Calculating Your True Energy Needs
At 176 cm and 88 kg, your baseline Basal Metabolic Rate using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation lands around 1,850 calories before activity. Adding 23-26k steps (roughly 12-15 miles) burns an extra 800-1,100 calories daily, while 90 minutes of resistance training adds another 400-600. This puts your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) between 2,800-3,400 calories depending on intensity. A 2100-calorie intake creates a 700-1,300 daily deficit – aggressive but not automatically 'too low' if managed correctly.
What the Research Actually Shows on Large Deficits
Studies in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition demonstrate that deficits up to 1,000 calories daily preserve muscle when protein stays at 1.6-2.2g per kg of body weight (140-190g for you) and resistance training continues. However, research from the Minnesota Starvation Experiment and modern reviews in Obesity Reviews show metabolic adaptation kicks in after 4-6 weeks: thyroid output drops 15-20%, NEAT (non-exercise activity) falls, and hunger hormones like ghrelin rise 25%. For those in their 40s-50s dealing with hormonal shifts, this adaptation often feels worse due to declining estrogen or testosterone.
Practical Adjustments That Match My Methodology
In my book The CFP Weight Loss Method, I emphasize cycle dieting over linear deficits. At your activity level, 2100 calories works for 10-14 days followed by a 2-3 day refeed at maintenance (2,900 calories) to blunt adaptation. Prioritize 40% of calories from protein, time carbs around lifting sessions, and include anti-inflammatory foods to ease joint pain. Track morning heart rate variability – if it drops 10+ bpm consistently, increase calories by 300. This approach has helped clients with diabetes and blood pressure lose 1-2 pounds weekly without crashing energy or triggering binge cycles common after past diet failures.
Why Activity Level Doesn't Always Protect You
High step counts improve insulin sensitivity by 30-40% per Diabetes Care studies, aiding blood sugar management. Yet excessive volume without enough fuel can elevate cortisol, promoting abdominal fat storage especially during perimenopause. Start with a 500-calorie deficit (2,400-2,600 calories) for the first month, then adjust based on weekly averages. Measure waist circumference and strength numbers, not just scale weight. This prevents the overwhelm of conflicting advice and builds sustainable habits that insurance limitations can't touch.