Posts Tagged ‘counting calories’

Counting Calories for Weight Loss

By Team TFLA On May 30, 2011 No Comments

Losing weight and counting calories go hand-in-hand, and despite what those peddling weight loss products tell you, weight loss cannot happen successfully without counting a few calories.

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{The best time to count calories is before you buy the food item!}

Today we will focus on teaching you how to count calories for weight loss. Keep reading to find out more! Click here to continue reading



Benefits of Counting Calories: Fat Loss and Beyond!

By Mike On August 10, 2009 7 Comments

Don’t be fooled by all the fat loss and muscle building experts out there proclaiming the death of calorie counting. Chances are they all started with some form of calorie counting and are obviously more experienced now and don’t need to follow the practice religiously.

Calorie counting at the end of a tough day
Fellow fitness blogger Rafi Bar-Lev from The Fitness Adviser was kind enough to explain the basics of this time-tested method and outline the long term benefits.

Benefits of Counting Calories: Fat Loss and Beyond- Guest Post by Rafi Bar-Lev

Your coworker makes a comment to you about your weight.

Generally, you’d just brush it off, but this isn’t the first person to say something and you’re aware that it really is a problem.

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How Do I Count Calories Burned?

By Mike On February 4, 2009 No Comments

Counting calorie consumption has never been a problem for those people that wanted too. There are plenty of online databases of hundreds of food items that allow us to determine with a considerable amount of accuracy how many calories we have inputted into our bodies. But what about the calories we expend?

How many times have you heard or read about doing 15 minutes of cardio at the end of each of your strength training workouts or to go for a 15 minute walk, twice a day.

Well, one way to get a rough estimate of the calories you burn in many activities is with a simple formula developed by physiologists using a yardstick known as the Metabolic Equivalent or MET.

A single MET represents the amount of energy used at rest.

The University of South Carolina’s Arnold School of Public Health maintains what it calls the Compendium of Physical Activities, which gives the

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