No more fast food!
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As for me, I probably eat fast food more often than I should. Mostly because I get lazy and bored of my cooking. For sure, preparing the food at home is the best way for me to control the content and calories. And not always because the calories do not match what the restaurant said, or because they haven't published that info, but because I usually wind up getting way too much stuff and eating much more than I would have at home. I definitely have much more consistent and desirable results when I make breakfast/lunch at home!0
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I'm on the road a lot for my job. I try to preplan meals but still eat out often. The Asian chicken salad from Mcdonald's is not too bad calorie wise and tastes pretty good with the low calorie sesame ginger dressing.
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CharonCharon wrote: »See if you can say no to restaurants and fast food for 1 full month.
Put sticky notes all over your house. Even in your car.
Tell everyone you know about your goal and ask for support.
Call a friend when you feel tempted.
Fast food/ restaurants do not care about your health.
They just care about digging in your wallet.
Do slow food restaurants care about your health? Would you prefer to eat at restaurants that only offer what you don't want to eat?0 -
paperpudding wrote: »thrashersara88 wrote: »How quickly did you notice changes in your health and life?
I am about 60 days into my journey. Within the first three weeks, I didn't eat out. One night, we were rushed out the door after something happened. I didn't eat anything and didn't plan. We stopped at McD's. The first part of the meal I didn't notice because I was so hungry. The second was DISGUSTING! It made me want to throw up. I put it down and wouldn't eat any more. I haven't been back since. It's pretty soon after you cut things out that you will notice how your body is changing and your tastes move away. It is pretty easy to go past a fast food restaurant after tasting that nasty food.
I don't get this need to demonise fast food like macdonalds and call it disgusting and nasty.
If you don't like it don't eat it.
But there is no reason people can't eat it and lose/ maintain weight and be healthy.
Uhm, I think this is exactly what the previous poster was saying. That the food tastes bad and she will not eat it again? It is not demonising to say that you find the taste of something disgusting.0 -
paperpudding wrote: »Yes, tastes change over time, I accept that. ( although 60 days isn't really much time)
But that doesn't make the food no longer eaten 'disgusting' or 'nasty' or 'making me want to throw up'
I agree with this sentiment. It's just... what should the person say if the food made them nauseous?
Yes I guess you should say you feel nauseous eating it
( although I find it a bit strange that a food previously enjoyed has gone to the 'making you feel like throwing up' point in just 2 months)
I guess it was the whole ' the food is disgusting and nasty' idea added to the nearly making her throw up that seemed demonising the food, rather than just saying the food wasn't appealing to her any more.0 -
paperpudding wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »Yes, tastes change over time, I accept that. ( although 60 days isn't really much time)
But that doesn't make the food no longer eaten 'disgusting' or 'nasty' or 'making me want to throw up'
I agree with this sentiment. It's just... what should the person say if the food made them nauseous?
Yes I guess you should say you feel nauseous eating it
( although I find it a bit strange that a food previously enjoyed has gone to the 'making you feel like throwing up' point in just 2 months)
I guess it was the whole ' the food is disgusting and nasty' idea added to the nearly making her throw up that seemed demonising the food, rather than just saying the food wasn't appealing to her any more.
I have never enjoyed this type of fast food. I have never managed to eat at McDonald's or Burger King. The smell of whatever fat they use to fry things into makes me want to throw up, it smells like trash to me, literally. It is not a matter of the food not being tasty, it is a matter of head scratching and wondering how people eat it, same as I would feel e.g. about someone telling me cat food looks delicious. It is not about the calories or the quality or whatever, I will drink soda for example and not pretend it is a nutritious or healthy choice. Of course since I have not been used to eating this type of fast food ever, perhaps I could get to accept that it actually is edible if I were forced to eat it regulalry for whatever reason. But perhaps the opposite is also possible, that once you get a break then you also start to notice whatever it is that makes me gagging at the smell?0 -
Perhaps.
Or perhaps some new converts to healthy eating get a bit over zealous about demonising things that don't fit into their healthy eating criteria.0 -
_Terrapin_ wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »Yes, tastes change over time, I accept that. ( although 60 days isn't really much time)
But that doesn't make the food no longer eaten 'disgusting' or 'nasty' or 'making me want to throw up'
I think the sodium is about the only memory I have of fast food after a long break; IDK, it's fuel in an emergency.
Oh man. Yeah. My last filet of fish didn't do that but I went to Pizza Hut and Smashburger last year and can say NEVER AGAIN. All I could feel was the salt in my body for two days. Awful. Although Smashburger was good at least... Pizza hut was just not.
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Very rare now before was 4-5 times a week. Once and a while I get a wendys spicy chicken wrap can't get over those but still within my limits.
Feel so much better. The salt was killing me especially with high blood pressure.
Still when they come out with new things on TV commercials it calls to me but it fades and i tend to just get past it.0 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »thrashersara88 wrote: »How quickly did you notice changes in your health and life?
I am about 60 days into my journey. Within the first three weeks, I didn't eat out. One night, we were rushed out the door after something happened. I didn't eat anything and didn't plan. We stopped at McD's. The first part of the meal I didn't notice because I was so hungry. The second was DISGUSTING! It made me want to throw up. I put it down and wouldn't eat any more. I haven't been back since. It's pretty soon after you cut things out that you will notice how your body is changing and your tastes move away. It is pretty easy to go past a fast food restaurant after tasting that nasty food.
I don't get this need to demonise fast food like macdonalds and call it disgusting and nasty.
If you don't like it don't eat it.
But there is no reason people can't eat it and lose/ maintain weight and be healthy.
@paperpudding I agree with your general point on demonizing fast food but once one gets off it then tries it later it can really taste like crap. It did taste good when we last ate it but we just lose our taste for junk food after eating better for a while.
While the Huddle House can serve some very high carb meals I get them to leave off the carbs and just have coffee, 5 fried eggs and 6 strips of fried bacon. That will permit me to hit my medium protein macro.
The CookOut and other fast food places locally offer low carb meals now but staying < 50 grams of carbs daily I have to watch for "hidden" carbs.
Shouldn't it taste like crap the first time you have it too, then? I don't think the business model would work if it was that way.0 -
Be prepared that for the first week you may feel awful. If you do, don't worry, it will pass. I know that when anytime I stop eating a lot of fast food/bar food I feel like poo for the first few days. Then I feel better around day 4. I expect that I will go through this every so often, because I have a lot of bar trips as a musician.
I do allow myself the occasional taco bell, but you better believe I am fitting it into my calories.
However, you may be surprised at how much time cooking a different meal each day can take. It may be helpful to plan to make one big meal and serve it over a few days. A little planning goes a long way when preparing your own food. Good luck - you can do it!0 -
Still eat fast food, just less of it.
In excellent health and lost over a 100 pounds doing so.0 -
stevencloser wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »thrashersara88 wrote: »How quickly did you notice changes in your health and life?
I am about 60 days into my journey. Within the first three weeks, I didn't eat out. One night, we were rushed out the door after something happened. I didn't eat anything and didn't plan. We stopped at McD's. The first part of the meal I didn't notice because I was so hungry. The second was DISGUSTING! It made me want to throw up. I put it down and wouldn't eat any more. I haven't been back since. It's pretty soon after you cut things out that you will notice how your body is changing and your tastes move away. It is pretty easy to go past a fast food restaurant after tasting that nasty food.
I don't get this need to demonise fast food like macdonalds and call it disgusting and nasty.
If you don't like it don't eat it.
But there is no reason people can't eat it and lose/ maintain weight and be healthy.
@paperpudding I agree with your general point on demonizing fast food but once one gets off it then tries it later it can really taste like crap. It did taste good when we last ate it but we just lose our taste for junk food after eating better for a while.
While the Huddle House can serve some very high carb meals I get them to leave off the carbs and just have coffee, 5 fried eggs and 6 strips of fried bacon. That will permit me to hit my medium protein macro.
The CookOut and other fast food places locally offer low carb meals now but staying < 50 grams of carbs daily I have to watch for "hidden" carbs.
Shouldn't it taste like crap the first time you have it too, then? I don't think the business model would work if it was that way.
It does taste, or rather smell, like crap if you are not used to it from a young age. I cannot eat some types of fast food, never had it as a child, it does not smell like food to me. I have similar stories from several friends. It is one of these things where if you are not used to them from early on, it is unlikely you will fall in love with them later in life. Of course this goes for a lot of tastes, not just fast food. Marmite or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches come to mind: impossible to see the appeal if you are introduced to them as an adult, at least from my limited personal experience in relatives and friends.0 -
Well of course, I think that we all ate fast food when we were teens. I stopped eating that junk about 5 years ago and only eat it maybe 2-3 times per year if I am on a road trip. I can't remember how it was when I stopped but now it is so gross and I get sick when I eat it. Now I cook 4-5 times a day and that gets to be a drag sometimes but I enjoy eating healthy. I don't eat frozen/processed food either.0
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paperpudding wrote: »Perhaps.
Or perhaps some new converts to healthy eating get a bit over zealous about demonising things that don't fit into their healthy eating criteria.
Why does it really matter? I don't mean that as an attack, it just seems odd to be bothered that a complete stranger thinks a food is disgusting. There are all sorts of foods in countries outside the US that are perfectly acceptable to them which I find disgusting (balut comes to mind), but I doubt they sit around offended that some chick half a world away thinks it's gross; I imagine they're too busy chowing down.
I'm not sure why someone else's preferences or opinions would even be worth a second thought if it's something that you like or want to eat. I doubt they're bothered by you choosing to eat it.0 -
stevencloser wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »thrashersara88 wrote: »How quickly did you notice changes in your health and life?
I am about 60 days into my journey. Within the first three weeks, I didn't eat out. One night, we were rushed out the door after something happened. I didn't eat anything and didn't plan. We stopped at McD's. The first part of the meal I didn't notice because I was so hungry. The second was DISGUSTING! It made me want to throw up. I put it down and wouldn't eat any more. I haven't been back since. It's pretty soon after you cut things out that you will notice how your body is changing and your tastes move away. It is pretty easy to go past a fast food restaurant after tasting that nasty food.
I don't get this need to demonise fast food like macdonalds and call it disgusting and nasty.
If you don't like it don't eat it.
But there is no reason people can't eat it and lose/ maintain weight and be healthy.
@paperpudding I agree with your general point on demonizing fast food but once one gets off it then tries it later it can really taste like crap. It did taste good when we last ate it but we just lose our taste for junk food after eating better for a while.
While the Huddle House can serve some very high carb meals I get them to leave off the carbs and just have coffee, 5 fried eggs and 6 strips of fried bacon. That will permit me to hit my medium protein macro.
The CookOut and other fast food places locally offer low carb meals now but staying < 50 grams of carbs daily I have to watch for "hidden" carbs.
Shouldn't it taste like crap the first time you have it too, then? I don't think the business model would work if it was that way.
It does taste, or rather smell, like crap if you are not used to it from a young age. I cannot eat some types of fast food, never had it as a child, it does not smell like food to me. I have similar stories from several friends. It is one of these things where if you are not used to them from early on, it is unlikely you will fall in love with them later in life. Of course this goes for a lot of tastes, not just fast food. Marmite or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches come to mind: impossible to see the appeal if you are introduced to them as an adult, at least from my limited personal experience in relatives and friends.
I never had marmite but I only started eating fast food as a teenager and even then only extremely rarely, never had it as a child, and PB&J sammiches even later on. I think both taste great.0 -
Still eat fast food, just less of it.
In excellent health and lost over a 100 pounds doing so.
This is pure taste indulging with zero care about health and wellness.
BRING IT ON!0 -
paperpudding wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »Yes, tastes change over time, I accept that. ( although 60 days isn't really much time)
But that doesn't make the food no longer eaten 'disgusting' or 'nasty' or 'making me want to throw up'
I agree with this sentiment. It's just... what should the person say if the food made them nauseous?
Yes I guess you should say you feel nauseous eating it
( although I find it a bit strange that a food previously enjoyed has gone to the 'making you feel like throwing up' point in just 2 months)
I guess it was the whole ' the food is disgusting and nasty' idea added to the nearly making her throw up that seemed demonising the food, rather than just saying the food wasn't appealing to her any more.
I have never enjoyed this type of fast food. I have never managed to eat at McDonald's or Burger King. The smell of whatever fat they use to fry things into makes me want to throw up, it smells like trash to me, literally. It is not a matter of the food not being tasty, it is a matter of head scratching and wondering how people eat it, same as I would feel e.g. about someone telling me cat food looks delicious. It is not about the calories or the quality or whatever, I will drink soda for example and not pretend it is a nutritious or healthy choice. Of course since I have not been used to eating this type of fast food ever, perhaps I could get to accept that it actually is edible if I were forced to eat it regulalry for whatever reason. But perhaps the opposite is also possible, that once you get a break then you also start to notice whatever it is that makes me gagging at the smell?
Fair points, but this isn't the same as starting a diet and suddenly thinking the Micky D's quadruple cheese burgers you were happily scarfing down two weeks ago are now disgusting
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Pinnacle_IAO wrote: »Still eat fast food, just less of it.
In excellent health and lost over a 100 pounds doing so.
This is pure taste indulging with zero care about health and wellness.
BRING IT ON!
I still eat within my goals. Mostly get and my favorite grilled chicken sandwich or fish sandwich and/or once in awhile a Big Mac and get the small kid size fries with it and sometimes a ice cream cone.0 -
Man, I love a McDonald's cheeseburger once in a while. I used to love their milkshakes in the old days but now they're all foamy. I miss the Shamrock Shakes from the 80's.
I do agree that too much can make a belly rumble. When we were homeward bound from a recent road trip, my son declined to have a meal and said, "Mom, I can't WAIT to get home and have a salad." That was kind of a proud moment for me... Yeah, we had our fun, but the kid had learned it's not the best to eat it all the time.0 -
My spouse and I ate out all of the time, especially fast food. About 3 months ago, we spent a large amount of money on convenience and eating out. This is part of what kicked us to eating better/homecooked meals and exercising. It took us about two weeks to really notice a difference. I noticed it more in my energy levels and digestion. About three weeks in I really started craving fast food, but now the thought just makes me sick. I ate two servings of chex mix the other day (which was in my calories) and had a tummy ache. Stick with it!! You will be grateful for it!!
Edit to add: We still eat out about two times per month, but it is at a restaurant. Fast food doesn't even sound appealing to us right now. I'm also afraid that if I eat it I will go back to eating it in an unhealthy fashion...so I just stay away from it for now.0 -
Fast food is what it is. Don't demonise it. Everybody knows it's crap for you (nutrition bang for your Buck), but it's fun, convienient, social etc. Don't be surprised if it effects your goals if you eat the stuff all the time. It can be enjoyed in moderation as long as CICO is being applied and it fits your Macros. Enjoy food.0
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stevencloser wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »thrashersara88 wrote: »How quickly did you notice changes in your health and life?
I am about 60 days into my journey. Within the first three weeks, I didn't eat out. One night, we were rushed out the door after something happened. I didn't eat anything and didn't plan. We stopped at McD's. The first part of the meal I didn't notice because I was so hungry. The second was DISGUSTING! It made me want to throw up. I put it down and wouldn't eat any more. I haven't been back since. It's pretty soon after you cut things out that you will notice how your body is changing and your tastes move away. It is pretty easy to go past a fast food restaurant after tasting that nasty food.
I don't get this need to demonise fast food like macdonalds and call it disgusting and nasty.
If you don't like it don't eat it.
But there is no reason people can't eat it and lose/ maintain weight and be healthy.
@paperpudding I agree with your general point on demonizing fast food but once one gets off it then tries it later it can really taste like crap. It did taste good when we last ate it but we just lose our taste for junk food after eating better for a while.
While the Huddle House can serve some very high carb meals I get them to leave off the carbs and just have coffee, 5 fried eggs and 6 strips of fried bacon. That will permit me to hit my medium protein macro.
The CookOut and other fast food places locally offer low carb meals now but staying < 50 grams of carbs daily I have to watch for "hidden" carbs.
Shouldn't it taste like crap the first time you have it too, then? I don't think the business model would work if it was that way.
It does taste, or rather smell, like crap if you are not used to it from a young age. I cannot eat some types of fast food, never had it as a child, it does not smell like food to me. I have similar stories from several friends. It is one of these things where if you are not used to them from early on, it is unlikely you will fall in love with them later in life. Of course this goes for a lot of tastes, not just fast food. Marmite or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches come to mind: impossible to see the appeal if you are introduced to them as an adult, at least from my limited personal experience in relatives and friends.
I don't think that's true. I never really had any fast food as a kid except for the occasional McDonald's. We never had pizza (I didn't actually like pizza, but do now) or Chinese or Indian or any other kind of takeaway. These days I have usually one takeaway meal a week. I know a friend who was raised in a household that NEVER went out to eat. Ever. She's now hooked on fast food and eats out a few times a week. Taste buds change every couple of weeks so in most cases what you like or dislike as a child will be totally different to what you like or dislike as an adult.
I even know someone who never tried marmite but loves it now. His sister loved it as a kid and hates it now - and their cousin is the opposite! I think it's just down to the individual.
Really, OP, eating out once or twice a week probably won't hurt as long as you work it into your calories and macros0 -
I eat out for lunch pretty much everyday when I am working. I just make it fit in my calorie count for the day. Lunch is by far my biggest meal of the day as I work 12's. Protein shake and greek yogurt for breakfast. Chicken or fish with a small side for dinner and eat out for lunch. It works for me.0
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thrashersara88 wrote: »For the last couple of years fast food and large restaurants portions have been a huge problem for me! Eating out is such a convenience that I have relied on it to allow myself to be lazy and not prepare meals. Not anymore. For the sake if my family and my own health I am committing to no longer eating out. Has anyone gone from eating out a few times a week to not at all? How quickly did you notice changes in your health and life?
Spend some time planning menus and making grocery lists. Buy foods that are simple and easy to cook.0 -
I almost never eat fast food anymore...maybe a few times a year on long road trips. I prefer to make my own food. If I don't have time to prepare my own lunch, I go out for something healthy like a create your own salad. Fast food just is really high in calories for what you get and it's not very healthy. I feel better not eating junk.
I do occasionally go to restaurants socially. But luckily I can just about always find healthy options on the menu. Every few months I will order something I normally don't eat anymore...but I find I want to do that less and less often as time goes on. New habits get stronger the longer you practice them.0 -
williamwj2014 wrote: »CharonCharon wrote: »See if you can say no to restaurants and fast food for 1 full month.
Put sticky notes all over your house. Even in your car.
Tell everyone you know about your goal and ask for support.
Call a friend when you feel tempted.
Fast food/ restaurants do not care about your health.
They just care about digging in your wallet.
Lol..."hey man, I need someone to talk to because I'm having the urge to go get fast food" "okay hold on, I'm at the burger king drive thru picking up something to eat"
Yeah okay..self discipline is key.
"Uh yeah, hang on, man...(in the background) I'll take a number 4, extra mayo, large fries, and a large Fanta...yeah, and add a jr. Bacon to that.....ok, what's up man?"
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I eat out when the cravings hit but keep it within my calorie goals. I love fast food, no sense in making myself miserable over it.0
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paperpudding wrote: »Perhaps.
Or perhaps some new converts to healthy eating get a bit over zealous about demonising things that don't fit into their healthy eating criteria.
Why does it really matter? I don't mean that as an attack, it just seems odd to be bothered that a complete stranger thinks a food is disgusting. There are all sorts of foods in countries outside the US that are perfectly acceptable to them which I find disgusting (balut comes to mind), but I doubt they sit around offended that some chick half a world away thinks it's gross; I imagine they're too busy chowing down.
I'm not sure why someone else's preferences or opinions would even be worth a second thought if it's something that you like or want to eat. I doubt they're bothered by you choosing to eat it.
Agreed - It doesn't really matter and I am not bothered by it - was just commenting on the thread about what my take on it was.
I though that's what threads were for?
Of course there are foods that we all think are disgusting - but it isn't usually Foods we were happily enjoying just weeks before.
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paperpudding wrote: »paperpudding wrote: »Perhaps.
Or perhaps some new converts to healthy eating get a bit over zealous about demonising things that don't fit into their healthy eating criteria.
Why does it really matter? I don't mean that as an attack, it just seems odd to be bothered that a complete stranger thinks a food is disgusting. There are all sorts of foods in countries outside the US that are perfectly acceptable to them which I find disgusting (balut comes to mind), but I doubt they sit around offended that some chick half a world away thinks it's gross; I imagine they're too busy chowing down.
I'm not sure why someone else's preferences or opinions would even be worth a second thought if it's something that you like or want to eat. I doubt they're bothered by you choosing to eat it.
Agreed - It doesn't really matter and I am not bothered by it - was just commenting on the thread about what my take on it was.
I though that's what threads were for?
Of course there are foods that we all think are disgusting - but it isn't usually Foods we were happily enjoying just weeks before.
I think for some people that it makes it easier to adhere to if they can shine a negative light on the things that they have chosen to give up...at least in my opinion.
I think as far as feeling "sick" and "throwing up" is somewhat true. When they give up fast food which is usually high in sodium and fats they replace those with foods that are not so salty and fatty. Then, depending on the length of time that they have abstained, when they resume eating those higher sodium/fatty foods it can be hard on the stomach.
I am that way with beef products. I grew up eating a lot of beef. I love beef. However I seldom eat beef anymore but when I do I also get that upset stomach feeling.
TL:DR If you convince yourself that fast food is disgusting...makes you puke...smells rancid...you are less likely to eat it and thus making it easier to adhere to you commitment to eliminate it.
Is that a healthy mental attitude...wouldn't be for me but I can see it working for someone else.
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