Beginning to think it's Calories consumed vs. NET instead

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  • lisakyle_11
    lisakyle_11 Posts: 420 Member
    I think everyone is different and you have to find what works for you. Eating a lot even though I exercise a lot doesn't work for me to lose weight unfortunately either. I wish I didn't have sucha big appetite. I thinking eatin around your BMR is a good way to do it.

    yep... eating 'more' to lose just added additional weight and frustration for me.
  • tsh0ck
    tsh0ck Posts: 1,970 Member
    Glad you said something about Sugar!How come most people don't track their sugar?Once i started tracking it and staying under 25g daily the weight started falling off.I see some people on here eating 85-100 g of Sugar a day and can't figure out why their not losing.For some reason they don't want to put sugar on their diary????

    because sugar has nothing to do with pure and simple weight loss. I don't track sugar. or sodium, for that matter.
  • Calimama123
    Calimama123 Posts: 128 Member
    bump
  • SaraTN
    SaraTN Posts: 536 Member
    Glad you said something about Sugar!How come most people don't track their sugar?Once i started tracking it and staying under 25g daily the weight started falling off.I see some people on here eating 85-100 g of Sugar a day and can't figure out why their not losing.For some reason they don't want to put sugar on their diary????

    because sugar has nothing to do with pure and simple weight loss. I don't track sugar. or sodium, for that matter.

    For some people sugar actually does have an impact... sugar = carbs and that effects insulin levels. Chances are they are carbohydrate sensitive so if they notice a plateau it is important for them to track and analyze. With respect to sodium, I can say that for me and my body it does have an impact.... if I eat out or consume too much sodium, I can see it when I weigh myself the next day.... it is not a lasting effect as I work to correct it.. consume more water etc.

    For ME, what works is tracking all the data I can, weigh myself every day and realizing as a woman there are several contributors to fluctuation but I take the daily weights and average them out and report the average as my weekly weigh in since I think that is more accurate for me... just throwing it out for others to consider.
  • aminakhan1980
    aminakhan1980 Posts: 105 Member
    bump for later
  • OccupyFitness
    OccupyFitness Posts: 145 Member
    I keep trying different adjustments and it seems like I naturally want to fall back to eating about my BMR regardless of exercise but sometimes I eat them if I feel hungry (or at least I feel like I have a buffer zone if I eat something that I have a hard time calculating).
  • baycat107
    baycat107 Posts: 165 Member
    bump
  • redcat17
    redcat17 Posts: 267 Member
    I keep trying different adjustments and it seems like I naturally want to fall back to eating about my BMR regardless of exercise but sometimes I eat them if I feel hungry (or at least I feel like I have a buffer zone if I eat something that I have a hard time calculating).

    Yeah, I seem to do the same. I don't pay that much attention to my net. It seems like most days I'm eating about my BMR, or maybe a bit more on the days I work out. Also, sometimes I know I'm off on my eating and exercise calories. Pretty much I just eat healthy and when I am hungry. So long as I'm losing weight (and not losing too quickly), I don't worry too much about "net".
  • Sometimes we burn more calories than we think in a given day and some days we are just more active than others. Cutting grass , cleaning house and so on and so fourth. I eat my daily 1,200 and that is usually if I exercise or not. Somedays I am starving and I try to listen to my body. If I know I have worked out and have been a busy bee , I will eat . I think it is better to eat when you are hungry than starve yourself. Or only worry about matching the numbers on here. After all this is a journey . The exercise and the diet on here is close but not exact. I also notice a lot of people don't count seasonings, or bites here and there. Or over measuring or weighing so your daily counts are never right on.
  • ThinUpGirl
    ThinUpGirl Posts: 397
    I only struggled with net calories when I started working out. Before I was working out, net calories were fine because I had no exercise to speak of, which meant calories consumed = net calories.

    My TDEE is 2600 and my BMR 1600. MFP used to set net goal for 1700 net calories. I would try to reach that goal, but found myself eating about 2500-2600 calories a day to do so. This seemed counter intuitive since that's how much I would eat to MAINTAIN and I wanted to lose.

    Now I ignore net. I pay attention to my TDEE and BMR. I always consume above my BMR and I take my deficit from my TDEE. I eat about 2200 calories a day which is a 400 calorie deficity from TDEE. Basically I target somewhere less than TDEE but more than BMR for calories consumed.

    Here's another way I think of it:

    I have 12 lbs to lose, which means I have 42,000 calories in excess storage (3500 calories = 1 lb, so 12 lb x 3500 = 42,000 calories). I need to burn those storage calories off.

    I burn a total of 2600 calories from living/breathing/pumping blood (BMR) and exercise/normal life. But I feed my body 2200 calories a day and then it uses 400 calories from my 42,000 calories of storage to cover my energy needs of 2600 calories. I am whittling my 'storage' calories, or excess pounds away at 400 cal/day.

    ETA: And I meant to say that this took trial and error over a 2 month plateau for me to figure out. Once I figured out that I was eating enough calories to maintain my weight, it was no suprise I wasn't losing. Then it took a few more weeks to find the sweet spot. At a 400 calorie deficit I lose about 0.5 lb/week. I'm also doing heavy lifting and very close to my goal weight, so I'm not surprised.

    How long did you lose before you reached your plateau.

    This is the best explanation I've read so far in regards to NET.

    Thanx for sharing :)
  • beachdiva2010
    beachdiva2010 Posts: 180 Member
    Bump for later....I'm getting a headache.
  • themommie
    themommie Posts: 5,033 Member
    I think that you need to find what works for you, not everyone is exactly the same. While these formulas might work for most people they dont work for everyone. I have lost 101 lbs by eating 1250 cals a day and not eating back any exercise cals, alot of people say you can't lose like this because your body will go into starvation mode, but I have lost doing this. I also have health issues fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue and hypothyroid which play into it so maybe this is why this works for me but all I know is this has worked......
  • Deathangl13
    Deathangl13 Posts: 38 Member
    Glad you said something about Sugar!How come most people don't track their sugar?

    Because it doesn't matter, if you're already tracking calories. If you look at the nutrient section of the phone app, you will see that all nutrients from scanned labels are tracked, including sugar.
  • Deathangl13
    Deathangl13 Posts: 38 Member
    Can someone help me

    I've lost 22lbs
    I've 71 lbs to lose
    I'm 42 female 207lbs 5ft 2
    I do 2 Zumba classes a week & 3 wii Zumba a week
    3000 calories burnt
    I was eating 1310 calories a day
    Then lowered at mfp recommendation as I'd list 2x10lbs
    My weightloss is stalling people have helped me saying I should eat more rat my net = my BMR 1649

    Now after reading this I'm worried I shouldn't eat net of 1649

    I've eaten 1350 or under Net since Tuesday as it was only 620 net before

    Can someone tell me how many calories I should eat to lose 1-2 lbs a week do I eat net 1350 or calories 1649
    Or something else ?

    Thanks

    Okay, you need to know your body fat percentage if you want to get EXACT. At least as exact as possible. The higher your body fat, the greater your calorie deficit can be without messing everything up. The LOWER your body fat percentage, the SMALLER your calorie deficit has to be. In other words, you have to eat more. Now this has absolutely nothing to do with "speeding up your metabolism". It has to do with fat reserves and how the body regulates metabolism based on the feedback loop, assuming everything is operating efficiently on a hormonal level (which it usually isn't with obesity). As you lose body mass, your metabolism SLOWS DOWN. This is very important because most people will hit a plateau thinking it's because of "dieting" and start eating more. This is only true at sub 12% body fat levels. Try to think of it like this - As your body weight comes down, what was once a deficit is now MAINTENANCE. You have to eat less as you get lighter, because a lighter body mass burns less calories. And you ALWAYS lose muscle when you lose body weight. Strength training will minimize it, but there is no way around it.
  • Deathangl13
    Deathangl13 Posts: 38 Member
    I think that you need to find what works for you, not everyone is exactly the same.

    Unless one of us somehow bypassed Evolution and evolved in the last few decades, yes we are.
  • Deathangl13
    Deathangl13 Posts: 38 Member
    still agree with her, if your gonna eat all the calories back, you might as well watch tv and do nothin, same results is what everybody is saying :)

    Well, no not really. Training (specifically strength training) completely changes the way your body HANDLES those calories. You are better off training and eating more than not training and eating less, if you're concerned about body composition.
  • AmandaCaswell1982
    AmandaCaswell1982 Posts: 170 Member
    To me it just makes perfect sense to eat at your maintenance level or between your BMR and TDEE and exercise..... and then leave it at that.... let exercise create your deficit.....don't eat it back, no matter what amount the deficit is...

    If you don't exercise than I am not sure what to say as I have not tried to lose weight by diet alone...

    I started doing this back at the end of 2011-- it helped me through 2 plateaus and has transformed my body. Not only does it fuel me, but it helps me get used to how I will eat at my goal weight ;) My "net" is always around/above my BMR.
  • wilkyway
    wilkyway Posts: 151
    This is what I do now: I've set my calorie-goal to maintenance ~ 2000kcals. My activity level is set to 'active' which is more than appropriate. I'm constantly on the move.
    Now, with this setting I see my actual deficit, not the precalculated one by MFP, if it were set to 'lose 1 lbs a week'.

    So, I don't really eat back my exercise cals, or if then only a bit. I usually use them for special occations...

    When I eat my 2000 kcals and exercise, I have created a deficit, by which I am sure not to undernourish my body. For me this works best, I get worried if I have a too high deficit for too long.
  • leopard_barbie
    leopard_barbie Posts: 279 Member
    I started a thread that has a handy little weight tracker based on calorie intake and caloric expenditure. http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/576000-weight-loss-simulator

    I think the tool is pretty amazing when you manipulate the data. Some people have been confused thinking it was "telling" them to consume a rediculously low number of calories but in actuality it just puts it into perspective with the weight loss goals, like you might be expecting too much too fast.

    I have played around with the data by a time frame goal and a lifestyle change goal. For me, it works to put in my job and my leisure time activity for the baseline at low active levels. Then, when I input my data for lifestyle change I use the detailed button and add my scheduled runs/walks that I do per week. This will tell me I am increasing my activity by X%. I can also manipulate my carb intake say for the first 15 days only get 10% of my calories from carbs then at day 11 up it to 30%.

    Under the tabulated data, it will tell you exactly how many calories you need to consume and burn each day along with body fat percentage, lean mass etc. Of course, you can also input the calories you want to consume (i.e. 1500) it will then simulate how many you need to burn based on the data you initially put in.

    Perhaps this will help people "visualize" the concept.

    Here is the direct link if you don't want to go to the thread:

    http://bwsimulator.niddk.nih.gov/

    Replying so I can use this link when Im not on works computer.
  • chevy88grl
    chevy88grl Posts: 3,937 Member
    I haven't read the entire thread, but I can tell you that for me to lose weight? I have to NET significantly higher than my BMR. My BMR is 1338. I can easily lose weight if I consume 2100-2200 NET calories and I can easily maintain if I consume 2300-2500 NET calories. So, for me .. it is all about NET calories. And there's NO WAY that eating below my BMR is a good idea for me. Not only would I be hungry enough to eat small household pets, but my body would be SO cranky and ticked off at me.
  • MMarvelous
    MMarvelous Posts: 1,067 Member
    Bump
  • dlwyatt82
    dlwyatt82 Posts: 1,077 Member
    I haven't read the entire thread, but I can tell you that for me to lose weight? I have to NET significantly higher than my BMR. My BMR is 1338. I can easily lose weight if I consume 2100-2200 NET calories and I can easily maintain if I consume 2300-2500 NET calories. So, for me .. it is all about NET calories. And there's NO WAY that eating below my BMR is a good idea for me. Not only would I be hungry enough to eat small household pets, but my body would be SO cranky and ticked off at me.

    That's fine as a way to track your own calories (so long as you don't change your activity level around), but is not valid advice for other people. Net calories is based on whatever MFP reported your original target to be. If your target (before exercise) is much higher than your BMR, then so should your net calories be. My target is 100 calories less than my BMR (Sedentary activity level), so bumping my "net calories" up over BMR would mean I was eating too much food.
  • cmccorma
    cmccorma Posts: 203 Member
    I think that you need to find what works for you, not everyone is exactly the same.

    Unless one of us somehow bypassed Evolution and evolved in the last few decades, yes we are.

    I respectfully disagree. We have all been blessed with certain genetics from our parents which are different than others. Adding to that, I developed gestational diabetes during pregnancy. Three months later, I was still showing some insulin resistance. So for me, I have to watch my sugar. Others may not have to. When I eat more protein and less sugar, my glucose level remains in the normal range. This is not true for someone without insulin resistance.
  • neanderthin
    neanderthin Posts: 10,223 Member
    I think that you need to find what works for you, not everyone is exactly the same.

    Unless one of us somehow bypassed Evolution and evolved in the last few decades, yes we are.

    I respectfully disagree. We have all been blessed with certain genetics from our parents which are different than others. Adding to that, I developed gestational diabetes during pregnancy. Three months later, I was still showing some insulin resistance. So for me, I have to watch my sugar. Others may not have to. When I eat more protein and less sugar, my glucose level remains in the normal range. This is not true for someone without insulin resistance.
    I believe the confusion is in how efficiently the body burns calories when metabolic dysfunction is apparent, like yours. Our metabolism does recognize these abnormalities which does effect our weight loss/gain, but and a conclusive but, it is still accounted for on the out side of the energy balance equation on an individual basis. The hard part is trying to figure out what and how these dysfunctions effect us on an individual basis and make adjustments, like with PCOS and diabetes where a lower carb diet shows much improvement.
  • waldo56
    waldo56 Posts: 1,861 Member
    When I figured out that protein doesn't count (I heavily exercise and strength train, somehting I noted in my data and BMR calculation, BMR rose with protein intake) I busted a plateau where I thought I had a 750 deficit/day but really had a 1250 deficit per day.

    I've pretty much reached my goal weight now, and am down to a 500 cal/day deficit tapering out.

    My calcuated BMR varies with protein intake linearly.

    Right now my total food intake is in the 3000-3500 cal/day area (@190 lbs) and I've got a 500 cal/day deficit (500-100 cal/day exercise). My current calculated BMR is a hair over 3000/day. Before I heavily exercised and strength trained, and upped my protein intake, it was in the 2400/day area @ 220 lbs and over.

    My last stall was @ a 1000 cal deficit @ 12% BF, with my target set to 2050 cal/day net (was losing precisely 2 lb/wk for a couple months prior). Upping it to 2300 cal/day busted the stall, now I'm in the 9% BF area.
  • katcod1522
    katcod1522 Posts: 448 Member
    I am going to say this...I was stuck last week at 133.2 from last Wed to Sunday...today..the scale reads 129.8. I normally eat 1200-1250 cals a day I run 25 miles a week. I am 5'2. Saturday..I ran 12 miles...and burned 900 cals. I ate 2100 cals Saturday....but take off the 900...I only netted 1200. So..my body got tons of fuel (food). I think that dropped the scale almost 3lbs this week! Take a spike day..but make it a harder exercise day. To this day..my dr says there is no science to eating back burned cals. Consume (as in put in your mouth) 1200-1500 cals a day..and lose weight.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    When I figured out that protein doesn't count (I heavily exercise and strength train, somehting I noted in my data and BMR calculation, BMR rose with protein intake) I busted a plateau where I thought I had a 750 deficit/day but really had a 1250 deficit per day.

    I've pretty much reached my goal weight now, and am down to a 500 cal/day deficit tapering out.

    My calcuated BMR varies with protein intake linearly.

    Right now my total food intake is in the 3000-3500 cal/day area (@190 lbs) and I've got a 500 cal/day deficit (500-100 cal/day exercise). My current calculated BMR is a hair over 3000/day. Before I heavily exercised and strength trained, and upped my protein intake, it was in the 2400/day area @ 220 lbs and over.

    My last stall was @ a 1000 cal deficit @ 12% BF, with my target set to 2050 cal/day net (was losing precisely 2 lb/wk for a couple months prior). Upping it to 2300 cal/day busted the stall, now I'm in the 9% BF area.

    Lest anyone is confused, everywhere you said BMR, you meant TDEE.

    Your BMR would not change with change to eating protein, actually, neither would your TDEE for that matter.
  • dlwyatt82
    dlwyatt82 Posts: 1,077 Member
    I am going to say this...I was stuck last week at 133.2 from last Wed to Sunday...today..the scale reads 129.8. I normally eat 1200-1250 cals a day I run 25 miles a week. I am 5'2. Saturday..I ran 12 miles...and burned 900 cals. I ate 2100 cals Saturday....but take off the 900...I only netted 1200. So..my body got tons of fuel (food). I think that dropped the scale almost 3lbs this week! Take a spike day..but make it a harder exercise day. To this day..my dr says there is no science to eating back burned cals. Consume (as in put in your mouth) 1200-1500 cals a day..and lose weight.

    I'm not sure what point you're trying to make here, since you contradict yourself. You say that you should only eat 1200-1500 calories per day, yet you also say "take a spike day and make it a heavy workout day." In different words, you've just described what it means to eat back your exercise calories, while also claiming that your doctor says there is "no science behind it".

    The short-term weight change over the weekend is fairly meaningless, but even that, you attributed to eating back your exercise calories in your post.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    I am going to say this...I was stuck last week at 133.2 from last Wed to Sunday...today..the scale reads 129.8. I normally eat 1200-1250 cals a day I run 25 miles a week. I am 5'2. Saturday..I ran 12 miles...and burned 900 cals. I ate 2100 cals Saturday....but take off the 900...I only netted 1200. So..my body got tons of fuel (food). I think that dropped the scale almost 3lbs this week! Take a spike day..but make it a harder exercise day. To this day..my dr says there is no science to eating back burned cals. Consume (as in put in your mouth) 1200-1500 cals a day..and lose weight.

    Did you know 1500 calories of carb's stored as glucose with required water weigh 3lbs?

    Your long run burned off a bunch of carbs, depending on intensity, probably 70-80% of calories burned was carbs. Did the carbs from your extra 900 eaten replenish those stores?

    Your Dr doesn't understand how MFP works to every other weight loss calculator where you input expected total activity levels and then take a deficit.
  • waldo56
    waldo56 Posts: 1,861 Member
    When I figured out that protein doesn't count (I heavily exercise and strength train, somehting I noted in my data and BMR calculation, BMR rose with protein intake) I busted a plateau where I thought I had a 750 deficit/day but really had a 1250 deficit per day.

    I've pretty much reached my goal weight now, and am down to a 500 cal/day deficit tapering out.

    My calcuated BMR varies with protein intake linearly.

    Right now my total food intake is in the 3000-3500 cal/day area (@190 lbs) and I've got a 500 cal/day deficit (500-100 cal/day exercise). My current calculated BMR is a hair over 3000/day. Before I heavily exercised and strength trained, and upped my protein intake, it was in the 2400/day area @ 220 lbs and over.

    My last stall was @ a 1000 cal deficit @ 12% BF, with my target set to 2050 cal/day net (was losing precisely 2 lb/wk for a couple months prior). Upping it to 2300 cal/day busted the stall, now I'm in the 9% BF area.

    Lest anyone is confused, everywhere you said BMR, you meant TDEE.

    Your BMR would not change with change to eating protein, actually, neither would your TDEE for that matter.

    Actually, it does.

    BMR/TDEE whatever, the value that is left when you reconcile scale weight over time with calories in and calories burned.

    Protein that is used for muscle building and maintence doesn't count toward your daily energy balance when you are calculating how much fat you should be gaining and losing based on your intake. I've never seen this written anywhere before but self experiments confirm this is the case as do experiements on themselves others have done. The key is though that you have to be able to calculate the setpoint yourself from real weight data, MFP's formula for your setpoint uses all 3 macros and doesn't work nearly enough.

    Once I figured this out I had absolute precision in my loss and didn't plateau once until I reached a point that I expected it (1000 cal/day deficit @ 12% BF is where it occurred). My weight graph was a straight line, 2 lb per week precisely. My weight (fat) loss can be predicted 100% by my fat and carb intake alone and a BMR/TDEE for those macros alone calculated from weight data. To use MFP protein is treated as a constant, a 2nd goal to hit every day.

    Like I said, my cacluated BMR/TDEE, the reconciled value, rose from almost exaclty what MFP calcuated for me (2450 cal/day) to over 3000 cal/day as I increased my exercise and protein intake. And I do not underestimate my exercise, 750-1000 cal/day is the norm for me (hence my maintence calorie levels will be in the 4000 cal/day area total intake). The increase in calcuated BMR/TDEE rate was linear, exactly 4*net change in daily protein intake rolling average over time.