R.J.
Just as an addendum to BrookeM's... drop too far below that, and your body will start doing 3 things
1) Throw the breaks on your metabolism / hoarding every single calorie
2) Resulting in weightgain
3) Start eating itself (resulting in flab initially, then organ damage)
Conversely, increase your calorie load and your exercise/output and your body will up it's metabolic rate.
This is an aspect to dieting / weightloss / eating / exercising that a lot of people don't get.
EX2) Anorexic eating 400 calories a day, and doing strenuous exercise for 6 hours a day can easily be GAINING weight every month
EX2) Athlete eating 12,000 calories a day, and doing strenuous exercise for 6 hours a day can be struggling to keep the weight on because they keep LOSING weight
The real trick is to NOT be in deficit NOR in great excess. Deficit tell your body there's something wrong with the food supply and your body starts hoarding. Great excess and your body starts packing on batteries (fat is 'just' stored energy).
Instead, keep providing your body exactly what it needs (or as close as possible) and it will start doing a few things
1) Increase resting and active metabolism
2) Get 'lazy' with it's energy storage (aka fat)
3) Start resetting baseline 'normal' weight
On the surface... maintain at 1472, decrease & lose, increase and gain... for VERY brief periods of time. The decrease and GAIN, increase and LOSE.
So many many people yo-yo with mini starvations (be decreasing calories or increasing exercise without matching nutritional content), and then splurge, and they yo yo in a gradually increasing line, fighting to stay 'x' weight.
If you're 'fighting' you're doing it wrong. Or you have a medical issue (often hormonal). It's a slower process of upping your metabolism, but it means you don't spend all your life fighting your body, and slipping, and diving back in, and, and, and.