Why Eating Exercise Calories is so important.
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Is there a way to save this thread? Or does it automatically simply by me replying to it?0
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BUMP FOR LATER0
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Bumpity Bump Bump0
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Thank you thank you thank you! I am new and was wondering this... turns out I have not been eating enough! I haven't been eating my exercise calories back most days! Now I will keep track of the net amt THANK YOU!0
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Thank you i get it now , I was feeling very guilty eating them back !0
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Great advice and explanation! I am going to try to eat all my exercise calories for a week and see how I do!0
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Very well explained! Thank you!0
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Yet again............................ double :yawn: :yawn:0
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bump....thanks0
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Thanks for the info- I will try this. Makes total sense!0
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BUMP THIS FOR FUTURE REFERENCE.....THANKS !!!0
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Everyone needs a reminder once in a while. Thank you.0
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Like so many others, I just want to express gratitude for you posting this. It does a great job of explaining why eating exercise calories back is important0
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biz-ump.0
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thank you for explaining this. I was wondering just the other day about the NET calories!!!0
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I often hear people asking why eating your exercise calories is a good thing?
These people think 'That's extra calories burned, so that will speed up my weight loss.'
Well, yes and no.
The thing is, your body needs fuel.
Your metabolism, typically around between 1200 and 1800 calories, are the calories that your body will burn, during the day, every day. Even if you sat around on the sofa, or slept, or were in a coma. You would need this to allow natural processes like hair/nail growth, skin replenishment, organ function, etc to continue.
That's why it's very dangerous to eat anything under 1200 calories!
So, lets take the average 1500 calorie metabolism.
- If you live a sedentary lifestyle (desk job or no exercise), you would probably only burn 300 - 500 calories in a day by moving around. So you need 1800 - 2000 calories to maintain.
A significant amount of the population leads a sedentary lifestyle, so most doctors recommend 2000 calories a day is good.
- If you live a lightly active lifestyle (job involving some walking or some exercise (1/2 days) then you'd burn around 500 - 700 by moving around. So you need 2000 - 2200 to maintain.
- If you are quite active (some manual labour or exercise 3 - 5 days/week) then that's probably 700 - 900. Thus, you need 2200 - 2400 calories to maintain.
- And if you are very active (manual job or exercise 6 - 7 days/week) then you're burning around 1000. So, you need about 2500 calories to maintain.
This is your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (or TDEE)
MFP will set your deficit at what you want 0.5/1/1.5/2 lbs/week or -250/-500/-750/-1000 calories below your TDEE.
Simples, right?
Well, ish. Let's take an average scenario:
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Meet Jane. She weighs 200lbs, and wants to lose 50lbs.
Jane has a metabolism of 1500. She leads a sedentary lifestyle, so she burns about 2000 calories per day.
Jane wants to lose 1lbs/week
MFP calculates Jane's calorie intake and deducts 500 calories. She will require 1500 calories to lose 1lbs/week.
But Jane decides she will start running.
Jane burns 400 calories when she runs for 30 minutes.
She does not eat back those 400 calories.
Jane is now NETTING 1100 calories.
*NET = Calories Consumed - Calories Burned from Exercise
You're NET should equal your CALORIE GOAL to achieve weightloss.
Because of the extra activity, 400/1500 of the calories consumed have been burnt by Jane. That means the body must function on only 1100 calories per day to allow natural processes like hair/nail growth, skin replenishment, organ function to continue.
THUS, Jane's metabolism drops* to meet her NET calories (1100).
NB* This may take several weeks and will not respond to occasionally high deficits.
Over the same period of time, Jane's body will respond to the huge caloric defecit and try to preserve the body, by burning Jane's muscle rather than her fat. The number on the scale drops, but Jane does not seem to get any skinnier.
Now she burns 1600 calories on sedentary days, and 2000 calories on exercise days.
When Jane has lost 50lbs and returns to normal eating, she can only eat 1600 calories on sedentary days or she will gain weight again.
HOWEVER. If Jane decides to eat back the 400 calories:
She continues to lose 1lbs/week
Her metabolism will increase because (a) she is exercising (which increases the metabolism) and (b) because she is eating 1900 calories (the more calories she eats, the more her metabolism is raised.)
However, her NET calories remain at 1500, so she achieves ideal weightloss.
When Jane reaches her goal of 150lbs, her metabolism will be faster so she is able to eat more than 2000 calories to maintain her weight.
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Do you see? But eating back her exercise calories, Jane is able to continue her weightloss without damaging her metabolism for the future.
Exercising and then eating back your calories is just about the best thing you could do for your weightloss. It raises your metabolism, allows you to eat more, and helps to tone/build muscle rather than burn it so you don't get that flabby look of loose skin.
I really hope this helps someone.0 -
bump!!! T0
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Thanks because I was confused about eating calories back. You helped me with the example.0
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Thank you thank you thank you! Someone gets it :happy:0
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This explanation trumps the board I JUST finished reading which almost had me convinced to stop eating my exercise calories. Thanks to the info provided by the OP, I am going to maintain what I've been doing: eating back my exercise calories!0
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