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#2
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| You should be eating until you are satisfied, but not stuffed. If you are not hungry, I wouldn't worry about calories. For some folks though, figuring out when they have to stop eating is not so easy in the beginning. Then, to have you an approximation of how many calories you should aim for, you can use things such as the BMR and the AMR. However, these are numbers that would apply for the average person and might not always reflect the truth about one's metabolism. If you want to read more about this, there is a sticky thread here: http://www.atkinsdietbulletinboard.c...r-amr-bmi.html (BMR, AMR and BMI) 1900 sounds like a good number to me. Are you losing? If you are, then you must be doing something right.
__________________ "The truth is that temptation lurks everywhere, unless you deny yourself a social and working life and the attendant pleasures of eating out. I believe that the best way to overcome temptation is not with willpower, which is so often in short supply, but with our brain power, a potentially unlimited resource. Imagine that you're doing great, losing weight, feeling better than ever, thrilled with yourself, hearing compliments from friends and acquaintances---and then it happens! Despite all your good intentions, you're mightily tempted by a food you're not supposed to have. What to do? I'll tell you this: You'd better have a strategy ready!" (Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution, Chapter 19) |
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#3
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| I agree with Georgiana. This early in the Diet, I wouldn't worry about BMRs, AMRs, etc. Eat until you are satisfied, but not stuffed. You've already noticed that some days you'll eat more than others. And that's perfectly normal. Newborn babies eat only the amount of formula/milk they need to eat to stay alive and do their baby activities. Children typically do this until they are toddlers. Then some well-meaning adult starts to worry that the child isn't eating enough because they think a 2 year old should be able to eat the same amount of food that a 14 year old does. So they push food onto the child, who then learns to stop eating when he or she is stuffed to the gills, rather than to eat only that amount of food they need to eat. Your body won't let you starve. I tend to eat more the more physically active I am. For example, when I go on a 5 mile hike or a 15 mile bike ride, I'm more hungry than on days I'm sitting in the office pushing the papers in the "in" pile to the "out" pile.
__________________ ~Megs~ 242/141/160 (130) dress size 26/10/8 5'4", Female, May 2, 2003 http://www.geocities.com/not2latespage http://mformiscellaneous.blogspot.com/ |
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