How do you choose a salad over a Big Mac?
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sampsondavidj
Posts: 7 Member
McDonald's has always been a nemesis for me. I have stood in line, pondering if I should get a salad or McWrap instead of a Big Mac. 99.97% of the time, I choose the Big Mac....I did get the McWrap once. What I am looking for is "decision process information" that helps you choose the salad. What I mean by "decision process information" is any thoughts or reasonings that you have that lead to the decision to eat the salad.
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Replies
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Sorry, can't help you. On the very rare occasion I do go to McDonal's it's for the burger. I do choose just a plain ol' cheeseburger, no fries, and unsweet tea. I can think of many reasons to not eat the salad the main one being I'd rather eat a good salad made at home.
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If you know going to McD's is going to make it hard to skip the big mac, I'd consider finding a new fast food place. Avoiding temptation can be easier if you take yourself out of the situation.
I don't care for big macs, but when there's something I really want I either work it into my calories for the day or remind myself that it doesn't fit today but I can have it later. It helps me to remember it will be there later for a day when it does fit.37 -
I’d go some place else and get a good quality salad.18
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If I know that 99.97% of the time I am going to get the Big Mac, I just don't go to the place that sells Big Mac. If I know I want to get a salad I go to places that are known for good salads and not set myself up for failure.27
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If I'm in line at McDonald's I am going to eat the Big Mac, because McDonald's salads are disgusting, not particularly lower calorie than their burgers, and not particularly nutritious. So eat the sandwich you want to eat and figure out how it fits into your calories. A Big Mac is 563 calories. That's a reasonable sized meal if you eat nothing else with it.
The question that comes to my mind is, why are you in line at McDonald's in the first place if you think you need to be eating more salads? Go to a store, buy some salad fixings, and make a decent, delicious, filling, nutritious salad for much less money. Plus avoid the temptation of last minute decisions.35 -
I would do both. A Big Mac is ~600 calories, so you can have an entire salad and then half the burger. If the idea of saving half a burger is too sad for you or if the saved half is too risky to take home, order the salad and a regular cheeseburger. Also, always account for the calorie-dense dressings and add-ons to a salad. It isn't necessarily the most nutritious or lower calorie option on the menu.5
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I don't like the Big Macs, but I do the quarter pounder. Decision process made way ahead of time before I got to McDonalds. And I would not being to going to McDonalds for the salad or a wrap, it would be for the burger.
eta Spare of the moment drive thru's don't happen with me anymore. But if I have to, my cals left for the day are the driving force behind choice.4 -
Sorry, can't help you. On the very rare occasion I do go to McDonal's it's for the burger. I do choose just a plain ol' cheeseburger, no fries, and unsweet tea. I can think of many reasons to not eat the salad the main one being I'd rather eat a good salad made at home.
This. If it is really my only option I get the kids meal.7 -
rheddmobile wrote: »If I'm in line at McDonald's I am going to eat the Big Mac, because McDonald's salads are disgusting, not particularly lower calorie than their burgers, and not particularly nutritious. So eat the sandwich you want to eat and figure out how it fits into your calories. A Big Mac is 563 calories. That's a reasonable sized meal if you eat nothing else with it.
The question that comes to my mind is, why are you in line at McDonald's in the first place if you think you need to be eating more salads? Go to a store, buy some salad fixings, and make a decent, delicious, filling, nutritious salad for much less money. Plus avoid the temptation of last minute decisions.
This Is what I do, no fries and a diet soda. Their salads suck.7 -
I just don't go to McDonalds unless I intend on getting a burger. Going to McDonalds for a salad is like going to a hooker for a hug.77
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I've never liked Big Macs, so that's no problem. But I'll work a Quarter Pounder into my calories.8
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I agree that if you go to McDonald's you should get a burger and not a salad, their salads are terrible and not many fewer calories than the burgers. If you're looking for general decision-making help, I found this Chris Pratt quote oddly helpful and on-point.
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May be just thinking what you want, do you want the Big Mac and to stay your current size, or do you want to make a short term sacrifice, knowing that in the long term going for the salad will help you loose weight.
However, a different strategy that may be more successful is to have just the Big Mac, but have it with out fries, and only drink a diet soda. Make sure you log your food accurately, and you can build if into that days calorie allowance.3 -
When in line at MacDonalds, do a u-turn, walk out the front door, go to Wendy's for chili! Over a salad, or a baked potato! Yum!12
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Kathryn247 wrote: »I agree that if you go to McDonald's you should get a burger and not a salad, their salads are terrible and not many fewer calories than the burgers. If you're looking for general decision-making help, I found this Chris Pratt quote oddly helpful and on-point.
I want to know what burger with 1200 calories he's talking about. And eat it.22 -
Okay...so I'm going to try to summarize what came out so far:
1) Avoid being there in the first place.
a) Go somewhere else where I can get something healthier
b) Plan and prepare meals ahead of time to avoid going
2) Damage control
a) Limit the number of calories by just eating the burger, add a diet pop if I need something to drink.
b) Cut the burger in half and eat the salad with it (No this isn't too sad...I never thought of it though).
3) Plan to eat the burger and work it into your consumed calories
4) It may have been a lost cause...you're there to get a burger so the decision does not exist and McDonald's doesn't make a great salad.
I would like to look at number 2 in a little more depth and perhaps would like to know why someone would choose option A or B or any other ideas. Pondering the effects media has had, I realized I get the fries because I see them in the picture and that is what my brain recognizes as a complete meal.
Do you tell yourself anything that makes you motivated to do something different? I'm thinking to change it up, I may find someone who wants to eat half a burger and a salad. Eventually, I will be working to drop fast food...baby steps for now.
EDIT: I totally posted this before the Chris Pratt quote was there. That is the direction I am hoping to go with this conversation. And to Stevencloser...I will give you something that should indicate I had a problem....A triple whopper without cheese at burger king has 1140 calories. I would eat a triple angry whopper, fries, and pop once or twice a week when the angry whopper was out. There was no nutritional data for that burger. That isn't who I am now, but I still struggle with fast food restaurants.10 -
If I want to splurge on something drowning in calories, I'll just eat lighter the rest of the day (personally I like saving up my calories for evening). I won't starve myself of course, but I might have a light breakfast and lunch, or just snack on fruit and veggies during the day.
If I've already splurged and can't have that burger/pizza/etc. without going over my cals, I remind myself "That _____ will still be here tomorrow and the day after that, etc. You can say No now because you can plan to say Yes another day." That thinking has also saved me many times when I've been on the brink of binging.12 -
I quit going to these places for the most part.6
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sampsondavidj wrote: »Okay...so I'm going to try to summarize what came out so far:
1) Avoid being there in the first place.
a) Go somewhere else where I can get something healthier
b) Plan and prepare meals ahead of time to avoid going
2) Damage control
a) Limit the number of calories by just eating the burger, add a diet pop if I need something to drink.
b) Cut the burger in half and eat the salad with it (No this isn't too sad...I never thought of it though).
3) Plan to eat the burger and work it into your consumed calories
4) It may have been a lost cause...you're there to get a burger so the decision does not exist and McDonald's doesn't make a great salad.
I would like to look at number 2 in a little more depth and perhaps would like to know why someone would choose option A or B or any other ideas. Pondering the effects media has had, I realized I get the fries because I see them in the picture and that is what my brain recognizes as a complete meal.
a. Pre-logging my day prevents the need for damage control.
b. In the event of I have no choice other than to be at McDonalds (which will never happen) and number of calories are the issue, the salad is still a no go. Having smaller/lesser calorie burger, or cutting a higher calorie one in half would have suffice along side diet/unsweetened tea.
I am counting calories always. Plan where you are going and what you want. I find it hard to think that someone just goes to McDonalds and does not know what they want or are getting ahead of walking in there.
eta: if you have cerrtain triggers (fast food/certain foods in general) putting your self in a situation where you may lose control of your decision processes i would thin you would want to avoid it all together.8 -
stevencloser wrote: »
I want to know what burger with 1200 calories he's talking about. And eat it.[/quote]
The Ranch House Cheeseburger at Cheesecake factory is listed at 1,887 calories!9
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