""each time you consume 3500 less calories than you burn, you lose a pound in weight.""
Thats confusing...
3500 = 1 pound.
-3500 = -1 pound.
+3500 = +1 pound
My total calorie deficit is roughly 1500 per day. Some might think that's too much but I feel in perfectly good health.Weight loss is a slow process, especially now since you're closer to your goal. Don't be discouraged. Since you're probably cutting your cals by more than 500/day some of the, um, non-loss you're experiencing could be attributed to things like water weight.
Thanks Steve, now I understand a little better. So essentially you lose a pound of fat every time you burn 3500 calories more than you're consuming + extra weight from loss of fluids and other stuff?No, you guys are assuming the only thing you lose when you diet is fat.
There are 3500 calories in one pound of fat.
So IF fat were the only thing you lost while you diet, the 3500 calorie deficit would make sense.
But that's not the case.
And the other 'things' you lose while you diet don't have 3500 calories per pound.
As a general rule, you can go by that. But our bodies are not very 'general' in nature and more often than not, the 3500 calorie deficit doesn't play out as planned.
Thanks Steve, now I understand a little better. So essentially you lose a pound of fat every time you burn 3500 calories more than you're consuming + extra weight from loss of fluids and other stuff?