it wasn't my idea to start at 1200. i bought one of those scales that measures body fat% (even though i thought it was a bad idea) and i used the number it gave me to figure up my BMR. the number the online formula i used gave me was 1389- told me i need to take in 1910 calories a day. i decreased 1910 by 25% giving me 1432. so i was planning on aiming for 1400 but the first day i counted i ended up just under 1200 and i felt ok. i've heard a lot of times that 1200 is a blanket number that diet plans say to cut down to so i figure it's probably something like the lowest "safe" number of calories to aim for. so really my thought was to shoot for anywhere between 1400-1200. i figured as long as i didn't go over 1400 i'd still be able to lose some weight and as long as i didn't drop under 1200 i wouldn't be starving.
No, there is no general baseline caloric intake that is "okay" for everyone. Caloric intake is a very individual and personal thing. Anyone saying otherwise is wrong.
I know you don't know me at all, so putting your trust in a stranger kind of sucks. But I promise ya... haha, I don't spend all this time on these sites so I can secretly make people fat. I am here to offer my advice. My advice is based on years of learning from books and hands on experience. I don't claim to know all, that is for sure. But listening to me will definitely leave you better off then just winging it on your own.
and thanks for understanding my worries about obsessing. a lot of people think it's dumb but to me it's very real. i hate myself for being fat (and at 180 and 5'6 i'm not really that big at all) and i know feeling that way can be the first step in the wrong direction.
I have seen people become obsessive with this lifestyle. It is quite easy actually. Many people who don't know me "assume" that I am obsessive with it.
Compare me to your average couch potato, and sure, you could say that I am.
Compare me to your average gym-goer though, and I am not. And 9/10 times, and I hate saying this b/c it sounds like I am blowing my own horn, but I have a point, but 9/10 times I look better than them too.
The reason I believe that this is the case is because of my healthy relationship I have with this lifestyle.
I could have something come up such as an injury or a trip, which leads to a week off from the gym. Guess what? I would not mind.
A dinner could comes up with a bunch of friends and guess what? I am going to eat whatever the hell I want.
I might be tired and not feel like running today. Guess what? I won't.
I live and die by this notion:
Acute setbacks mean VERY little in the grand scheme of chronic forward progress.
I know that over the long run, I am going to do things the right way. And because of this fact, when I am not up for the challenge or when life gets in the way.... it's okay. Because tomorrow is another day. Or next week is another week. I've programmed my mind for LONG TERM success. My mind drives my actions.
And "big-scale" success like we talk about here. You know the kind. Losing 50 lbs. Looking your best ever. Regaining your health. These kind of "big-scale successes" don't happen overnight. They take a great deal of consistent effort over a long period of time. So when things don't go the way you had hoped or planned one day or one week.... big whoop. Those short time frames mean very little when we are dealing with such large time frames.
Why am I telling you this? You are not me and I am not you.
Right now you are putting a lot of focus on your nutrition. While you are exerting the energy, I suggest partitioning some of it toward your mind and the pre-existing relationships you have in there. If you tell yourself that you will probably get addicted to this to an obsessive level, my bet is that you will. What you repeatedly think on a conscious level becomes your realities. I have seen it time and time again.
So letting your mind run wild with all these concerns is probably going to make them true, eventually.
I'd rather see you start focusing on the things you say to yourself. Your self-talk. And through this, establish a healthy relationship with your body. Start focusing on what you want rather than what you don't want.
IMO, you've got to get the mind right before you get the body right.
hahahahaha