calories earned

babs72
Posts: 5 Member
hi I'm new to MFP and I have just been reading a couple of threads on here. I'm confused. if i have earned extra calories why do i need to use them. surely they are there to show how much I have burnt and then if I stick to 1200 I will lose weight. I hope this makes sense. I'm really confused now.
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Replies
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The calories mfp gives you include your deficit to lose weight anything over that just makes your deficit bigger which is not always a good thing mfp expects you to log and eat back at least a portion of the calories you earn. A portion because they can be inflated most start with 50% and adjust accordingly4
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A couple things. This website gave you a goal BEFORE exercise and based on one set activity level.
If you are earning calories thru exercise, log that and eat a portion of those calories (only a portion because exercise calories can be inflated). If you are earning calories thru an activity tracker, this means you are more active (today) than the one set level you signed up for. Activity trackers can give pretty good estimates for step based exercise.
1200 is the DEFAULT minimum for women......as low as MFP will go. 1200 is NET, that means pre-exercise. Only a small % of women really need a goal that low to lose weight (very petite, elderly, and/or very sedentary). The 1200 goal is pretty common because so many choose an overly aggressive weekly weight loss goal.
What's the difference in losing weight aggressively vs. moderately? Do you want weight loss or fat loss? A moderate deficit, adequate protein, and strength training can help you keep more lean muscle. Healthy weight loss should help you lower your body fat %.5 -
If you think of calories as fuel for your body - you need to replenish what you use or you will run out.3
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why eating too little is a bad idea (even if you lose faster):
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10569458/why-eating-too-little-calories-is-a-bad-idea/p1
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You should eat back *some* of your exercise calories especially if you are shooting for such a low (1200 calorie) net. Consider it some reward for your hard work in the gym! But I think sometimes those exercise calories are inflated so probably no more than half.1
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1200 calories (unless you're a very short, elderly, sedentary female) is already pushing the boundaries of sustainable calorie intake. Add in the calories burned by activity and your calorie deficit is very likely excessive and can lead to physical problems (brittle nails, hair loss, loss of muscle mass).
An excessive calorie deficit also means that you're very likely setting yourself up for binges that will blow your calorie intake out beyond that of a more sensible and appropriate calorie intake.1 -
1200 calories (unless you're a very short, elderly, sedentary female) is already pushing the boundaries of sustainable calorie intake. Add in the calories burned by activity and your calorie deficit is very likely excessive and can lead to physical problems (brittle nails, hair loss, loss of muscle mass).
An excessive calorie deficit also means that you're very likely setting yourself up for binges that will blow your calorie intake out beyond that of a more sensible and appropriate calorie intake.
Eat your exercise calories.
I'm a short-ish (5'5"), elderly-ish (63 y/o), sedentary (outside of intentional exercise), female . . . and a consistent 1200 daily calories - even if I ate back all exercise calories - would put me in the hospital incapacitated in less than a year. (In theory, it'd get me from my current 135 to 52 pounds in 365 days, but I'm pretty sure I'd die before that.)
This is a good read: https://www.aworkoutroutine.com/1200-calorie-diet/
Give it some thought.1 -
Since the 1200 calorie part has already been covered, I'll talk about earned calories. The way the MFP calculator works is different from most calculators you see out there. Some calculators would include exercise calories as part of your diet so you don't have to eat them back. MFP, however, doesn't count them in until you add them, then adjusts the calories you need to eat. If you eat 1200 calories, then exercise for 400 without eating at least some of them back, your net calories would be effectively 800. Do you think 800 calories sounds healthy?
Here's a video you might find useful:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10503681/exercise-calories-do-i-eat-these-a-video-explanation/p1
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