jennifermaria
Cathlete
I've always gotten different estimates for my resting metabolic rate, so I got it tested a few months ago. It came out at 1450 calories, but I found out later it may have been inaccurate because I worked out before--about two hours before, which is supposedly ok, but I think it may have impacted it--so I decided to get another one today, especially since I've been training for a marathon and wanted to see if the extra intensity in workouts did anything to nudge that at all.
Well, apparently, it did, 'cause my RMR is now at...
1800 calories!!
Dude!! I was hoping it'd go up a little, but wow wow, I never thought it'd go up that high! And I was good today--I didn't work out before the test, and I had a normal size breakfast (they said eating would be ok, as long as it wasn't a big meal, and I had cereal, fruit, and milk, so it wasn't a lot). This was as accurate as it gets.
All I can say is no wonder I'm hungry all the time LOL. And no wonder that I've lost weight on the weeks where I actually thought I ate above my calorie requirements (or what I THOUGHT were my calorie requirements). When I've been more careful to stay on the "weight loss" level, I've stalled or gained weight.
I'm not sure how much my RMR will go down once my marathon training is over, but for now, I'm going to eat my calories and not feel guilty. It'll definitely be a mindset change for me; I think my brain is programmed to think that fewer calories means weight loss, and that I couldn't possibly eat 2000 calories and still lose weight. Not that I have a lot to lose--I just have 2-3 nagging pounds that I've been trying to get rid of so I can see my arm and ab muscles more.
But anyway, I thought I'd share. I'm so excited that my RMR is higher than I thought it would be .
Well, apparently, it did, 'cause my RMR is now at...
1800 calories!!
Dude!! I was hoping it'd go up a little, but wow wow, I never thought it'd go up that high! And I was good today--I didn't work out before the test, and I had a normal size breakfast (they said eating would be ok, as long as it wasn't a big meal, and I had cereal, fruit, and milk, so it wasn't a lot). This was as accurate as it gets.
All I can say is no wonder I'm hungry all the time LOL. And no wonder that I've lost weight on the weeks where I actually thought I ate above my calorie requirements (or what I THOUGHT were my calorie requirements). When I've been more careful to stay on the "weight loss" level, I've stalled or gained weight.
I'm not sure how much my RMR will go down once my marathon training is over, but for now, I'm going to eat my calories and not feel guilty. It'll definitely be a mindset change for me; I think my brain is programmed to think that fewer calories means weight loss, and that I couldn't possibly eat 2000 calories and still lose weight. Not that I have a lot to lose--I just have 2-3 nagging pounds that I've been trying to get rid of so I can see my arm and ab muscles more.
But anyway, I thought I'd share. I'm so excited that my RMR is higher than I thought it would be .