How To Count Calories

How To Count Calories

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There I was on Instagram doing my daily video asking my audience what I might be able to help them with…and I got this response: 

“I don’t know how to count calories…can you help me?”

Well, of course, it's my pleasure to help anyone if I can. But with this message, I felt like the person sending it to me felt guilty that she didn’t know how to do this — which is absurd. Why would you know how to do this if it's not something you have looked into how to do it. In the fitness industry, we spend a lot of time talking about things which we know…and we don’t do a great job of informing people about actually how to do what we talk about. This is for one reason…many people in this industry want to make them seem like they have a secret you don’t have…thus you will part with your cash in order to get said secret. It's nonsense. Nothing makes someone actually want to invest in you more than you empowering them to solve problems themselves. Helping them when they think they will never be able to figure it out.

Therefore this article is here to:

  1. Explain why you should count calories

  2. Show you how to count calories

  3. Make you aware of the positives and negatives of counting calories

and

4. Send you on your way feeling empowered to take control of this part of your Fitness Journey. 

Why You Should Count Calories

Most Diets you have ever heard of, will in some way do two things. 

  1.  Count your Calories 

  2. Get you into a Calorie Deficit or a Calorie Surplus

For the purposes of this article, let's just use the premise that you want a calorie deficit to lose weight. Whether you followed Slimming World, Weight Watchers or Atkins they all incorporate a “system” for counting your calories. The issue with these diets is they also encourage you to develop very questionable relationships with how you view your food which in the long run creates a very messy relationship between you and your diet. They also use this calorie counting system to restrict your intake of calories…hence getting you into a Calorie Deficit.

These companies have clearly realised that part of a successful Fat Loss diet is that you manage to get the dieter to learn how to restrict their food, and thus get results. 

Have you ever heard the phrase “what is measured can be managed”? 

Well, that is why you should count your calories if you want to lose weight. We need to keep track. And that's it. Keep track of the amount of energy you are eating. 

That's all a calorie is: A unit of energy. 

In the same way, a mile is a unit of distance. A calorie is a unit of energy. 

And in the same way, you are tracking how far you are running or walking, or how much you are lifting…you must also track how much you are eating. 

You wouldn’t step foot into the Gym and not take note of how heavy the dumbbell you are lifting is, would you? So why are you not treating your food the same? 

Emotions. Which I empathise with…(and if you need help with that then please read my article titled: How Do You Define Binge Eating?)…but that's not for this article.

It is also my belief that counting calories is important as we habitually wildly underestimate how many calories we are eating. A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine (1) and an article published by Public Health England (2)both state that participants under-report their calorie consumption.

This is why I believe it is very important for you, if you want to begin to lose weight to start counting your calories as accurately as possible. In the Western World we are so poorly educated on this subject…it leads to a huge overconsumption of caloric intake. We just have very little idea on two things, how many calories we actually require each day (our Total Daily Energy Expenditure) and how many calories are in our foods.  

There is:

97kcal in a Cappuccino from Starbucks (Tall)

130kcal in a bag of Salt and Vinegar Walkers Crisps

214kcal in a large glass of Red Wine

1064kcl in a 200g bar of Cadburys Dairy Milk 

1720kcal in a medium Dominos Pepperoni Pizza

Now imagine you had some garlic bread with the pizza or a dash of syrup in your cappuccino. Maybe had two glasses of wine not just the one…you can see how the little bits here, the little bits there add up. 

And if you don’t track that…you can begin to take away from all of your hard work in the gym.

That being said…

“All calories count, but you don’t have to count all calories” — Jordan Syatt

You can get into a Caloric Deficit without counting calories, but this doesn’t mean you shouldn’t educate yourself on them. Learning how many calories are in the foods you eat is a simple and easy way to make sure you can keep track, even when you aren’t “tracking”. 

How Do You Count Calories? 

Great question. 

Before we get into this…I want you to know that at times it's not easy to be very accurate. It used to drive me bonkers, the few times I have counted calories that it was never perfect. So right off the bat…i’m telling you this is NEVER an exact science. 

In fact, even the calories published on packets are not 100% accurate. The FDA in the US allows up to 20% deviation on what the packet might actually contain either way…

So how do you get around this? Well, you give yourself a nice long time frame to lose weight…you experiment and keep making little changes until it starts to work for your goals. 

Personally, I recommend to my clients to download the app “MyFitnessPal” although some clients have had great success with FitBit Tracking too. 

With MyFitness Pal you set up your Goal Weight…and it will give you a Daily Amount of Calories that you can consume. 

Then throughout the day you scan barcodes, type in and figure out what you are eating in order to find out how many calories you are eating. It has an extensive list of food stuffs in its library and there are few things in this world that aren’t on there. Including Restaurant Menus, Cocktails and your favourite Fast Foods. 

But figuring out portion sizes can be difficult. 

There's another catch with MyFitnessPal if you want to lose weight…and its this:

Image from @thegymstarter on Instagram

Image from @thegymstarter on Instagram

MyFitnessPal gives you back Calories burnt from exercise as per your exercise tracker (the red arrows on the illustration above). Fitness Trackers don’t accurately calculate the number of calories you have burned through exercise and therefore the number of calories MyFitnessPal says you can have back is not going to be accurate. 

Added to that…if you have increased your movement…and burnt some calories…why would you then want to eat that back?

 You are just undoing your hard work. 

What If The Food I Eat Is Home Cooked and Doesn’t Have A Barcode?

Tracking Home Cooked food is terribly irritating on MyFitnessPal. As you will have to weigh all your food, every ingredient and figure out how you cooked it because how you cook food changes its calorie content…there becomes a lot of barriers in place which will stop you from tracking your calories. 

And as you may well know…my number one rule for Fitness is enjoyment. As enjoyment leads to adherence. And if there are lots of barriers in place you simply will not remain adherent to what you are doing…because its no longer enjoyable…but onerous. 

Luckily for you, I have a Fat Loss My Fitness Pal rule in place for this very problem. 

If you are eating home cooked food, or whole foods nearly the whole of the time, that sticks to the rule of Protein and Veggies at every meal…and Carbs come along for the ride (one of my 5 AwesomeRules for life) then it is my belief you don’t have to track that food. 

But…

And its a Big But…if you eat anything with a Barcode on it…you must scan and track that. 

If you are finding you are getting to within 60% of your Calorie allowance (the Goal Number on the image above) from Barcoded Foods…then it is a fair statement to say that you are eating over your calorie allowance. 

This means that if you have a calorie allowance of 1500kcals a day and you are eating 900kcals worth of Coffees from Costa, Wine, Crisps and Dip, Sodas, Chocolate or Sandwiches from Pret then I think we can assume you are going over your calories each day. 

So the Big Food Number on your MyFitnesPal should read no more than 900kcals (60% of your Daily Caloric Allowance) in this example.  

YOUR BMR or GOAL CALORIES — Know Your Numbers

I set all my clients up with a calorie target of two numbers. 

  1. A Lower Limit

  2. An Upper Limit.

The lower limit is set to their BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) which is the number that dictates how many calories they burn just by being them. Their Digestion, Respiration, Minimal Daily Movement all leads us to this figure. 

If you want to know your BMR then email me a request and I will tell you how to get a number (adam@thegymstarter.com) 

The upper limit is normally their Goal B/W ins LBS x12. 

This figure is always higher than we expect and scares a few people. But if you are consistent with your training and your NEAT especially, then it will work fine for you. 

I ask all my clients to try and make sure that each day they will fall somewhere between these two numbers, and by doing so…they will over a course of time…lose weight, and keep it off. 

One last important point…

I heard this from Susan Neibergall on my Podcast: The Fitness Solution (listen on iTunes here). Susan said that the aim of being in a Calorie Deficit isn’t to see how little you can eat…but to see how much you can eat within that number. 

That's the challenge. 

It's not about restriction. 

It's about abundance within your limits. Imagine you driving a car, and you are coming onto a Motorway, you know that your limit is 70mph on the motorway…you are going to drive damn near to that number. You aren’t going to travel on the motorway at 40mph because you want to get your destination as quickly as possible, and you know that going that slow…when everything else around you is going that quick…is damn dangerous. 

Yout might cruise at 60/65mph…but no slower. 

What Are The Positives and Negatives of Counting Calories?

The positives are the following:

  1. You can educate yourself on the calories you are eating each day and see how that is effecting your Fat Loss Journey 

  2. It gives you a way of looking at food as just energy. Not good or bad foods…it just is literally a combination of calories formatted in a certain way for you to consume. 

  3. It is time-restricted. This is not something you need to do for the rest of your life. Once you get a handle on the foods you like to enjoy…and learn how much energy is in them then you are free to roam the world and keep looser tabs on what you are doing. Then if things go array…you have a tried and tested format to help you get back on track.

  4. It will lead to results. If you track accurately…it will lead to results for you. 

  5. It allows you to stop being a Dieter. You can finally walk away from Slimming World and Weight Watchers and actually learn that food is just food…and if it fits inside your number…then you can eat it. It basically gives you guilt-free freedom. 

  6. Read number five again. 

I know I spoke about negatives a the top of this section…and there are a few. But what I really mean are pitfalls. There are common mistakes that people make when tracking calories which will drastically hinder their progress. 

Again, let me call on Instagram: 

Image from @thegymstarter on Instagram

Image from @thegymstarter on Instagram

As you can see there are plenty of ways that this method of tracking your consumption can let you down, and therefore will hinder your progress. 

I can only suggest avoiding these mistakes and you will be able to remain accurate with what you are doing. 

The other negatives associated with Calorie Tracking is thus:

  1.  People can become obsessed with it.

  2. People don’t want to see the truth. 

Point 1: They can be completely obsessed with their numbers and that can totally impact the way they view their food.

What I would say about this is the following. We may all know someone who is “obsessed” with their numbers. But in truth, that is one person out of many more that you are focusing on. You are looking for the anomaly to prove your point. Far more people casually track their calories in this world, than get obsessed with it. Don’t use one person to prove your already biased opinion.

Point 2: It can be scary. If this is something that you believe you have had a handle on your whole life, but know the scale has never actually told you what you want to hear…then being accountable for what you are putting in your mouth can be a very scary moment. Seeing it in black and white…is, without doubt, a bitter pill to swallow. But if you can make your peace with that right now, then it will pay dividends, compared to you regretting not being able to when you are 55 and need a hip replacement. 

To Conclude

For me the answer is simple: Track Your Calories

Its not a life sentence. You don’t have to do this for the rest of your life. But if you can accurately track for a month or so…then you will learn so much about your food you will be able to take so much more control over what you are eating. 

Numbers are King. You need to know your numbers to succeed. Your Upper Limit, Your Lower Limit and hit between those each day for a long period of time…and you will succeed. 

Eat as much as you can within your numbers. That's the goal here. To eat as much as possible…not as little as possible. 

Stick to the 60% rule don’t let MyFitness Pals annoyances stop you from succeeding. Learn to work with it, rather than against it, and you will find success. 

Guilt-Free Freedom this is your goal. To learn to enjoy all foods so long as they work within your numbers. Foods are not good, or bad. They just are. 

And thats it. 

How To Track Calories by me, 

The Gym Starter… 

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Sources: 

  1. New England Journal of Medicine. 2020. Discrepancy Between Self-Reported And Actual Caloric Intake And Exercise In Obese Subjects | NEJM. [online] Available at: <https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM199212313272701> [Accessed 9 April 2020].

  2. Ons.gov.uk. 2020. A Government Statistical Service Perspective On Official Estimates Of Calorie Consumption — Office For National Statistics. [online] Available at: <https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/methodologies/agovernmentstatisticalserviceperspectiveonofficialestimatesofcalorieconsumption#toc> [Accessed 9 April 2020].

DID YOU FIND THIS USEFUL?

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