Am I eating too little?

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I've been doing good since July and have lost about 75 pounds, but sometimes I get nervous I am doing it wrong and want to make sure I don't sabotage myself. I am supposed to eat 1300ish for sedentary lifestyle to lose 2 pounds a week. Of course it used to be higher when I was heavier but I don't struggle too much eating less since I do the intermittent fasting. I try to eat back half the calories I work out after reading it on here, but I'm technically under the minimum I'm supposed to eat if you minus the calories burned though I did eat over. Is that wiped away or since I still technically ate it I am still eating enough a day? (The first picture doesn't happen often, just after a really bad day with 2500k or so and no exercise)

Replies

  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,013 Member
    Suggestion: Don't lose (or try to lose) more than 1% of your current body weight weekly, and 0.5% is better if within 25 or so pounds of goal weight. Exception: If severely obese and under close medical supervision for negative impacts, faster loss may be OK.

    I don't see enough information in your post to evaluate this. 75 pounds in around 6-7 months is quite fast loss, but it's unclear how much you weighed at the start, or weigh now.
  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
    Yes I needed to lose it. I was at 315 pounds and now I am at 243.
  • sxmmxggio
    sxmmxggio Posts: 1 Member
    Yes girl, this is too little. I would slowly bring it up to at least 1600 calories a day. My dietitian put me on 1800 when I was at 245 and never said anything about changing it for the next 90 or so lbs (my goal weight).

    I easily lost 20 lbs before I ended up putting it on hold due to personal reasons.
  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
    I have heen eating 1700 and 1800 but I exercise off 700 of it. Is that fine or I have to eat 1800 after exercise?
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,013 Member
    I have heen eating 1700 and 1800 but I exercise off 700 of it. Is that fine or I have to eat 1800 after exercise?

    Assuming your MFP profile is set up correctly (basing activity level on life before intentional exercise), absolutely yes . . . with the caveat that exercise should be estimated carefully.

    Different estimating methods are better for different exercises. The MFP exercise database is fine for some, can be meaningfully inaccurate for others, in some scenarios. If we knew what you do, and how you're estimating it, people here could maybe make suggestions based on experience.

    For sure, though, if you are eating 1700/1800 and exercising off 700, you're effectively giving your body 1100 calories of fuel, which is not enough. I don't know how tall you are, or your age, but at your current weight, your BMR (basal metabolic rate) is probably around that 1700-1800. BMR is the amount you'd burn in a coma, completely still all day, just from doing things like breathing, pumping blood, etc. Your job, home chores, etc., burn calories on top of that. Intentional exercise burns still more calories on top of that. Losing too fast is not a good idea: It increases health risks, among other things.

    Of course, accurate food logging is also in the picture. That's not a dig: Food logging is a skill that all of us had to develop with learning and practice, and it can be more subtle than lots of us first assume. Since most of us are likely to err in the side of underestimating eating, some people are eating more calories than they believe.

    Most of your entries (that I can see above enough to evaluate) look OK, though there are things in there that I would weigh in grams rather than doing "per piece/serving" or cups/spoons. That degree of precision isn't universally necessary, though it can be helpful as a diagnostic if someone's not getting expected results (which is not your question at all at this point).

    The real proof is in your weight loss rate, especially your recent rate. Take around your last 8 weeks of weight loss, and your last 8 weeks of actual calories eaten. (If you're adult woman and not in menopause, use times that start at some known relative point in your monthly cycle, and end at the same relative point a couple cycles later).

    Do the math: Total calories eaten over the time period + (Pounds and fractions lost over the time period times 3500) = total calories burned over the time period. Divide by the number of days in the time period. That's your approximate current maintenance calories per day (TDEE, or total daily energy expenditure). Subtract 500 calories daily for every pound per week it's sensible for you to lose, and eat around that level. (It's possible to do that math to get a pre-exercise estimate, and you can probably figure out how, but it's beyond me to type it out - apologies!).

    It would probably be OK for you to lose 2 pounds a week for another 25-30 pounds, as long as there aren't lots of other physical or psychological stressors in your life. After that, slow down as you get lighter. Consider staying in the range of 0.5-1% of then-current weight weekly as you go on, with a bias toward the lower end of that, especially as you get within 25 or so pounds of goal, or if you have other major sources of life stress.

    Just my opinion.
  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
    I am 5'5 and 29. I wasn't having any issues until Thanksgiving and that's when I started having more cheat days and not being disciplined. I stopped losing weight normally since then, and assumed it was overeating. I got back on track being disciplined, but I realized I still have been struggling. That's when I became worried about undereating since I read if you don't eat enough you could stop losing weight. I usually measure everything that isn't pre packaged besides my lunch which we just divide into 5s for my work week. I used a different website that says I should eat around 1680 a day and i put in I exercise 4-5 days a week so I assumed it meant eat 1680 amd exercise. I use a recumbent bike to exercise because of back issues and it was recommended by my physical therapist. My galaxy watch 4 counts my calories and pulse since my bike pulse doesn't work. The bike is usually 100 less than my watch maybe since no pulse, but my watch automatically puts my exercise I'm MFP so I go by that amount. I read bike calories were the most accurate of exercise calories, so I thought it was as good as I can get. I wish I could see a dietician, but I will have to wait since my insurance doesn't cover it. But I am getting that I should be eating 1680 after exercise? So If I exercise 700 off , eat close to 2300?
  • musicfan68
    musicfan68 Posts: 1,143 Member
    How many hours are you using the recumbent bike? 700 calories is a LOT of calories, and most likely no where close to what you are actually burning. Most people log only half of their stated exercise calories as they are almost always way inflated.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,013 Member
    edited February 2022
    musicfan68 wrote: »
    How many hours are you using the recumbent bike? 700 calories is a LOT of calories, and most likely no where close to what you are actually burning. Most people log only half of their stated exercise calories as they are almost always way inflated.

    If she synchs a tracker, and doesn't try to manually override the exercise calories in MFP, that shouldn't be an issue.

    Eating back half of exercise calories is a SWAG** method when people fear eating too much, thinks the MFP exercise calories are too high. Sometimes they are . . . but 50% is arbitrary.

    ** Scientific Wild-A** Guess

    I don't agree that most people only eat half. (I have no idea what proportion of people do that, maybe lots do, but I've always estimated them carefully, not necessarily using MFP's estimates - especially for things where it's likely to be less reasonable - and lost weight as expected.)

    Some people eat half, some people synch a tracker and trust it, some use a TDEE estimate and don't do anything special with exercise, and some do what I do. Any of that can work adequately, potentially. Some people eat none, which can be OK or a really bad idea, depending on circumstances.

    MFP's estimates are not always "way inflated", either. It varies. Until recently, MFP's calorie estimate for strength training (in the cardiovascular section) has been likely to be more accurate than most other methods. MFP uses METS estimating, which is a research-based methodology. It's just a better method for some things than others.
  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
    musicfan68 wrote: »
    How many hours are you using the recumbent bike? 700 calories is a LOT of calories, and most likely no where close to what you are actually burning. Most people log only half of their stated exercise calories as they are almost always way inflated.

    An hour and a half.
  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
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  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
    I used to not eat calories back at all. I would just eat my 1550 at the time and then exercise an hour about 500 calories, but then I read on here that you should eat back at least half so I have been trying to do that, though I sometimes still don't. I do have negative and I never count the walking calories when they do add them. I never manually add either. I don't mind not eating any back tbh I feel like I force myself sometimes out of fear of what I read. I will admit Iay he starting to have a bad relationship with food and have been told I could be developing an eating disorder, but i really want to be healthy and lose weight. My goal is 160,but I planned on going more. 160 is just the happiest I have been in life even if still over weight.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,013 Member
    I used to not eat calories back at all. I would just eat my 1550 at the time and then exercise an hour about 500 calories, but then I read on here that you should eat back at least half so I have been trying to do that, though I sometimes still don't. I do have negative and I never count the walking calories when they do add them. I never manually add either. I don't mind not eating any back tbh I feel like I force myself sometimes out of fear of what I read. I will admit Iay he starting to have a bad relationship with food and have been told I could be developing an eating disorder, but i really want to be healthy and lose weight. My goal is 160,but I planned on going more. 160 is just the happiest I have been in life even if still over weight.

    I'm not going to argue with 160: If you felt great there, that's good. When you get there, if you re-evaluate, that's fine, too. (The goal in your profile doesn't affect your MFP calorie goal at all, BTW. It's just used for some motivational messages in MFP.)

    I'd encourage you not to lose weight too fast - through whatever approach works best for you. It's going to come out to about the same place either way, if you synch your tracker, and you turn out to be pretty average (which most people are).

    While I don't think you should necessarily force yourself to eat, I also do think hunger isn't a great way to know whether calories are too low: I ate too little at first, because MFP underestimates my calorie needs (unusual, but it can happen). I felt great, energetic, not hungry, until I hit a wall, very suddenly: Got weak and fatigued, took multiple weeks to recover back to normal strength/energy. No one needs that, and at extremes, worse things can happen. Even my good brand/model tracker, one that estimates well for other people, underestimates for me. It's not that the tracker is inaccurate, it's that I'm noticeably non-average for others my size/age.

    Don't fear undereating because it will stop your weight loss: Avoid undereating because that's the best route to optimal health, and to the ability to stick to a reasonable calorie goal long term, long enough to lose a meaningful total amount of weight (and avoid that craving/cheat slippery slope).

    Eating for moderate loss can also be a good way to experimentally find & practice the relatively-easy eating and exercise habits you'll want and need to stay at a healthy weight permanently, once you get there.

    If you feel full, but realistically need more calories (based on experience with your personal loss rate), consider eating something not very filling, but calorie dense, such as nuts or peanut butter. If you've gotten good nutrition already, and still have calories, it's also fine to have less nutrient-dense treat foods, such as a cookie or ice cream, as long as it's something you can moderate.

    Eating enough for moderate loss, getting good nutrition along the way: Best route to being healthy, including a healthy weight.
  • evilwitch452
    evilwitch452 Posts: 10 Member
    Thank you. I definitely want to be lower, but don't want to aim for it right away. I do feel like 1300 calories when I am working out feels a bit low, but 1600 seems like a nice amount. Hopefully what it says I exercise off is close to accurate, but if not I would hope that at least it's working off that 300. I lost a lot of weight just by eating the amount without exercising the first month, so that's why I really don't want to over eat. I do tend to eat more on weekends by a little bit, but try to keep it in my exercise range. I hate to see my calories in negative. Thank you for all your tips. Everyone tells me I've done so good getting this far and I'm too hard on myself, but I just want it so bad.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,013 Member
    Thank you. I definitely want to be lower, but don't want to aim for it right away. I do feel like 1300 calories when I am working out feels a bit low, but 1600 seems like a nice amount. Hopefully what it says I exercise off is close to accurate, but if not I would hope that at least it's working off that 300. I lost a lot of weight just by eating the amount without exercising the first month, so that's why I really don't want to over eat. I do tend to eat more on weekends by a little bit, but try to keep it in my exercise range. I hate to see my calories in negative. Thank you for all your tips. Everyone tells me I've done so good getting this far and I'm too hard on myself, but I just want it so bad.

    Note that we can lose extra in the first month in water weight an d because of lower average digestive contents simply from less food volume.

    That part of initial scale drop isn't fat loss. It has to do with depleting glycogen, mostly in muscles, when we first reduce calories; glycogen is stored with some water attached. Besides that, reducing carb intake (vs. pre-diet levels, not necessarily all the way to low carb or keto) will also decrease average water retention, because metabolizing carbohydrates involves some water, too.

    The point about less average digestive contents is obvious, I think. If we eat/drink less on average, there can be less matter in our system on its way to becoming waste. That has weight: An apple in my fruit bowl weighs the same in my stomach right after I eat it, and some of that weight persists until it's all broken down and parts of it excreted as waste.

    Note that not everyone sees that initial drop from those factors, there are other things (like simultaneously increasing exercise, eating more fiber, etc., that can muddy the waters). But, if someone sees an unusually fast drop in the first week or few, after which loss slows some, water and digestive contents are probably part of the reason.

    Best wishes for success!
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,055 Member
    Unlike other sites which use TDEE calculators, MFP uses the NEAT method (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis), and as such this system is designed for exercise calories to be eaten back. However, many consider the burns given by MFP to be inflated for them and only eat a percentage, such as 50%, back. Others are able to lose weight while eating 100% of their exercise calories.

    https://support.myfitnesspal.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032625391-How-does-MyFitnessPal-calculate-my-initial-goals-