Quote:
Originally Posted by Puxlut
NW: So using your formula my TDEE is 2343 calories...is this what I require in a day to maintain my weight? Like Peanut, I am nursing as well...I'm confused  That seems high.
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I would use it as a guideline to start as every body will be different and it is just a starting point. For me it gives a ~2710 calculation or something and I lose weight (slowly) at that amount, obviously depending on my activity level. Keep in mind, our bodies are very complex and calories can vary a bit (a few hundred calories a day) day to day and as long as the average is around your maintenance level your weight will stay the same.
If that is what you come up with, I would try that amount of calories/day and if after a couple weeks you notice no change, you can drop the calories by a few hundred (300-500) and see what happens again. Because you are nursing, that should put you in a deficit, which is what you want to lose weight (I am assuming you want to lose and not gain

). A 500 calorie daily deficit should result in a 1-2 lb loss of fat weekly.
Keep you protein intake adequate so as not to lose muscle - you want that as that burns calories just existing! You want at least 1 gram/lb of lean body weight for protein. I don't want to get to complex a formula going, so I would say at least at 3 of your daily meals, try to have some form of meat the size of the palm of your hand. If you like eggs, 2 or 3 is good (my wife has 2 scrambled with cheese 5 or 6 days a week for breakfast) for protein. Eat the yolks! That is where all the nutrition in an egg is!
Eat as much green leafy vegetables, (broccoli and cauliflower are great too) as you can handle, some fruit - berries are best. Try to avoid processed foods as much as possible - pretty much anything that comes in a box.
Round out the rest of your calories with a variety of delicious fat!

I have 60% (sometimes more) of my calories coming from fat. The only fat you want to avoid is trans fat (this is often found as Hydrogenated or modified oil of some sort in the ingredient list) Nuts, seeds, butter, cream, Olive oil, avocado, coconut oil are a few great examples of fat.
I would recommend a high quality fish oil supplement if you do not eat a lot of oily fish.
http://www.marksdailyapple.com/fish-...alth-benefits/
Sorry, I got rambling again. I hope this helps.