How do I stop eating 6,000 calories??

2456710

Replies

  • Ri024
    Ri024 Posts: 24
    Thank you for all the advice.

    If it matters, I am 188 lbs and my goal is to be less jiggly. I guess that could happen at 140 lbs. =)
  • 1LRoy
    1LRoy Posts: 95 Member
    A few things I saw right away in your food diary

    1. WAY too many bread-based carbs. The spaghetti and garlic bread along put you over 1000 calories.
    2. WAY too many sugar-based carbs.

    I'd focus on cutting back your bread and sugar to start. Protein is more filling/satisfying and less calories overall. I don't know if my food diary is open or not, but I'll open it and you can see what I mean. I eat a lot of eggs (mostly egg whites or Egg Beaters), string cheese, protein shakes, and lean meats. I do have carbs, but I limit myself. For breakfast I'll have protein and 1 serving of bread carbs (1 piece of whole wheat toast, 1 cup of healthy whole grain cereal with skim milk, or 1 whole wheat flax waffle) and sometimes some fruit (half an orange or some strawberries as a treat).

    You also want to be more active. Anything more than what you are currently doing is a start in the right direction. I work a desk job, and every few hours I take a short brisk walk through the building. Now I'm going up and down every flight of stairs I pass on my walk. It all adds up.

    Truly, I didn't realize how many calories I was eating either until I starting logging.
  • em9371
    em9371 Posts: 1,047 Member
    Hello,

    I am new to this. I put it in most of what I ate today and it is around 5,744 (I cannot remember everything) but this program says my goal should be 1,530.

    Is this right? I know I eat more than some other people but is 1,530 really manageable? I am not very active but now I think I should start! Please feel free to send me any advice.

    Well if I was you, i'd cut out about 2,000 calories and start there. Jumping that low makes no sense from your starting point. Over time decrease them as you lose weight.


    Good advice.
    6000 to 1500 is just asking for failure, it's too much of a drop and you won't stick to it.
    Reducing by 2000 is a 14000 calorie a week deficit, so you should lose 4-5 lbs a week even on that.
    As you get use to choosing healthier foods, it will be easier to reduce your cals more.
    My diary is open if you want any ideas of the right sort of foods to eat. Choose things like lean meat (chicken, turkey, lean beef etc), fish, whole grain bread / pasta / rice, at least 5 a day fruits & veggies, dairy (choose naturally lower cal cheeses like mozzarella, feta, goats cheese, halloumi rather than cheddar), skimmed or 2% milk, plain Greek yogurt and add your own fruit.
    Junk food is not banned, but limit it to 1 meal a week and try to have a sensible portion.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,984 Member
    Use chopsticks.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
  • meshashesha2012
    meshashesha2012 Posts: 8,329 Member
    OP this is exactly where i started. my advice is to start by gradually decreasing your calories and meal size.

    for instance i used to eat a LOT of take out, 3 meals a day (plus snacks ).

    what i'd do is split what used to be a 2K lunch into 2 and save the other half for the next days lunch. i started off doing that for 1 meal and then 2 then 3. eventually you'll get down to half your intake then you can focus on gradually getting each meal down to where it should be to fit in with the 1500 calorie goal.

    i'd say in all it took me around 6 weeks to do that and that's included bad days when i'd slip and have super high calories again and eat an entire large pizza and hot wings for dinner :laugh:

    going from 6K->1500 all at once will be too much and you'll be very likely to give up

    good luck!!! you can do this!
  • SEishen
    SEishen Posts: 35 Member
    Baby steps. Starting out is a little daunting when you know something needs to change but you don't know where to start. Many great suggestions here. What put me in the right frame of mind was using the app on my phone to examine overall nutrition. When I saw that I was getting almost NO potassium, for instance, I asked friends and read up. As I've progressed, I've settled into a "diet" where I'm eating every couple of hours and finding myself often needing to add here and there to get to 1200. I still snack a lot, just on mini sweet bell peppers and sugar snap peas instead of cookies and chips! Also, measure, measure, measure. Have the spaghetti but have one measured serving. Salad dressing, 1 TBSP only. If you eat at McDonald's, have a grilled chicken wrap and a yogurt parfait. There are little things you can do that end up turning into a life habit. Best wishes. You can do it!!
  • Rayman79
    Rayman79 Posts: 2,009 Member
    I would start by cutting down to something like 2000-2500 calories a day, to start, and work your way down to the lower goal from there. The reality is, now that you've done "the crime" for so long, you must do "the time". It's not easy to watch what you eat and actively try to lose weight, but that's what we all get for overindulging and gaining more than we ought to, instead of being reasonable to begin with. It's going from one extreme to a bit of another.

    You are going to need to seriously crack down on a lot of the cheese, the bacon, the fried things, the whole eggs, the white bread, the alcohol, the mayonnaise and other full-fat condiments, and the sugar, to name a few. You can still have a little bit of some of these, occasionally, but not much if you want to lose the weight. Stock up on a variety of colourful vegetables, some fruit (not too much fruit, it's still high in sugars and therefore calories), lean proteins (fin fish, shrimp, skinless chicken, lean pork chops, lean ground meats, lentils, beans), healthy fats (olive oil used sparingly. PAM spray, avocados, nuts, NATURAL peanut butter), low-fat dairy (skim or 1% milk, or dairy alternatives), and whole grains (brown rice, sprouted grain breads, quinoa, to name a few). Try to reduce the quantity of foods you eat that have a laundry list of ingredients. Most of the ingredients that you can't pronounce or identify probably aren't good for you, and you should at least relegate to less than 20% of your daily caloric intake, if we are being reasonable.

    There is a "Recipes" section in the forums, I would suggest you peruse it for ideas. Do some web research to learn how to "cook light". If you're really stuck on how to cook something to get a desired result, feel free to ask me. My culinary arts certificate should get at least SOME use, for all the money I owe in student loans!

    This is very good advice.

    As uncomfortable as it may be, logging everything is really going to help you - A LOT.

    When you are starting to get a feel for the caloric and nutritional content of food, this will get much easier. Most of us have been where you are now, so trust me when I say it gets a lot easier, but you need some willpower to get through the initial phase of denying yourself some things.

    I'd also suggest trying to log foods before you eat them. It will then bring it back to a conscious decision YOU get to make about whether you eat/drink it... or if YOU decide it's not worth it.

    Good luck, and please ask as many questions on here as you want/need to.
  • taunto
    taunto Posts: 6,420 Member
    I was in the same boat. I was actually eating 6k calories myself. But then I started eating home-cooked meals. I cheated my brain by cooking meals where I get to "hide" veggies in it. I am Indian so alot of the curries I made I would just put in veggies like crazy and eat it up. Believe it or not, more times than not, I have to find ways to increase my food intake because after 1200 calories you just couldn't eat anymore. it'll take some time to build up.

    Do remember though, you can always eat back the calories you burn. So if you go over by a few hundred calories, go outside and walk around for a few miles. You'll feel better, walking will help digest food and you just burned those extra calories :)

    Last thing. WATER WATER WATER! OMG drink water like you've been stranded in desert for 100 years and just found an oasis. 8 glasses is easy stuff. Keep a bottle wiht you ALL the time and sip water all day. Without trying I am at 9-12 glasses. On days when I eat unhealthy stuff like pizza, I have gone upto 20 glasses.

    You can do this! Make sure to surround yourself with friends here. If you fail, don't sweat it. Try again. Failed again? Try again. Learn from your mistakes and try again and again and again.

    Good luck :)
  • d4rkn3ss06
    d4rkn3ss06 Posts: 57
    Well 1500 is very doable but it will be hard at first since you were use to eating so many calories but doable. If it seems to low or seems to hard try 2000 as others have said. I looked through your diary and you can make a lot of cuts that will lower your intake of calories. You have a lot of high calorie snakes in large portions so i would start by cutting portions. Eat snacks that you like (like m&ms) but eat the serving size and only once a day, or cutting bacon to only one meal a day, pasta is high in calories so add more meat less pasta and cut the portion of bread (i know i love garlic bread but its high in calories so cut the portion) , the cake and stuff you can keep but i would cut those out and get lower calorie snacks (fiber one brownies are delicious and only 90 calories!), drink lots of water, these are just somethings you can do but portion control is needed! I wont lie this will be hard at first but you can do it!! Being your first day logging its ok too see how many calories you eat!! It is a huge wake up call and really shows you how much you eat. These changes will really help you! :) Good luck!!!
  • Jordant107
    Jordant107 Posts: 218 Member
    Did you add the calories or kilojoules??
  • led6777
    led6777 Posts: 268
    I did too! It is an eye opener, but that many is absurd!

    This comment is totally rude, judgmental, and unnecessary. GTFO.
  • ijiiii
    ijiiii Posts: 61
    This has to be a joke, who eats over 5,000!calories??
    I do :/
    Then again I intentionally do it, because I'm desperately trying to gain weight. It's freaking hard to get that much food in, how someone can casually do it is mind boggling.

    To the OP. I say decrease calories to 3000 a day AND do some sort of cardio every day.
  • StarkLark
    StarkLark Posts: 476 Member
    Thank you for all the advice.

    If it matters, I am 188 lbs and my goal is to be less jiggly. I guess that could happen at 140 lbs. =)

    ha you don't weigh that much. If you always eat like this you should cut down to 5,000 or so, that's a weight loss of 2lbs a week.
    You post a lot of good stuff but I'm not sure I understand this one.

    If she is eating 6000 and cuts to 5000 per day, sure that is a 2 pound loss per day according to the math. But isn't that assuming that 6000 per day has her maintaining and not gaining? Seems more likely to me that 6000 is way over her TDEE and that dropping to 5000 won't actually result in a loss, only a slower gain.
  • em9371
    em9371 Posts: 1,047 Member
    Thank you for all the advice.

    If it matters, I am 188 lbs and my goal is to be less jiggly. I guess that could happen at 140 lbs. =)

    I expected you to be much heavier eating 6000 cals!!
    I am 196, and lose 1.5 a week on 2000 ish cals.

    Was the 1500 for a loss of 2lbs?
    As you lose weight you need to adjust your goal.
    To start with a small reduction of say 2000 is good until you get used to eating better.
    Then work your cals down until you hit whatever mfp gives you for a 1.5 loss.
    When you get down to 25lbs to go change to 1lbs
    When you get to around 10 to go change to 0.5lbs.

    Each 0.5 lb change to your goal will give you another 250 cals.

    If you don't exercise already, you should start. Heavy weights combined with light cardio is the best for reducing body fat.

    Look up the eat more to weigh less group, or helloitsdans post 'in place of a roadmap', they explain a lot about how many calories you should take in and why :-)
  • vfnmoody
    vfnmoody Posts: 271 Member
    probably want to go slowly with the calorie reduction as you get into a habit of eating differently

    a few things you might want to increase
    Eggs - 1 Fried Egg, 1 egg 70
    Save-on-Foods - Sliced Smoked Turkey Breast, 6 slices 180
    Mayo Kraft - Light Mayonnaise, 2 Tbsp. 90
    Maille - Old Style Whole Grain Dijon Mustard, 3 teaspoon (5g) 30
    Fresh - Romaine Lettuce , 1 leaves (85g) 2
    Generic - Tomato Slice, 2 Slice 8
    Diet Dr Pepper - 591 Ml Bottle (Canada), 591 ml 0
    Generic Raw - Pear, 1 medium 52
    Western Family - Spaghetti Noodles, 170 g or 1 cup cooked 600
    Classico (Canada) - Sweet Basil Marinara, 250 mL (1/2 cup) 140
    Generic - Grilled Prawns, 1 cup cooked 280


    a few things you might want to cut back on:
    Save on Foods - White Hamburger Buns, 1 Bun 180
    Oil - Vegetable, canola, 1 tsp 40
    Save on Foods - Medium Cheddar Cheese, 2 oz 240
    Western Family - Thick Sliced Bacon, 2 slices 270
    Dairyland - Coffee Cream 18% M.g., 2 tbsp 60
    Dairyland - Milk 2 Go - Chocolate, 1 container (2 cups ea.) 320
    Western Family - Thick Sliced Bacon, 2 slices 270
    Save on Foods - Medium Cheddar Cheese, 1 oz 120
    Dairyland - Coffee Cream 18% M.g., 2 tbsp 60
    Sugar - Granulated, White (1 Teaspoon), 2 teaspoon 30
    Western Family (Save on Foods) - Garlic Bread, 4 Slices (50 grams) 400


    things you might want to replace with veggi stick snacks and fruit.:

    Sleeman's - Honey Brown Lager, 36 oz Bottle 540
    Tim Horton's - Chocolate Chip Cookie, 2 cookie 460
    Cheese - Mini Babybel Original, 21 g 70
    M&M - Peanut Butter M&Ms, 1.5 oz (42g/about 1/4 cup) 220
    M&M's Brand - Peanut M&Ms (Canada), 1/4 cup (40 g) 210
    Grocery Store Brand - Lemon Loaf Cake, 1 Slice 130
    Doritos - Nacho Chips, 50 g 250


    replace

    Thick Sliced Bacon with a few more eggs
    Coffee Cream 18% M.g., with 2% (use lots to start and slowly derease the amount you use.)
    Sugar - Granulated, White switch to artifical sweetener)
    Garlic Bread, 4 Slices Large salad
    replace chocolate milk with white milk .
  • sassiebritches
    sassiebritches Posts: 1,861 Member
    Some people eat Low Carb - I say cut out all the noodles, breads, chips and crappy carbs.....stick with the protein, nuts, veggies and cheese....way better then processed stuff.
  • Rayman79
    Rayman79 Posts: 2,009 Member
    You post a lot of good stuff but I'm not sure I understand this one.

    If she is eating 6000 and cuts to 5000 per day, sure that is a 2 pound loss per day according to the math. But isn't that assuming that 6000 per day has her maintaining and not gaining? Seems more likely to me that 6000 is way over her TDEE and that dropping to 5000 won't actually result in a loss, only a slower gain.

    I'm with you there - dont understand the logic of that post Pu. I understand slowly dropping cals to get your body used to the change gradually, but it shouldn't result in fat loss at those levels. There will likely be some water loss if the diet is healthier, but not fat loss.
  • StarkLark
    StarkLark Posts: 476 Member
    Look up the eat more to weigh less group, or helloitsdans post 'in place of a roadmap', they explain a lot about how many calories you should take in and why :-)

    Good call, that's a great place to start for those who need to figure out how it's done.

    PBpanda, here is the link, check out the first post (it's filled with everything you need to know):

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/538381-in-place-of-a-road-map
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    Perhaps you should concentrate on your eating behaviour and the calories will fall off automatically.

    The chocolate milk, doritos and snacks alone exceed the calorie target you are contemplating.

    "Eating Less: Say Goodbye to Overeating" by Gillian Riley from Amazon or http://www.eatingless.com/ has helped a friend of mine. Management by measurement is one approach, as used here on MFP, but getting your mind around the self control issues is also important.
  • becoming_a_new_me
    becoming_a_new_me Posts: 1,860 Member
    Start with making smart changes that don’t deprive you of what you want, but are wiser in the long run. Your bacon, egg, and cheese sandwich with coffee and chocolate milk was 1210 calories day. That was nearly your whole day…try this instead:
    Orowheat sandwich thins instead of hamburger bun – 100 calories
    1 Egg poached instead of fried – 70 calories
    Sargento ultra Thins cheddar cheese (1 slice) – 45 calories
    Jenny O Turkey Bacon (2 slices) – 80 calories
    Coffee (this was fine)
    Fat Free half and half (2 Tbsp)– 30 calories
    Splenda or stevia (1 tsp) – 0 calories
    Silk Chocolate Almond Milk (1 cup in a grab and go container) – 120 calories
    Total Calories: 445 calories. That is a savings of 765 calories!

    Now lunch, instead of the turkey/bacon/cheese sandwich and chips that you had for 1272 calories, try this:
    Orowheat sandwich thins instead of hamburger bun – 100 calories
    Sargento ultra Thins cheddar cheese (1 slice) – 45 calories
    Jenny O Turkey Bacon (2 slices) – 80 calories
    Sliced Smoked Turkey Breast (3 slices) – 90 calories
    Light Mayo (1 Tbsp) – 45 calories
    Dijon Mustard (1 tsp) – 10 calories
    Romaine and tomato  - 10 calories
    Veggie Straws/Chips (40 straws) – 120 calories
    Pear  - 52 calories
    Diet Dr Pepper – okay, but try crystal light instead if you can
    Coffee (this was fine)
    Fat Free half and half (2 Tbsp)– 30 calories
    Splenda or stevia (1 tsp) – 0 calories
    This is 582 calories – a savings of 690 calories

    Now for dinner…you had three times the serving of spaghetti noodles and a total calorie count of 1960 calories. Try this instead:
    Spaghetti Noodles (2 oz) – 200 calories
    Marinara (1/4 cup) – 140 calories
    Steamed Broccoli (1 cup) – 30 calories
    Grilled Prawns (1 cup) – 280 calories
    Garlic Bread (1 slice) – 100 calories
    Garden Salad (2 cups) – 60 calories
    Light Italian Dressing (2 Tbsp) – 35 calories
    Honey Brown lager (12 oz) – 180 calories
    1025 calories for a savings of 935 calories

    For snacks which totaled 1302 calories:
    100 calorie chips ahoy snack pack – 100 calories
    Babybel cheese – 70 calories
    Emerald Cocoa Roast Almonds (1 oz) – 150 calories
    Air Popped Popcorn (2 cups) – 160 calories
    Banana – 112 calories
    Juice Box – 100 calories
    Lemon Loaf Cake – 130 calories
    822 calories for a savings of 480 calories.

    With the revisions, you go from 5744 calories to 2874 calories. You are still high, but from there, you can start making other changes too…less sweets, more veggies, etc. Hope this helps!
  • Justkeepswimmin
    Justkeepswimmin Posts: 777 Member
    Yeah I did 1200 net until my first goal (meaning I ate my exercize calories too), and now I net 1300 a day. I'll stay there until I meet my second goal and start to heavy lift.

    I looked at your diary - some specific alternatives are as follows: (I agree that you may want to try maintenence calories a few days before going to losing weight calories) :

    Meal 1 - Instead of a 180 cal white hamburger bun try a 100 calorie whole grain sandwich round or 110 calorie whole grain bagel...you'll feel full longer and its' fewer clories. Try egg whites or egg substitute instead. You don't need the oil, just a nonstick pan will do. Get 2% cheese and use much less or learn to love the laughing cow cheese wedges of 35 calories. Cut down the cream in your coffee in half, so it's at least something less, and consider a natural sweetener for your coffee (stevia) for example. Chocolate milk- just...don't. You can alternate a chocolate flavored am protein shake....for tomorrows breakfast.

    Meal 2 - Same comment on the bun. Try turkey bacon, tofu bacon, or forget the bacon (Most days...of course I have splurge days I'm just a vegetarian) My husband allows himself bacon 1 time a week (or sausage) Same comment as above on cheese except the cool thing about laughing cow is it's creamy so you can kill the cheese off AND the 'light' mayo in the same product! Try adding pickles, or pepperocini's for flavor! (low cal but high sodium). Same comment on coffee, and doritos...those are definately a splurge day activity. If I have to I'll have baked lays but generally my sides are nuts, kozy shack pudding, yogurt (non high sugar and non aspartame get off my back peeps about the aspartame I'm allergic), fruit, veggies, a salad...something to help you feel full that you wont eat too many of.

    Meal 3 - Spaghetti - try a whole wheat/grain or <insert substittue or addition here> to help you feel full. There are tofu noodles full of protein and low on calories (see hungry girl recipies) or just something that will break down more slowly and help you feel full longer. Instead of 4 slices of pre made garlic bread that is white try 2 pieces of bread whole grain and do the garlic butter part yourself to get fewer calories on them. Beer of that calorie level is a splurge day for sure...corona light 100 calories :)

    Meal 4 - I am all for chocolate at the end of the night, EVERY NIGHT :) but 2 cookies is 1 too many. Did you enter the M and M's twice? Either way you'll need to find a substitute for this sweet fest...I reccomend a 170 calorie rasberry luna bar - my evening chocolate with protein of choice. Protein to help you not feel so hungry and chocolate to hold off the chocolate craving. Have it with coffee every night as a 'closer' and teach your body that coffee and treat means time to no longer eat. If you need to have juice try crystal lite pure - no artificial sweeteners and only 30 calories for a packet that makes me 3 glasses. Sweetened with sugar and stevia. However, the more sugar you have the more you'll want...

    Try entereing your calories a day ahead of time...then you'll know "If I eat this then I will be X calories over" "If I eat this then not only will I not lose weight I will gain weight".
  • TheFunBun
    TheFunBun Posts: 793 Member
    ..I would reduce the least amount possible to get the results you want. No need to go down to 1500 if going down to 3k will do. What's the rate at which you've gained weight? Reduce accordingly so you're losing weight slowly instead.

    The switches a few people mentioned were great. Making good substitutions, filling up on more more more veggies, and just counting will do the trick. Definitely don't go down to 1500 if you don't have to, though.
  • Justkeepswimmin
    Justkeepswimmin Posts: 777 Member
    Start with making smart changes that don’t deprive you of what you want, but are wiser in the long run. Your bacon, egg, and cheese sandwich with coffee and chocolate milk was 1210 calories day. That was nearly your whole day…try this instead:
    Orowheat sandwich thins instead of hamburger bun – 100 calories
    1 Egg poached instead of fried – 70 calories
    Sargento ultra Thins cheddar cheese (1 slice) – 45 calories
    Jenny O Turkey Bacon (2 slices) – 80 calories
    Coffee (this was fine)
    Fat Free half and half (2 Tbsp)– 30 calories
    Splenda or stevia (1 tsp) – 0 calories
    Silk Chocolate Almond Milk (1 cup in a grab and go container) – 120 calories
    Total Calories: 445 calories. That is a savings of 765 calories!

    Now lunch, instead of the turkey/bacon/cheese sandwich and chips that you had for 1272 calories, try this:
    Orowheat sandwich thins instead of hamburger bun – 100 calories
    Sargento ultra Thins cheddar cheese (1 slice) – 45 calories
    Jenny O Turkey Bacon (2 slices) – 80 calories
    Sliced Smoked Turkey Breast (3 slices) – 90 calories
    Light Mayo (1 Tbsp) – 45 calories
    Dijon Mustard (1 tsp) – 10 calories
    Romaine and tomato  - 10 calories
    Veggie Straws/Chips (40 straws) – 120 calories
    Pear  - 52 calories
    Diet Dr Pepper – okay, but try crystal light instead if you can
    Coffee (this was fine)
    Fat Free half and half (2 Tbsp)– 30 calories
    Splenda or stevia (1 tsp) – 0 calories
    This is 582 calories – a savings of 690 calories

    Now for dinner…you had three times the serving of spaghetti noodles and a total calorie count of 1960 calories. Try this instead:
    Spaghetti Noodles (2 oz) – 200 calories
    Marinara (1/4 cup) – 140 calories
    Steamed Broccoli (1 cup) – 30 calories
    Grilled Prawns (1 cup) – 280 calories
    Garlic Bread (1 slice) – 100 calories
    Garden Salad (2 cups) – 60 calories
    Light Italian Dressing (2 Tbsp) – 35 calories
    Honey Brown lager (12 oz) – 180 calories
    1025 calories for a savings of 935 calories

    For snacks which totaled 1302 calories:
    100 calorie chips ahoy snack pack – 100 calories
    Babybel cheese – 70 calories
    Emerald Cocoa Roast Almonds (1 oz) – 150 calories
    Air Popped Popcorn (2 cups) – 160 calories
    Banana – 112 calories
    Juice Box – 100 calories
    Lemon Loaf Cake – 130 calories
    822 calories for a savings of 480 calories.

    With the revisions, you go from 5744 calories to 2874 calories. You are still high, but from there, you can start making other changes too…less sweets, more veggies, etc. Hope this helps!

    Wow you listed out the calorie savings with your suggestions, I was lazier, you're awesome!! :)
  • MissMormie
    MissMormie Posts: 359 Member
    I totally agree with the others in this tread that say cut down 1000-2000 calories a day. If this really is a normal day for you you'll probably see weight loss already by going to 4500 calories. That won't last though, as your body adapts to your new calorie intake you'll need to drop lower, until you drop under the 2000 mark.

    The good thing is that this'll be rather easy for you to begin with. Looking at your day yesterday you could drop:
    - Tim Horton's - Chocolate Chip Cookie, 2 cookie 460
    - Sleeman's - Honey Brown Lager, 36 oz Bottle 540

    And change
    Western Family - Thick Sliced Bacon, 2 slices 270
    to
    1 thin slice of bacon for about 90 calories.

    Just these changes will save you 460+540+2*180 = 1360 calories a day.

    Work from there. Find healthy alternatives for what you're eating. Try wholegrain bread instead of a white hamburger bun. Eat am apple instead of two helpings of M&M's (saves another 300 calories). There's a whole lot of change possible in your diet without it being painful. Start with that. Try and get your intake down to a more normal number before you try to go down to 1530.

    Actually, that 1530 is based on how much you want to loose per week. But you don't need to stick to that one. On the long run as long as you don't go above 2000 you'll loose weight. Try that first.
  • becoming_a_new_me
    becoming_a_new_me Posts: 1,860 Member

    Wow you listed out the calorie savings with your suggestions, I was lazier, you're awesome!! :)

    Thanks, but it really wasn't much of a big deal...they are foods that I eat fairly regularly (not all the time), but I knew most of the calorie counts by heart. :tongue:
  • Lam75
    Lam75 Posts: 72
    I am on 1200 a day and sometimes MFP yells at me as I am below this and not hungry. I am eating more fruit and veggies. The main change I have made is that we no longer buy biscuits (cookies for US folks), crisps (chips for US folks) or sweets. I used to buy a pack of small chocolate bars with the idea that they could be occasional treats but would eat them all within a day so simpler just to pretend that aisle in the supermarket isn't there.

    I now look at labels before I eat as before I would eat, then feel guilty then think sod it might as well finish the day off badly and eat everything else. I have tried all sorts of diets before and not been able to stick to them; this is working for me at the moment. I was horrified on Sunday, we went to Tesco cafe for lunch as the gym cafe was being used for a private party, Not one healthy option on offer, ended up with a cheese and onion toastie for 330 cals and a smoothie. Before doing this I would have had the toastie, probably a coke and cake (tiny cupcake was 480 cals!) but I stopped a moment and thought about it.

    Most important things I have learned in my battle against the weight - eat regularly, log everything, eat loads of veggies and drink plenty of water and most important if you go wrong, no guilt, carry on from where you fell off. Also this is a long journey, I used to be mad at 1lb a week but now I am ok with that, I try to look at the bigger picture. Weigh in once a week rather than dancing on and off the scales every hour expecting a pound to have miraculously vanished.

    Good luck on your journey, little steps all add up. If I can do it - anyone can!
  • Anayalata
    Anayalata Posts: 391 Member
    Use chopsticks.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    Best advice in this whole thread
  • Kathy53925
    Kathy53925 Posts: 241 Member
    Start with making smart changes that don’t deprive you of what you want, but are wiser in the long run. Your bacon, egg, and cheese sandwich with coffee and chocolate milk was 1210 calories day. That was nearly your whole day…try this instead:
    Orowheat sandwich thins instead of hamburger bun – 100 calories
    1 Egg poached instead of fried – 70 calories
    Sargento ultra Thins cheddar cheese (1 slice) – 45 calories
    Jenny O Turkey Bacon (2 slices) – 80 calories
    Coffee (this was fine)
    Fat Free half and half (2 Tbsp)– 30 calories
    Splenda or stevia (1 tsp) – 0 calories
    Silk Chocolate Almond Milk (1 cup in a grab and go container) – 120 calories
    Total Calories: 445 calories. That is a savings of 765 calories!

    Now lunch, instead of the turkey/bacon/cheese sandwich and chips that you had for 1272 calories, try this:
    Orowheat sandwich thins instead of hamburger bun – 100 calories
    Sargento ultra Thins cheddar cheese (1 slice) – 45 calories
    Jenny O Turkey Bacon (2 slices) – 80 calories
    Sliced Smoked Turkey Breast (3 slices) – 90 calories
    Light Mayo (1 Tbsp) – 45 calories
    Dijon Mustard (1 tsp) – 10 calories
    Romaine and tomato  - 10 calories
    Veggie Straws/Chips (40 straws) – 120 calories
    Pear  - 52 calories
    Diet Dr Pepper – okay, but try crystal light instead if you can
    Coffee (this was fine)
    Fat Free half and half (2 Tbsp)– 30 calories
    Splenda or stevia (1 tsp) – 0 calories
    This is 582 calories – a savings of 690 calories

    Now for dinner…you had three times the serving of spaghetti noodles and a total calorie count of 1960 calories. Try this instead:
    Spaghetti Noodles (2 oz) – 200 calories
    Marinara (1/4 cup) – 140 calories
    Steamed Broccoli (1 cup) – 30 calories
    Grilled Prawns (1 cup) – 280 calories
    Garlic Bread (1 slice) – 100 calories
    Garden Salad (2 cups) – 60 calories
    Light Italian Dressing (2 Tbsp) – 35 calories
    Honey Brown lager (12 oz) – 180 calories
    1025 calories for a savings of 935 calories

    For snacks which totaled 1302 calories:
    100 calorie chips ahoy snack pack – 100 calories
    Babybel cheese – 70 calories
    Emerald Cocoa Roast Almonds (1 oz) – 150 calories
    Air Popped Popcorn (2 cups) – 160 calories
    Banana – 112 calories
    Juice Box – 100 calories
    Lemon Loaf Cake – 130 calories
    822 calories for a savings of 480 calories.

    With the revisions, you go from 5744 calories to 2874 calories. You are still high, but from there, you can start making other changes too…less sweets, more veggies, etc. Hope this helps!

    Sweet! nice job.
  • HelenDootson
    HelenDootson Posts: 443 Member
    Try Cereal for breakfast - an instant saving of 1000 cals. I bake my own treats and freeze them - Peanut Butter and Choc Chip cookies for 144 cals - Sweet treats you can factor in so you don't feel deprived
  • Umeboshi
    Umeboshi Posts: 1,637 Member
    Use chopsticks.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    Best advice in this whole thread

    I'm a chopstick pro and can shovel food in like nobody's business with them. This might work for a chopstick newbie though.