Understanding the Importance of Calorie Counting
A calorie is a measure of the amount of energy within a particular food or drink. On the packaging, this is usually displayed as kcal. Calorie counting is one of the most common ways of tracking what you eat.
When our calorie intake exceeds the amount of calories spent through exercise and physical activity, weight gain ensues. For this reason, calorie counting has become a popular method of monitoring what you eat, and in doing so, you can improve your health by losing weight.
However, it is important to find a balanced approach. Becoming overly fixated on calorie counting may lead to a decline in the overall quality of your diet. This approach does not take into account what nutrients you are getting and where you are getting these calories.
Addressing Concerns About Calorie Obsession
Whilst calorie counting presents a simple approach to maintaining physical health and well-being, it can also lead to negative consequences. These can include:
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Nutrient deficiency: By counting calories, you put yourself at risk of consuming less nutritious foods or ignoring the need for a balanced diet, including vitamins and minerals.
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Obsessive behaviour: The focus can shift from overall health to meeting a numerical target, which can then lead to stress and anxiety about food choices.
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Eating disorders: Calorie counting can lead to an unhealthy relationship with food. Disordered eating ensues with skipped meals, anxiety around eating certain foods, obsessing over your body image and may even lead to an eating disorder.
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Eating disorders are recognised as mental health conditions where controlling food intake is used as a mechanism to deal with feelings and emotions. Common types of disordered eating include anorexia, bulimia and binge eating disorder.
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Prevents mindful eating: Mindful eating is when you listen to your body cues, i.e. when you feel hungry, this is your body's way of telling you it needs more food - for energy. Focusing on how many calories you consume can make you ignore these cues, which then leads to under or overeating.
Weight loss is a goal for many individuals, but simply relying on consuming fewer calories may be detrimental to your health. It is important, then, to be mindful about your food choices and ensure you listen to your body's signals.
Mindful eating involves listening to your body cues, eating when hungry, and stopping when full. A good place to start is developing a balanced relationship with food by avoiding labelling all foods as either good or bad. A balanced diet encompassing nutrient-dense foods can include fat and sweet foods, but moderation is key.
Setting realistic, achievable goals and avoiding extreme diets can improve overall well-being and help you achieve your goal weight.
Adopting a Flexible Calorie Counting Mindset
While counting calories can be a helpful tool for achieving your goal, it is important to do so safely without getting lost in the numbers. Being too restrictive can even be detrimental to your health. Opting for a softer, less rigid approach can be more sustainable in the long term and help you keep those excess pounds off.
The NHS recommends a daily calorie intake of 2,500 kcal for men and 2,000 kcal for women. However, to lose weight, this should be reduced by 600 kcal per day.
Ensure you account for all nutrient groups. Most calorie counting starts with low-fat or low-sugar alternatives. While these are good places to start, restricting them too much can lead to an imbalance of nutrients that your body needs to function.
So, What Are the 9 Ways to Count Calories Without Becoming Obsessive?
1. Using Calorie Counting Apps
There are many calorie-counting apps available, and it can be difficult to decide which one is best for you. Apps like MyFitnessPal help you track the number of calories you consume and then calculate a recommended daily calorie intake.
MyNetDiary is another calorie-counting app with a database of over 900,000 foods. It allows you to scan barcodes to instantly display the caloric content of foods, making tracking easy.
Importantly, these apps should be used alongside other tools to help maintain a healthy diet consisting of all required macronutrients (carbohydrates, protein, fat), vitamins and minerals.
2. Estimating Portion Sizes
Even if you eat healthy foods, eating too much can still affect your weight loss journey. For this reason, measuring your portion size and counting calories can help. A trick is to fill half your plate with vegetables and salad, leaving less room for high-calorie foods.
3. Reading Food Labels
Many of us lead a busy life, so it is easier to pick up items from a supermarket shelf without first reading the label. However, nutritional information can help determine the nutritional value of the product as well as the number of calories it contains.
This can provide valuable information to ensure a balanced diet. Colour-coded labels on the front of the package indicate whether a food is high, medium, or low in macronutrients (carbohydrates, protein, fat) and salt.
The rear of the package provides information about micronutrients, including vitamins and minerals. A healthy diet consists of a balance of all these nutrients, so reading the labels lets you track exactly what is going into your body. By solely tracking calories, you can miss out on healthy nutrients provided by vitamins, minerals, and other micronutrients.
4. Prioritising Nutrient-Dense Foods
'Real food' consists of unprocessed foods that are free of chemicals or additives (such as added sugars). These foods are nutrient-dense, low-sugar, and fibre-rich.
Unlike processed foods, which are easier as they are 'on-the-go meals', unprocessed foods are better for your heart health and your skin and are better at managing your blood sugar levels and triglycerides.
Processed foods carry an increased cancer risk, lack nutritional value, and contain unhealthy levels of salt and sugar. They are also easier to digest and calorie-dense, so a smaller amount contributes more to your calorie count and uses less energy to digest.
Opting for whole grains and fibre-rich foods can help with constipation and high cholesterol. A high-protein diet, while aiding weight loss, can also reduce hunger and boost metabolism, which can help maintain weight loss and lower blood pressure.
5. Embracing Flexible Meal Planning
In today's age, when most individuals are constantly on the go, meal planning is a helpful tool for saving time and money and, importantly, maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
A flexible meal plan involves planning different options for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The variety itself can help you stick to your healthy habits, providing flexibility to mix and match based on how you feel on any given day.
Incorporating calorie counting into a flexible meal plan can help you achieve your weight loss goals while meeting all the nutritional requirements of a healthy diet. Achieving a calorie deficit this way is more sustainable in the long term.
Occasional indulgences as part of the meal plan can be beneficial as it can be impossible to 100% stick to a diet. Incorporating indulgence as part of the plan, whilst for 80% of the time sticking to nutrient-dense healthier options, can help to maintain a sustainable weight loss plan.
6. Staying Active and Hydrated
Broken down to its backbone, weight loss occurs when you consume fewer calories than you burn. Physical activity plays a role in helping you to lose weight alongside calorie counts.
Research shows that monitoring what we eat can directly inform our exercise choices. For example, if your daily calorie count is 1500 kcal, you can use this to calculate how many calories you must burn through exercise. If you have had a cheat day or have exceeded your calorie needs for that day, you can deduce how much longer you need to exercise.
In addition, keeping hydrated helps ensure that all bodily functions can function normally. When exercising, adequate fluid intake can help replenish fluid levels depleted through sweating.
Water has zero calories, so it does not affect your calorie count. It can also help you in your weight loss journey and contribute to your overall health and well-being.
7. Focusing on Mindful Eating
Mindful eating is a process for managing eating habits, reducing disordered eating, and supporting weight loss. Essentially, it involves listening to your body, eating only when hungry, and eating only until you feel full.
By listening to bodily cues, you can mitigate against automatic eating thoughts and reactions. This can leave you noticing the effect food has on your body. Recognising which foods make you feel bloated and which leave you feeling satisfied can inform healthier food options encompassing fewer calories, which will meet your body's needs.
By solely counting calories, number crunching may take precedence over what you're eating, how much you're eating, and whether you even need to eat it in the first place.
Paying attention to hunger cues and satiety signals through mindful eating can then directly prevent the consumption of excess calories. This then directly impacts how much weight loss you can achieve.
8. Experimenting with Calorie Cycling
Different methods of calorie counting include calorie cycling. In this method, you alternate days of restricted calorie intake with days with no restrictions. Essentially, you are taking a break from dieting, which may actually aid weight loss.
When you restrict the number of calories you consume, your body may think you are starving. Your body's natural defence is to slow down your metabolism to prevent weight loss.
Incorporating occasional days of normal calorie intake every few weeks can prevent the body from thinking it's starving and keep the metabolism high. This may help people lose fat and aid weight loss, though more research is needed.
Strict eating habits and incorporating significant changes to your intake of calories should be avoided. This measure cannot be maintained long-term and can keep you from reaching your weight loss goals.
Instead, aim for sustainable health goals by incorporating fewer calories without restricting essential nutrients. Alongside regular physical activity, this can pave the way towards helping you burn body fat and consequently lose weight.
9. Seeking Professional Guidance
While it may seem as simple as consuming fewer calories than you burn, weight loss is not nearly as simple. Consulting with a registered dietitian or nutritionist is crucial in helping you determine the right amount of calories you need to reach your body weight.
Aside from the numbers, a nutritionist can offer the right advice based on your specific needs, emphasising the right balance of all macro and micronutrients required for safe, sustainable and healthy weight loss.
A personalised calorie-counting plan can help you eat foods that help you lose weight while simultaneously ensuring that they are nutritionally complete for your overall health and well-being.
Conclusion: Finding a Healthy Balance
While counting calories is an effective tool for losing weight, other factors to consider are what you eat and how much physical activity you engage in.
The bigger picture is that you must ensure you do not restrict food groups. This can lead to malnutrition and other medical issues such as an electrolyte imbalance, blood sugar swings or stomach issues..
The safest method is to approach your calorie restriction based on your individual needs and lifestyle. The occasional indulgence can help you stick to the new routine while improving your overall relationship with food.