What is that 0.9?!
shaisthakhan
Posts: 3 Member
Hi All,
I know everyone says that you shouldn't weigh yourself too frequently...but I cannot resist!
When I weigh myself on the digital scale it reads 54.9 kg one day and the next day it reads 54.1 kg. Now, the numbers 9/ 1 is for grams yeah?
And 3500 calories=1 pound. So I know that to loose one pound in a week I have to create a defecit and work it off. Is there any such representation for estimating grams as well? Do I make sense? LOL.
I know everyone says that you shouldn't weigh yourself too frequently...but I cannot resist!
When I weigh myself on the digital scale it reads 54.9 kg one day and the next day it reads 54.1 kg. Now, the numbers 9/ 1 is for grams yeah?
And 3500 calories=1 pound. So I know that to loose one pound in a week I have to create a defecit and work it off. Is there any such representation for estimating grams as well? Do I make sense? LOL.
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Replies
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Ok I think what your looking for is how to convert pounds into KG - 2.2lbs = 1KG
So a 500cal Deficit per day will = 1 Pound loss after a week, or 0.5kg also shown as 500g (give or take a little)
Hope that help and is what your after
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I get confused on how the deficit really works. Because if you burn 500 calories but then you eat them back how are you in deficit? Please explain0
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once a week or you will driver yourself crazy:bigsmile:
I weigh in pounds, am over 50 :noway: and it takes forEVER for me to lose a full pound. Ok a month, but shoot that sucks:sad:
My scale purposely says the .04 or whatever so I can see my 1/2 pound change for the week.
I was so obsessed with the scale my friend took it from me for a month and locked it in her trunk. Good thing I didn't know a locksmith or thief
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If you eat the number of calories that MFP calculates for you, then you are at a calorie deficit. Exercise burns more calories, which are added to your daily allotment by MFP when you log your exercise. That keeps the deficit the same as if you had done no exercise.I get confused on how the deficit really works. Because if you burn 500 calories but then you eat them back how are you in deficit? Please explain
So if MFP set my calorie total to 1300 calories a day, that gives me a 600 calorie deficit.
I burn 500 calories at Zumba, and log that. MFP tells me my calories for the day are now 1300 + 500 for the exercise. I can eat all of those calories, and still keep that 600 calorie a day deficit.
Some people don't eat all of their exercise calories to ensure that they aren't overestimating the calorie burn from exercise. You can also increase your deficit this way, but need to be careful. Too much of a deficit can make your body resist losing fat, as counterintuitive as that may seem. Good luck!0 -
Because the deficit is built into your goal calories already. The calories MFP tells you to eat has that 500 calorie deficit built in. You eat back exercise calories to maintain that 500 calorie deficit to lose weight safely.I get confused on how the deficit really works. Because if you burn 500 calories but then you eat them back how are you in deficit? Please explain0 -
If you eat the number of calories that MFP calculates for you, then you are at a calorie deficit. Exercise burns more calories, which are added to your daily allotment by MFP when you log your exercise. That keeps the deficit the same as if you had done no exercise.I get confused on how the deficit really works. Because if you burn 500 calories but then you eat them back how are you in deficit? Please explain
So if MFP set my calorie total to 1300 calories a day, that gives me a 600 calorie deficit.
I burn 500 calories at Zumba, and log that. MFP tells me my calories for the day are now 1300 + 500 for the exercise. I can eat all of those calories, and still keep that 600 calorie a day deficit.
Some people don't eat all of their exercise calories to ensure that they aren't overestimating the calorie burn from exercise. You can also increase your deficit this way, but need to be careful. Too much of a deficit can make your body resist losing fat, as counterintuitive as that may seem. Good luck!
Best explanation of why to eat back your exercise calories ever.0 -
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