definitely not. afaik the recommended kcal intake also relies upon you walking the minimum recommended 10k steps per day.
I've not finished reading the entire thread yet so there may be a ninja edit coming up. However this post had me bemused.
10,000 steps per day you say? So (bear with me) 10,000 paces per day?
That is an awfully long way don't you think? At an estimate that means that our Red friends recommend I walk around 9km per day
I have made this figure by doing a simple experiment: if it's 10,000 paces and each of my paces is three feet (the experiment was how I measured my pace)= 30,000 feet.
That's a LOT of distance to cover.
On topic:
Sandwiches when bought, or anything pretty much when bought contains so many calories. M&S BLT is like 600. I could eat two of those in a sitting and feel like i've had at most a light lunch= 1/2 of my day's allowance and still hungry
The day's calorie allowance however has a flaw or two:
1. If Raymond, for example, is 4 feet and 11 inches tall and of normal build, he is recommended a maximum of 2.5k calories per day.
I am 6 feet and 5 inches and of large build, yet they say I should eat the same as Raymond.
Is there any logic behind that whatsoever? Surely a bigger man needs more to eat, by the simple logic that he is larger and requires more energy to fuel his larger system?
2. If Raymond has just turned 18, he is a man, and is recommended 2.5k calories per day.
Raymond's grandpa has just turned 100, he is a man, and is also recommended 2.5k calories per day (the same amount as his grandson).
Surely an 18 year old's body requires a larger energy intake than that of a 100 year old man?
I think that calorie counting is balls frankly! My friend does this (not dieting) and I inwardly do a little facepalm when she says the number of calories in a foodstuff that one would avoid if trying to better one's eating patterns.
It's what you eat not what you don't eat; counting calories assists in making you conscious of how much you're eating etc, but it doesn't necessarily assist in losing weight, as fewer calories doesn't necessarily mean healthier.
To the OP:
Good on you for trying to shed some pounds! Steer well clear of those sandwich aisles mate: shocking how much (if you're watching what you're eating) of your 'RDA' a small sandwich triangle takes up, and yet it still leaves you hungry
Edit: OP, what is your 'diet'? 18lbs in 3 months, hats off to you sir!
Another Edit: I did the BMR thing which gave me 2209 and if I were described as sedentary I would require 2650 calories per day
Never heard of BMR before. They should make this known to more people as that's quite a handy thing to know of. ('they' being unspecified peoples who assist with dieting and teach you the BMI equations etc)