How do you guys cope over the holiday season?

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Replies

  • stealthq
    stealthq Posts: 4,298 Member
    vingogly wrote: »
    Before I eat a treat someone is offering me, I ask myself if it will be worth it: when I'm finished, will I say to myself, "Yeah, that was worth the calories" or "I wish I'd saved the calories for something better". Cheap *kitten* Christmas cookies and store bought treats that are nowhere near as tasty as things I could prepare myself (I'm a pretty good cook) aren't worth it to me. As a consequence, it's not hard for me to say no.

    Another rule is: I'll take a small portion of something and enjoy it, telling myself: if I want more when I'm finished, I can get more. A good percentage of the time I'll find that the original portion was enough for me, and I don't need to go for a second portion to feel satisfied. And if I do go back for more, it's a conscious decision and I don't feel guilty for doing so. But I only go back for more of things that are really, really good.

    There was a Hallowe'en potluck at work -- I made a pan of very good gingerbread with lemon icing. I had one medium sized piece, enjoyed it, and passed on everything else because I knew my gingerbread was better than the other offerings on the table (almost all of it store bought). I decided before hand that whatever was left over, would be left in the kitchen for others; I would NOT take anything home.

    I missed this post before.

    Honestly, this is a large part of why I always bring something to potlucks at work. Many of my co-workers can't cook worth a damn*, and few of the ones who do have similar tastes to mine. This way, I can get small tastes of others' food (and discretely not eat it if I don't like it) and a more normal sized helping of mine.

    Now I just need to shift more to making entrees/sides and less to desserts.

    * One year a co-worker was so excited to bring his mother's recipe for '*kitten* on a shingle' as a giant casserole. He had never cooked before. He was in his late twenties. No joke.
  • Wynterbourne
    Wynterbourne Posts: 2,225 Member
    stealthq wrote: »
    vingogly wrote: »
    Before I eat a treat someone is offering me, I ask myself if it will be worth it: when I'm finished, will I say to myself, "Yeah, that was worth the calories" or "I wish I'd saved the calories for something better". Cheap *kitten* Christmas cookies and store bought treats that are nowhere near as tasty as things I could prepare myself (I'm a pretty good cook) aren't worth it to me. As a consequence, it's not hard for me to say no.

    Another rule is: I'll take a small portion of something and enjoy it, telling myself: if I want more when I'm finished, I can get more. A good percentage of the time I'll find that the original portion was enough for me, and I don't need to go for a second portion to feel satisfied. And if I do go back for more, it's a conscious decision and I don't feel guilty for doing so. But I only go back for more of things that are really, really good.

    There was a Hallowe'en potluck at work -- I made a pan of very good gingerbread with lemon icing. I had one medium sized piece, enjoyed it, and passed on everything else because I knew my gingerbread was better than the other offerings on the table (almost all of it store bought). I decided before hand that whatever was left over, would be left in the kitchen for others; I would NOT take anything home.

    I missed this post before.

    Honestly, this is a large part of why I always bring something to potlucks at work. Many of my co-workers can't cook worth a damn*, and few of the ones who do have similar tastes to mine. This way, I can get small tastes of others' food (and discretely not eat it if I don't like it) and a more normal sized helping of mine.

    Now I just need to shift more to making entrees/sides and less to desserts.

    * One year a co-worker was so excited to bring his mother's recipe for '*kitten* on a shingle' as a giant casserole. He had never cooked before. He was in his late twenties. No joke.

    Ah, flashbacks to my dad's stories about the joys of 'SOS' day on the ship back when he was in the Navy. LOL
  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 25,616 Member
    vingogly wrote: »
    Before I eat a treat someone is offering me, I ask myself if it will be worth it: when I'm finished, will I say to myself, "Yeah, that was worth the calories" or "I wish I'd saved the calories for something better". Cheap *kitten* Christmas cookies and store bought treats that are nowhere near as tasty as things I could prepare myself (I'm a pretty good cook) aren't worth it to me. As a consequence, it's not hard for me to say no.

    Another rule is: I'll take a small portion of something and enjoy it, telling myself: if I want more when I'm finished, I can get more. A good percentage of the time I'll find that the original portion was enough for me, and I don't need to go for a second portion to feel satisfied. And if I do go back for more, it's a conscious decision and I don't feel guilty for doing so. But I only go back for more of things that are really, really good.

    There was a Hallowe'en potluck at work -- I made a pan of very good gingerbread with lemon icing. I had one medium sized piece, enjoyed it, and passed on everything else because I knew my gingerbread was better than the other offerings on the table (almost all of it store bought). I decided before hand that whatever was left over, would be left in the kitchen for others; I would NOT take anything home.

    This was something I decided when I started with MFP.

    I am going to eat only foods I like ... I am not wasting my calories on foods that I don't like or which are just "meh".

    So I can look over a morning tea table at work and think ... meh, meh, meh, oh that might be nice, meh, meh, yuck, meh ... and next thing I know I've got a plate of fruit (which I love!) and the one piece of cake that actually looks good.

  • leejoyce31
    leejoyce31 Posts: 794 Member
    I am planning to eat like I do now. This is my first holiday in maintenance. I'm just not ready to venture out. I can't relate to the outside pressure issue. I don't give in to what others want. I do what I feel is best. If you want to eat then do so, but if you don't want to then don't. You must do what you feel is right.

    Best of luck!
  • LynnBBQ72
    LynnBBQ72 Posts: 151 Member
    My plan is to eat a little of anything I want on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Eve. I'll have a taste of whatever I want but I refuse to gorge myself like I have in years past. Really - I would eat until the SKIN on my belly hurt, not just the inside. I haven't seen my family in about 3 months, so they will be shocked at Thanksgiving when they see my weight loss. I immediately expect the "Don't lose too much weight, you look better chubby" and the "Here- take a pie home. One pie won't hurt" comments to start and last the full day. Most of them are overweight, diabetic, and generally unhealthy and they think any female under 175 lbs is anorexic.
  • Dano74
    Dano74 Posts: 503 Member
    I cope with enjoying the poop out of it. In reality, there's only a couple days over the 30 day span that are any different in "foods available"- and 10-20% consumption of "overage" and "splurge" doesn't make much of a dent in 80% consistency. Keep those fun holiday foods in calorie, enjoy a couple days of revelry and keep on keepin' on in this great thing we call livin'.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    edited November 2016
    Plan so things fit my goals. Eat at maintenance for a day. Cook so I know what is in stuff.
    Prioritize/moderate. I don't have to eat everything in sight. I can eat what I want most. I don't have to go back for seconds.
    Move around some.
    Log everything as best I can and move on with my life whatever the final total.
    Chew mint gum if I don't want to nibble.
    Worked for me the last 2 years.
  • sgt1372
    sgt1372 Posts: 3,997 Member
    I don't "celebrate" the holidays by overeating or drinking more than I normally do. So, no problem for me during the holidays because I treat them the same as any other day.
  • Intentional_Me
    Intentional_Me Posts: 336 Member
    sgt1372 wrote: »
    I don't "celebrate" the holidays by overeating or drinking more than I normally do. So, no problem for me during the holidays because I treat them the same as any other day.

    Do you want a cookie?

    Wait, no. I don't think you'd accept.
  • ahoy_m8
    ahoy_m8 Posts: 3,053 Member
    sgt1372 wrote: »
    I don't "celebrate" the holidays by overeating or drinking more than I normally do. So, no problem for me during the holidays because I treat them the same as any other day.

    Well, I do. It's a lot of celebrating which means eating more stuff I did not make myself than normal and, honestly, more alcohol. TBH, celebrating joyfully and enjoying people I don't see often is a higher priority goal for me than maintaining, but maintaining is definitely a goal. Here's what has worked for me in years past:

    1) don't arrive hungry at cocktail parties. Eat before going. Admire how the hors d'oeuvres look. They usually look better than they taste. If they're truly extraordinary I have a taste.
    2) bank calories for dinner parties/special meals.
    3) balance extra wine with extra cardio. 1 glass =2 miles. I walk 4mi on my rest day and add 4mi to my normal cardio one day during the week, and I limit that to one day. That gives me a little extra to work with.

  • TriFitness35
    TriFitness35 Posts: 121 Member
    I cope by believing in Santa
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    sgt1372 wrote: »
    I don't "celebrate" the holidays by overeating or drinking more than I normally do. So, no problem for me during the holidays because I treat them the same as any other day.

    That sounds fun...
  • JaydedMiss
    JaydedMiss Posts: 4,286 Member
    I dont have a family so holidays dont effect me XD But id just try and portion the foods i ate fairly and enjoy. Nom!
  • skiextrm
    skiextrm Posts: 144 Member
    I cooked a turkey dinner last night and invited family. Did it last month, too. They love it,. Great protein, sweet potatoes, broccoli, green beans, rolls, and a little gravy. I let the kids mow down on stuffing. Turkey is a great leftover and having it more often takes the "emotional charge" out of it. P.S. Freezing a bunch of turkeys in November helps this plan! I also make sugar free pumpkin custard frquently. Why wait and make foods you like scarce? We'll have 2 more turkey dinners this month. It's just food.
  • sgt1372
    sgt1372 Posts: 3,997 Member
    sgt1372 wrote: »
    I don't "celebrate" the holidays by overeating or drinking more than I normally do. So, no problem for me during the holidays because I treat them the same as any other day.

    Do you want a cookie?

    Wait, no. I don't think you'd accept.

    You' re right. I seldom if ever eat cookies any more. Same for cakes or any other baked goods. ;)
  • sgt1372
    sgt1372 Posts: 3,997 Member
    edited November 2016
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    sgt1372 wrote: »
    I don't "celebrate" the holidays by overeating or drinking more than I normally do. So, no problem for me during the holidays because I treat them the same as any other day.

    That sounds fun...

    The obvious problem associating "fun" with overeating and excessive drinking during the holidays can be measured on your waist and scale afterward.

    I have no problem having "fun" during the holidays w/o doing either. I just take pleasure in doing other things during the holidays that will not negatively affect all the effort that I have put into my weight loss, muscle development and fitness.

    That's my choice. If you and others want to binge during the holidays, that's yours. To each his/her own.
  • dave_in_ni
    dave_in_ni Posts: 533 Member
    Well guys, an update. If I was gonna *kitten* up Christmas Day was gonna be the day to do it and well I didn't. Christmas dinner in the UK is all about the biggest dinner of the year, turkey, roast potatoes, little sausages in bacon, stuffing, mashed potatoes, roast ham, gravy, cranberry sauce the list could go on.

    Well I wasn't even interested, I have turkey 2-3 times per week anyway usually in the form of them turkey fillets, potatoes I don't eat anymore really and the same with pork, so in the end Christmas dinner consisted of a slice of turkey and some veg and because i eat this regularly I never even finished it as was bored. Total calories 200-300, I've protein bars with more calories.

    The rest is plain sailing, the house is coming down with chocolate and treats but because I've said no for so long I've no longer an interest.
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    dave_in_ni wrote: »
    Well guys, an update. If I was gonna *kitten* up Christmas Day was gonna be the day to do it and well I didn't. Christmas dinner in the UK is all about the biggest dinner of the year, turkey, roast potatoes, little sausages in bacon, stuffing, mashed potatoes, roast ham, gravy, cranberry sauce the list could go on.

    Well I wasn't even interested, I have turkey 2-3 times per week anyway usually in the form of them turkey fillets, potatoes I don't eat anymore really and the same with pork, so in the end Christmas dinner consisted of a slice of turkey and some veg and because i eat this regularly I never even finished it as was bored. Total calories 200-300, I've protein bars with more calories.

    The rest is plain sailing, the house is coming down with chocolate and treats but because I've said no for so long I've no longer an interest.

    No offense but that just doesn't sound enjoyable. Being so restrictive and saying no to foods I enjoy for so long that they don't interest me anymore would make me sad. It's important, in my opinion, to not live in extremes. Making food the focal point of celebrations and indulging in such a way that it sets off binges or has lasting impact in the form of not being able to moderate is not good either. But being at a celebration with loved ones and finding zero pleasure in the foods doesn't sound like a healthy mindset either.
  • 43501
    43501 Posts: 85 Member
    I toss out the rulebook for Christmas eve and Christmas day and eat whatever the hell I want and then go back to normal on the 26th.

    This year I hit 2,400 cal on Christmas day, more than I've eaten in a single day in about two and a half years. It was a bit overrated. Got that temptation/experience out of my system and don't really feel like doing it again anytime soon.

    I feel like people worry too much about the few days/events around Christmas. A short period of indulgence is nothing. What's really insidious aren't holidays but the little creeping everyday habits like "oh boy, I should buy two donuts after work today, I've had a *kitten* day and I need the pick me up" that happens every other day of the year.
  • dave_in_ni
    dave_in_ni Posts: 533 Member
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    dave_in_ni wrote: »
    Well guys, an update. If I was gonna *kitten* up Christmas Day was gonna be the day to do it and well I didn't. Christmas dinner in the UK is all about the biggest dinner of the year, turkey, roast potatoes, little sausages in bacon, stuffing, mashed potatoes, roast ham, gravy, cranberry sauce the list could go on.

    Well I wasn't even interested, I have turkey 2-3 times per week anyway usually in the form of them turkey fillets, potatoes I don't eat anymore really and the same with pork, so in the end Christmas dinner consisted of a slice of turkey and some veg and because i eat this regularly I never even finished it as was bored. Total calories 200-300, I've protein bars with more calories.

    The rest is plain sailing, the house is coming down with chocolate and treats but because I've said no for so long I've no longer an interest.

    No offense but that just doesn't sound enjoyable. Being so restrictive and saying no to foods I enjoy for so long that they don't interest me anymore would make me sad. It's important, in my opinion, to not live in extremes. Making food the focal point of celebrations and indulging in such a way that it sets off binges or has lasting impact in the form of not being able to moderate is not good either. But being at a celebration with loved ones and finding zero pleasure in the foods doesn't sound like a healthy mindset either.

    You'd think that but it gets to stage where the pleasure is in saying no. I learned this with drinking, I used to be a big weekend binger, the hangovers got to much so I stopped and actually enjoyed waking up hangover free, the pleasure came in saying no.

    Similar happened yesterday, I sat and watched my family eat so much they sat down and fell asleep straight after, when they woke they sat complaining the rest of the day about how full they were and I thought to myself why?? That's pure gluttony.

    Today we had a rerun of Christmas dinner at my parents, I did similar today however today I had a slice of cheesecake as it looked so good. Still under my calorie goal today with 2 workouts done.
  • vanmep
    vanmep Posts: 410 Member
    I have lost 20 pounds. To "mess that all up," I would have to eat 70,000 calories over maintenance during the couple of weeks of Christmas indulgence. I'm pretty sure that's not even possible. So I don't worry about it too much. I moved my calories up to maintenance for a couple of weeks. Moving back tomorrow. Exercised a bit of discipline around portions. Didn't worry too much about a couple of days of "blowing it." It's the long game that counts.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    vingogly wrote: »
    Before I eat a treat someone is offering me, I ask myself if it will be worth it: when I'm finished, will I say to myself, "Yeah, that was worth the calories" or "I wish I'd saved the calories for something better". Cheap *kitten* Christmas cookies and store bought treats that are nowhere near as tasty as things I could prepare myself (I'm a pretty good cook) aren't worth it to me. As a consequence, it's not hard for me to say no.

    Another rule is: I'll take a small portion of something and enjoy it, telling myself: if I want more when I'm finished, I can get more. A good percentage of the time I'll find that the original portion was enough for me, and I don't need to go for a second portion to feel satisfied. And if I do go back for more, it's a conscious decision and I don't feel guilty for doing so. But I only go back for more of things that are really, really good.

    There was a Hallowe'en potluck at work -- I made a pan of very good gingerbread with lemon icing. I had one medium sized piece, enjoyed it, and passed on everything else because I knew my gingerbread was better than the other offerings on the table (almost all of it store bought). I decided before hand that whatever was left over, would be left in the kitchen for others; I would NOT take anything home.

    Re the first bolded, that is exactly how I managed the buffet last night. And one trip was enough.

    Re the second bolded, I think I speak for more than just myself when I ask you to post the recipe.
  • icemom011
    icemom011 Posts: 999 Member
    Staying in maintenance for the most part, over doing my usual eating on days of parties, family gatherings, since the week before Thanksgiving ( my daughter only could come home pre thanksgiving week, so we had Pre- Thanksgiving for her), then the real thing with all the yummy leftovers, then my son came home, so we cook a little more and i wish i can say no a little more often. Lots of good food that i love, all those special desserts. Christmas is the same, but I'm still hanging in there. Some days are better than others, or should i say nights, because that when the sweet tooth hits the hardest. My best way to deal with nightly snacking is to brush my teeth. After that, I'm good. Problem is, i don't always want to be good and continue to make excuses to have another bite. Wish i can solve this somehow.
  • soufauxgirl
    soufauxgirl Posts: 392 Member
    I have enjoyed a few days of indulgence, but discipline will see me back to my regime in the New Year. We are only human and quite frankly its abnormal to think we can eliminate foods altogether that we enjoy especially during the festive season.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    dave_in_ni wrote: »
    Well guys, an update. If I was gonna *kitten* up Christmas Day was gonna be the day to do it and well I didn't. Christmas dinner in the UK is all about the biggest dinner of the year, turkey, roast potatoes, little sausages in bacon, stuffing, mashed potatoes, roast ham, gravy, cranberry sauce the list could go on.

    Well I wasn't even interested, I have turkey 2-3 times per week anyway usually in the form of them turkey fillets, potatoes I don't eat anymore really and the same with pork, so in the end Christmas dinner consisted of a slice of turkey and some veg and because i eat this regularly I never even finished it as was bored. Total calories 200-300, I've protein bars with more calories.

    The rest is plain sailing, the house is coming down with chocolate and treats but because I've said no for so long I've no longer an interest.

    This seems...food phobic....
  • NancyYale
    NancyYale Posts: 171 Member
    Over big food holidays and vacations I usually eat everything in sight for a couple of days, then give myself a good talking to and go right back on Plan. I might not losee that week but usually don't gain. I chalk that up to living in the real world, and I don't let it knock me off plan for more than a day or two. Thinking long term is the key.
  • aneedforchange
    aneedforchange Posts: 75 Member
    I ate whatever I wanted and then came back here afterward. Lol
  • I ate what I wanted and moved on with life.
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