Exercise vs diet
mkeatonmom4
Posts: 36 Member
I had a doctor tell me once that diet was had more of an impact on weight loss than exercise. She did not say that exercise wasn’t important.
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Weight loss is caused by being in a calorie deficit. Exercise is important for health and fitness.14
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Ditto @harper16
Weight loss is always about taking in less calories than your body burns.5 -
As others have said, it’s about consuming fewer calories than you burn. Theoretically, you could eat nothing but cupcakes and lose weight as long as you eat LESS calories than your body requires to maintain your current weight. You would probably feel pretty awful though since you would be missing many of the nutrients you need.
For me, the exercise portion is to help me reach the physic I want and to help burn more calories so I can continue to eat at a deficit.4 -
Dieting is for the scale, exercise is for the mirror. 😉10
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It takes me at least half an hour of reasonably intense exercise to burn 250 extra calories (and fewer calories would be more realistic for half an hour, for many exercise types). It takes me a couple of minutes, tops, to eat a Snickers bar with that many calories.
I really like my exercise, and there are bunch of other good reasons to do some, but when it comes to weight loss alone, it's a heck of a lot easier, less time consuming, and less complicated to cut out eating the Snickers bar than it is to add the exercise, if you ask me.
The numbers would be different if I were a bigger person, or a more/less fit one than I am, but the underlying concept is reasonably realistic at all sizes and fitness levels.
Which you should do depends on a lot of individual factors. There isn't a universal formula for what's best.3 -
I’ve always heard (and agree with) the phrase “You can’t out exercise a bad diet.” It is possible to lose weight with diet only, I’ve done it. It is healthier to do it with a sensible exercise plan as it does burn more calories, helps build muscles (which burns more calories), and improves cardiovascular health, blood sugar levels, etc.4
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I can agree with your doctor. Losing weight requires a calorie deficit; its up to you how you create that deficit. Exercise can do it, but only if you have your diet under control and know that you are eating at maintenance. The problem with trying to do it with exercise alone is that many people end up eating back what they burned in exercise and then some, which means they are consuming more and therefore wiping out their deficit.
For me, I much prefer to use MFP's NEAT method of creating my deficit and then just add back in exercise calories as a bonus. The exercise for me gets me bonus calories to help with the snack drive in the evenings and to build my stamina and health.
That said, there are still many people who think that you can't lose weight without exercise. my 88 year old grandmother, for instance......(and at that age, I don't see the point in trying to argue with her when she says "you can't lose weight if you don't exercise"). She's set in her ways lol3 -
Agreed. My exercise is more for my mental health and feeling fit and healthy.
However, it does mean I can have 40g of peanuts in the evening should I choose to, which is lovely.0 -
Exercise is for heart & lung health, stamina/endurance, flexibility, etc. It can have a side benefit that it burns a little additional calories.
But how much you consume: determines whether or not you'll lose weight.mkeatonmom4 wrote: »I had a doctor tell me once that diet was had more of an impact on weight loss than exercise. She did not say that exercise wasn’t important.
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A friend of mine who happens to be a physician always says "you cannot out-exercise a bad diet". Based on my experience over the years he is right
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The problem with trying to lose weight with only exercise is that if you do not have your food controlled your body will see the extra energy demands and increase your hunger to supply it.
There will always be exceptions to the rule though. You will find some people who have managed to lose at least some amount of weight with creating a deficit through exercise. Of course it could also be that exercise helped them eat less food because it kept them busy or less bored during a time they snacked... without food monitoring it is hard to know.
The other problem with exercise is that it is not an easy habit to form or maintain for a lot of people. Injuries can limit or prevent exercise for days, weeks, months or more.
Food control can be produce consistent results even if adherence is not always perfect. As long as you are in a calorie deficit most of the time you can make great strides even if you are sedentary. My views are that a long term sedentary lifestyle is a health risk so I do think it is better to try and move more but for weight loss it is not necessary.1 -
Once again, @ninerbuff knows.0
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I've heard that diet and calorie deficit makes you lose weight but exercise is helpful for keeping it off/maintenance0
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Agreed with everyone.
For me exercise was huge in ensuring I stuck to calorie counting and helped me to see food as fuel and necessary rather than the ideal being 0 calories.2 -
I heard someone say recently that 85% of weight you lose is lost in the kitchen. This was specifically about men over 40. I have to say for myself that this is so, so true. I can kill myself in the gym until I get injured and not lose weight and keep it off. But as I corrected my diet choices I have seen lasting benefits.1
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My personal observation is that if I am consistently working out I seem to care more about my nutrition especially calorie intake. So for me, good eating habits and exercise go hand in hand and I’ve never been successful when isolating one or the other although I’ve tried many times.
Without exercise I should be around 2000 cals/day but i find this very hard to do. So I exercise and eat around 2500/day.
Also, there’s nothing quite as obvious seeing how hard it is to burn an extra 200 or 300 calories on a rower or walking etc, then looking at the calorie content of a small portion of ice cream.6 -
I just have so many questions it is crazy! I am 45 years old. 9 kids still at the house. My husband and I have started trying to eat healthier and exercise more. I was walking 30 minutes a day. Now I am walking 60 minutes a day. Mist days of the week. He doesn’t track food. I try to. My dietician wants me to focus more on whole grain, fruits and vegetables. I get that and I try very hard to do that. It can be hard to keep the house stocked with healthy foods. My kids eat too. I feel like my walks are moderate . I am huffing and puffing. My feet hurt. I keep going. It is hard to be certain that all the numbers are correct. My dietician says I am doing things right by just changing my diet and exercise. I just worry it is not enough. I can’t afford the premium MFP. I don’t want to live my life just by numbers on the MFP app. My dietician says we eat food not numbers. Is it possible I am too rigid with this. My therapist thinks so too. Maybe I am. I have become more active and I do pay better attention to my food choices. I guess I should be happy with that for now . My husband thinks I am to hard on myself. Sorry for the long essay!2
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mkeatonmom4 wrote: »I had a doctor tell me once that diet was had more of an impact on weight loss than exercise. She did not say that exercise wasn’t important.
Regular exercise is important for you overall health and well being, particularly if you don't have an active type of job. Exercise does not default to weight loss though...if you exercise regularly and eat maintenance calories you will maintain...if you eat surplus calories you will gain.2 -
mkeatonmom4 wrote: »I just have so many questions it is crazy! I am 45 years old. 9 kids still at the house. My husband and I have started trying to eat healthier and exercise more. I was walking 30 minutes a day. Now I am walking 60 minutes a day. Mist days of the week. He doesn’t track food. I try to. My dietician wants me to focus more on whole grain, fruits and vegetables. I get that and I try very hard to do that. It can be hard to keep the house stocked with healthy foods. My kids eat too. I feel like my walks are moderate . I am huffing and puffing. My feet hurt. I keep going. It is hard to be certain that all the numbers are correct. My dietician says I am doing things right by just changing my diet and exercise. I just worry it is not enough. I can’t afford the premium MFP. I don’t want to live my life just by numbers on the MFP app. My dietician says we eat food not numbers. Is it possible I am too rigid with this. My therapist thinks so too. Maybe I am. I have become more active and I do pay better attention to my food choices. I guess I should be happy with that for now . My husband thinks I am to hard on myself. Sorry for the long essay!
It is unlikely you need the few added features that the premium version of MFP provides. Many many successful people here have only used the free version.
"Healthier" foods can easily add up to more calories than you need in a day making them unhealthy for you. It is better to eat a healthy number of calories.
I find numbers relaxing and reassuring. I fully understand that others will feel differently. If you want your weight to drop you must be in an energy deficit. This is easy to verify with calorie counting but it is not required.
I strongly suggest you invest in better shoes as soon as you can. You are trying to form a habit of walking and if your feet hurt that is how your brain will associate the activity and begin to balk when it is time to do it.
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mkeatonmom4 wrote: »I just have so many questions it is crazy! I am 45 years old. 9 kids still at the house. My husband and I have started trying to eat healthier and exercise more. I was walking 30 minutes a day. Now I am walking 60 minutes a day. Mist days of the week. He doesn’t track food. I try to. My dietician wants me to focus more on whole grain, fruits and vegetables. I get that and I try very hard to do that. It can be hard to keep the house stocked with healthy foods. My kids eat too. I feel like my walks are moderate . I am huffing and puffing. My feet hurt. I keep going. It is hard to be certain that all the numbers are correct. My dietician says I am doing things right by just changing my diet and exercise. I just worry it is not enough. I can’t afford the premium MFP. I don’t want to live my life just by numbers on the MFP app. My dietician says we eat food not numbers. Is it possible I am too rigid with this. My therapist thinks so too. Maybe I am. I have become more active and I do pay better attention to my food choices. I guess I should be happy with that for now . My husband thinks I am to hard on myself. Sorry for the long essay!
You are doing the things you can do, to improve. That's the good path. Stay on that path, gradually incorporating manageable positive tweaks to eating and activity levels, and you'll get there. Incremental change is easiest, and most sustainable, for most of us. At times, it can feel like nothing much is happening, but when you reach the point of looking back several months, you'll be surprised at what you've achieved.
Listen to your dietitian.
There's no magic in Premium MFP. The basics you truly need - especially at first - are in the free MFP.
On the exercise front, for most of us, the sweet spot is something that is just a little bit challenging to current capabilities, a bit of a push forward, but not miserable, painful or exhausting. That's an improvement path, and a side benefit is that we learn that moving more can be enjoyable, doesn't need to be punitive. You've doubled your walks: That's amazing!
You're doing fine. Be kind to yourself, celebrate the positive changes. How would you talk to your best friend, if she were working on what you're working on, in the way you now are? Talk to yourself that way. Persistence IMO is more important than perfection.
If someone had told me at age 45 (when I was wrapping up stage III cancer & a full course of treatment, obese, totally inactive, physically depleted), that I'd later be compete as an athlete, work out regularly, eventually be as slim as I'd been at 22, I would've thought they were out of their ever-lovin' mind. But now, age 64, that's more or less where I've gotten, through a series of individually pretty small, manageable life changes. I surprised myself. You can, too.
Wishing you continuing success - just keep going!
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One of the biggest dilemmas of those wishing to lose weight is what they should begin with. Should they alter their diet first or include exercise in their daily routine?
Weight loss can be a tricky game if you tend to listen to all instructions that are there. In fact, many times they mean no weight lost but permanent damages caused.
So find out about it on the source given below:
SOURCE- https://www.femina.in/wellness/weight-loss/exercise-or-diet-what-should-you-focus-more-on-for-weight-loss-83451.html-3
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