Do you track your exercise?
RunnerGirl238
Posts: 448 Member
I feel like when I track the exercise, I eat more. What do you do?
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Replies
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I think you’re supposed to6
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Absolutely.
This site gives you a calorie goal with your deficit built in but does not include intentional exercise as you add this in as you go. Moving more means you can/should eat more as you're fueling your workouts and preventing your calorie deficit from being greater than it should be. Larger deficits can make adherence more difficult and, for some people, results in restrict/binge cycles, among other negative effects.
This is an excellent video on the topic:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10503681/exercise-calories-do-i-eat-these-a-video-explanation/p111 -
Yep and I eat more when I exercise. Lost over 100lbs doing so.9
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Yes. I log my exercise into MFP. And yes, exercise does often increase appetite. It can be difficult, but sometimes I just have to resist the urge to eat, use some self control and discipline and tell my stomach NO4
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RunnerGirl238 wrote: »I feel like when I track the exercise, I eat more. What do you do?
That is precisely what is meant to happen. The calorie amount given by MFP has your deficit included before any intentional exercise. You need to refuel what you burn for healthy weight loss.6 -
RunnerGirl238 wrote: »I feel like when I track the exercise, I eat more. What do you do?
Yes I track all extra activity that falls outside of my normal daily routine - 60 minute walks, 30 minute treadmill session, 10 minute kettle bell routine, etc.
The extra calories gained can be eaten back in increased food intake, but the general recommendation is to eat about 50% of it.1 -
If you don't eat back your exercise calories, you end up really hungry. That makes it much harder to stick to healthy eating long term. Instead of getting into a starve and binge cycle, by eating your exercise calories, you feel more satisfied with your way of eating, so you'll continue to watch what you eat.
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Yes, I track my exercise ... and yes, you'd better believe I eat more.0
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I track my exercise, and eat back some or all of my calories. I only log things that go above and beyond my normal day-to-day movements at work or at home. (Ex: I don't log cleaning, but I do log a 15 minute walk outside)0
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You track/log, and eat exercises calories if you follow the MFP way (NEAT). You don't if you use the TDEE method.
I don't track exercise calories anymore. I log the kind of exercises that I do and the time spent doing them, and give myself 10 calories per exercise. With years of practice and experience and found my own TDEE, and the calories that I need to eat to maintain my weight. Since I am small and old, I don't burn many calories resting or even exercising,0 -
Of course. And then I enjoy the extra calories I get to eat to fuel my workouts, knowing that I'm not overeating them. (I used to think, in all seriousness, that running up three flights of stairs would entitle me to a brownie or doughnut. Now, I realize that's more like a 2-hour walk.)3
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