-Diablo's Journal, 03 Jan 21

"There is an illusion of complexity to weight loss (perpetuated largely by people who want your money) but it is actually very straightforward. Your body requires a certain amount of energy (measured in calories) each day in order to fuel its activities. This is called your Total Daily Energy Expenditure or TDEE. If your diet supplies more calories than your TDEE (a surplus), you will gain weight. If your diet supplies fewer calories than your TDEE (a deficit), you will lose weight.

You’ve probably heard of many different diets out there, and when they work, they all achieve weight loss in the same way – manipulating calorie balance. While you can reach a deficit by increasing your TDEE through exercise, it is significantly easier to eat less than to do enough exercise to make a difference. This also means that you can lose weight through diet alone and exercise is not required to lose weight.

This creates two points of failure to be aware of:

Overestimating your TDEE.
This is very easy to do. Just remember, always, that no TDEE calculation is 100% accurate. Treat them as estimates only and don’t get fixated on what a calculator told you if it conflicts with what you’re seeing on the scale. Calculations of calorie burn during exercise, in particular, tends to be wildly inaccurate and inflated.
Underestimating your calorie consumption.
Most commonly this happens when people pay inadequate attention to what they’re eating. This ranges from unconscious snacking to ignoring calorie content in drinks or food additives (dressings are a big culprit) to simply not tracking calorie consumption at all.
Whichever it is, the most important fact to remember is that the scale doesn’t lie. In order to maintain or gain weight while eating at a true deficit, it would require your body to break the laws of the universe by creating energy out of thin air. You can read further in our FAQ: Why can’t I lose weight?

It is also important to understand that for all intents and purposes, weight loss and fat loss are interchangeable concepts. If you are losing weight, you are necessarily losing fat as well.

Step By Step Guide
Take your “before” measurements.
These can be any measurements you want, but should at least include weight and photos of front, back, and side (in underwear is ideal).
Estimate your TDEE.
Remember to treat this as an estimate only, and keep in mind the adage “No plan survives engagement with the enemy”. Expect to have to adjust this number.
Set a daily calorie goal.
The best place to start is by reducing your TDEE by 10-20% (TDEE x 0.9-0.8). You will usually want to avoid going under 20% less than your TDEE. Going too far below your TDEE will the increase likelihood of malnourishment, muscle loss, low energy, inadequate fat intake for hormonal balance, and cycles of restriction followed by binge eating.
Track your calorie consumption.
Tools such as MyFitnessPal or NutritionData are very useful for tracking calories. We also recommend the 3-Suns Adaptive TDEE Spreadsheet, which will adjust its estimate of your TDEE over time. Track everything you eat and drink, including additives and toppings.
Take regular progress measurements.
Weight should generally be measured once a day (or at least once a week), preferably unclothed and on an empty stomach. Don’t sweat day-to-day fluctuations – track the trend over time. Monthly progress photos may be worth considering. Avoid any handheld or scale based body fat percentage measurements – the bio-electrical impedance method is extremely inaccurate and inconsistent.
Adjust your diet over time.
As you lose weight, your TDEE will inevitably go down – less mass requires fewer calories to fuel. This means that your starting calorie goal will eventually no longer cause weight loss, and you will need to adjust it down.
Periodically take maintenance breaks. To minimize muscle loss and maximize health, adherence and performance, Dr. Mike Israetel of Renaissance Periodization recommends spending a maximum of 12 weeks in a weight loss phase and losing no more than 10% of your body weight in a single phase. Briefly (1-2 weeks) increase your calorie intake slightly to maintain your weight before starting the next weight loss phase.
Expect to be hungry. You may not be used to feeling hungry often, or even at all, but when you start eating less food than your body is used to and wants, hunger is something you need to expect and be willing to deal with. It’s possible you’ll be able to reduce or eliminate feelings of hunger through changes in what you’re eating, but it’s just as possible that you won’t. Hunger is normal when eating at a calorie deficit, and you can’t let it trip you up. To read some thoughts from experienced members of the community, have a look at our Community Campfire thread – Managing Hunger While Losing Weight."


https://thefitness.wiki/weight-loss-101/

View Diet Calendar, 03 January 2021:
3114 kcal Fat: 105.52g | Prot: 173.16g | Carbs: 445.69g.   Breakfast: Little Debbie Star Crunch, Keebler Sandies Pecan Shortbread Cookies, Potato French Fries, Cheeseburger with 1/4 Lb Meat on Bun, Halo Top Creamery Peanut Butter Cup Ice Cream, Apples, Quest Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Protein Bar. Lunch: Pure Protein Chocolate Deluxe High Protein Bar (Small), 1% Fat Milk, Kashi GOLEAN Crunch! Cereal, Gala Apples, Pure Protein Chocolate Deluxe High Protein Bar (Small). more...

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Comments 
Yep, Yep, Yep! 💪🏻🏋🏻‍♂️🤸🏻‍♀️ Hopefully this helps some people.  
04 Jan 21 by member: davidsprincess
Good morning Diablo. Nice post for the beginning of the new year. Have a great day. 
04 Jan 21 by member: shirfleur 1
Absolutely. Two great points: 1 It doesn't have to be complicated and even if you're hoping to be healthier, lowering your body fat percentage to a healthy/normal range is usual enough to take care of most of that. 2 Forget the calorie calculators, look at the average calories over a period of weeks at which you lose, maintain, or gain when tracking food as accurately as possible and accounting for activity. 
04 Jan 21 by member: LaughingChevre
I was watching yet another commercial on TV for the latest weight loss "strategy" - I often think about the information you post and I think you could be the TV Commercial "fact checker" and there would be a warning and a link to this post. Thanks for the post and reality check.  
04 Jan 21 by member: tahoebrun
Thank you D. Some new information for me, as well as wise reminders. 👍 
04 Jan 21 by member: _bec_ca
Wonderful and true message. The result of listening to your advice allowed me to reach my goals! Thank you for sharing again.  
04 Jan 21 by member: melissatwa
Excellent information. You are right on the money. I should have saved the article, Floridian did one years ago on popular diets, most have been around for years in various versions reincarnated. Calories in and out. Bottom line is a cartsin amount of calories overall to lose no matter how you slice it. Phil Donahue said you want make a million dollars, wrote a diet book!! hehe🙂 
04 Jan 21 by member: Maine coon
“Don’t listen to charlatans.” -Dr. Layne Norton 
04 Jan 21 by member: smashfoodmike
Great information. That said we do need some exercise, if just walking 150 minutes a week . I was losing weight with a calorie deficit. Lately I have increased exercise and eaten the amount alloted for maintenance of a sententary lifestyple. I am hoping to gain some muscle after reading that a portion of our weight loss is muscle. My endurance is better, and I am increasing to .72 times the protein of my lean weight. Is this correct? (Normal maintenance protein is 0.36 times your IDEAL weight) Is there such thing as eating too much protein if your body has fat to burn? If you have 0% fat then your body has trouble converting protein to fuel it needs. That is what fats and carbs are for.  
04 Jan 21 by member: Fiberoptic
Agreed. Very good information to share. I think it's great when people downplay how many calories you can burn with exercise, but I also like to up-play (if you will) how exercise is still so key in crucially important ways related to weight loss. Staying on track with good eating doesn't seem possible without the "Happy" lift that exercise brings me, for example. It also helps keep things, ahem, flowing in the body.  
04 Jan 21 by member: Edgeytown
Does this app factor in calories burned? This is day one for me and I got done walking in but it doesn’t seem to allow extra calories for it. 
04 Jan 21 by member: Gigi Patty
Great article!!! 
04 Jan 21 by member: bearnoggin
This is excatly what i needed to read  
04 Jan 21 by member: kendraberryhill
Reply to Gigi Patty. Figure out what your resting metabolism rate is by dividing those hours awake. Mine is 67 calories burned, so I subract that from an hour of walking at 3 m.p.h. to give me an accurate number of additional calories actually burned. I figured my daily required calories for maintaining and sendentary lifestyle. You can then decide to cut 500 calories a day per week for a 1 lb. loss, or add it in actual exercise . (or a combo) 
04 Jan 21 by member: Fiberoptic
You're welcome everyone. They want you to believe there is a special code. It's simple math but it isn't easy. You have to overcome bad habits. Find out what you need to do to create a moderate deficit that you can stick to and the opposite if you need to gain. 
04 Jan 21 by member: -Diablo
thank you, I found this very helpful 
04 Jan 21 by member: mia.jones17
Thanks D for solid info here in 2021! My wife and I where discussing over the holidays how we may indulge here or there but we have both realised solid sustained losses over the past year and it’s doubtful it’s due to regular exercise. I’ll be checking out that site and reading on. 👍 
04 Jan 21 by member: 66Pack
Fiber optic: thank you for this info! 
05 Jan 21 by member: Gigi Patty

     
 

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