight without exercise are "lucky" or blessed with "high metabolism"; they simply restrict their calorie intake to a point where their calorie burn throughout their normal day is less than what their body uses so they lose weight over time.
The fact that you've not been successful trying this in the past is rooted in that you didn't restrict you intake enough to consistently stay in a caloric deficit.3 -
Your body burns calories just to keep itself alive (BMR) plus burns more during your daily activities. You have to take those into account.
Between the two of these (no intentional exercise), I burn around 1700 calories a day. So if I eat less than that, I'll lose weight.2 -
Based on some of your other threads, I just want to point out the "frequently asked questions" section. It has a wealth of information:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10300319/most-helpful-posts-general-health-fitness-and-diet-must-reads#latest4 -
You burn calories just by being alive daily and then you get more when you walk around a grocery store or do housework. I burn around 1600-1700 calories just doing my normal routine, without exercise. If I burn 1700 calories that day and only eat 1200 calories, then I will lose weight because I am in a deficit of 500 calories. If I do that daily then I will lose 1 pound a week. Now if I add exercise, I could try to lose 2 lbs. a week or eat back those calories and just lose 1 pound that week. I prefer eating more food.1
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Thank you all. Your feedback was a lot of help. I appreciate your knowledge, ideas and feedback very much! 🤗2
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I am lazy. My natural state is slug-like playing games with bursts of high energy activities of FUN. I have a pretty tolerable neat (I'm jittery at work). I don't consciously go to the gym as a normal state (though I've been known to be prodded for building muscle with weights when a friend drags me out), so I don't factor in exercise. I keep a range of TDEEs (lowest [Losing @ 1lb/week] -> maintenance at goal weight [Still Losing] -> maintenance at current weight [Not gaining at least]) and make sure I fall somewhere in that range on a weekly basis. I usually eat a % of my exercise calories back because I don't consciously "exercise".
I do things I like with the SO: walking, hiking, etc. I don't exercise to "go exercise for weightloss" as that's not sustainable for me in the long run. I embrace both aspects of myself: the slug that wants to play video games (less crunchies for me) and the hiker that wants to see amazing vistas and walk through the jungles of far off places (lots more crunchies for me! Yippee!) and the girl who likes to go for a nightly walk with the hubs to talk about the game we play together (a little more crunchies for me).
And if I really want extra crunchies, well then, I'm driven to walk. XD
So yes, it's entirely possible to lose weight without exercise. Is it possible to get the body you want without exercise? That's different and entirely dependent upon what body you want. I'm happy with somewhere in between lean and soft, because I know 100% that's sustainable for me. XD2 -
It's just math. As you go one day after another in a modest calorie deficit, you accumulate weeks and months of humongous calorie deficits that translate into lost weight. The weekly or more often days of oopsie can easily negate a good handful of 'nailed it' days. This is why people doubt the facts.0
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I actually find it easier to lose weight without much added exercise (I still do some exercise, but not intense, 2 hour workouts or heavy lifting). If I'm working out too hard/intensely my appetite skyrockets and staying in enough of a deficit to appreciably lose weight is nearly impossible - my workouts start to suffer, as does my sanity lol.
Much easier to stick with a much lighter workout plan and work on eating less than trying to do both at the same time - at least for me. I'm sure others have different stories.2 -
Weight loss is 90% diet, exercise & lifestyle are more minor components. You can lose by diet alone. I find it helps to add exercise and some lifestyle modifications (sleep, etc) and those changes are just good for your overall health. However, for purely weight loss its not necessary.0
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Thanks ladies, I have a better understanding now. I appreciate your feedback. 🤗1
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