Husband ordering pizza
Replies
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So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Because we don't think that white flour, fat, dairy, etc are bad, especially not in the context of a diet that is nutrient dense.
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/817188-iifym0 -
You were saying?
225 pounds? FUK YES!0 -
You have 1500 cals remaining. Why wouldn't you eat the pizza?
Well, I really don't know how accurate this is about calories and exercising, but it's also not just the calories. I know pizza is high in fat, sodium, sugar, carbs, stuff like that... and I just can't decide whether or not it would be worth it. Calorie-wise, yeah, no problem, but it's more of everything else I'm iffy about. Figured I'd ask and take a tally if the answers and decide that way. Lol
Girl, eat the pizza.
The sodium may cause a day or two of water retention, but otherwise, a couple slices ain't gonna kill ya.0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Because long term health and maintenance is not measured in how often you say no, but in the moderation of yes. We have pizza all the time, usually homemade. We but quality ingredients, make whole wheat or multigrain crust, and enjoy ourselves. Do I eat a whole pizza by myself? No. I usually have two slices and maybe some salad, fruit or steamed veg on the side. Pizza fills me up too much to have more. And then I have my favourite: cold pizza for breakfast.0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Eats ALL the pizza. Has NEVER turned down pizza as long as it fits my macros.
You were saying?
Tell me you also eat ice cream and I'll love you forever.0 -
You have enough remaining calories to eat a few pieces of pizza, if you want to. But if you really don't want to, because pizza is generally seen as not a part of your new life-style diet, then don't. In the meantime, tell your husband that if he wants to order and eat pizza, he can eat it in the garage. Sounds to me like he is an insensitive lout, not uncommon for our gender. Doesn't he need to change his diet? High fat, high sodium, high calorie - he needs to pay attention to what he is eating too.0
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Coming in to dinner with 1,500 left probably isn't the best scenario. Can't really eat it back healthily at that point. Might want to eat more meals during or closer to the activities.
If eating pizza bothers due to oils/salt/lactose, or non-organic concerns, don't eat it. The 3-400 calories from a slice aren't the problem.0 -
Truthfully, I'm more concerned at how you have 1500 calories remaining...1500 calories is a pretty hefty chunk of exercise.0
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I have heard that it is also possible to make your own food in the kitchen as well.0
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I rather have a bottle of wine ( 650 calories ) and some cheese if I had 1500 calories left.0
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Seriously...I have a real problem with this idea that if one person is dieting, or whatever you want to call it, other family members are accused of lack of caring or lack of support if they choose to eat something else. My hubby fried a pound of bacon this morning, and I had four slices, all I wanted. This does not imply lack of caring on his part, just that he wanted to cook the bacon, no problem. Doesn't mean I have to eat it. Doesn't mean he isn't supportive, because he is. Take some responsibility for YOUR choices, and don't whine if somebody else wants something different.0
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Main issue isn't really about the pizza.... its more about the husband's lack of caring or support. Something she needs on her quest to eat health and to get in shape.
LOL! Yea, when I'm bulking and my wife is cutting, I eat anything I want in mass quantities and she doesn't. It works the same in reverse too, but it's much more amusing at restaurants when she orders the large prime rib and I opt for a small sirloin, as the waiter never seems to put the right plate in front of the right person. The point is, it is about SELF control. Yes, we support each other, but we don't limit what the other eats either.0 -
Seriously...I have a real problem with this idea that if one person is dieting, or whatever you want to call it, other family members are accused of lack of caring or lack of support if they choose to eat something else. My hubby fried a pound of bacon this morning, and I had four slices, all I wanted. This does not imply lack of caring on his part, just that he wanted to cook the bacon, no problem. Doesn't mean I have to eat it. Doesn't mean he isn't supportive, because he is. Take some responsibility for YOUR choices, and don't whine if somebody else wants something different.
I'm with you on that! I would never "impose" my weight loss on someone else.0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Eats ALL the pizza. Has NEVER turned down pizza as long as it fits my macros.
You were saying?
Tell me you also eat ice cream and I'll love you forever.0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
If she doesn't want it, she doesn't have to eat it. End of problem.0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Eats ALL the pizza. Has NEVER turned down pizza as long as it fits my macros.
You were saying?
Tell me you also eat ice cream and I'll love you forever.
*swoons*0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Eats ALL the pizza. Has NEVER turned down pizza as long as it fits my macros.
You were saying?
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If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy
Thats exactly the issue, it NOT a diet, its a lifestyle change. We are supporting her by saying she doesn't need to freak out over a slice of pizza once in a while.
Exactly. Most of us are not on a diet. We just make sure we don't overeat and therefor we lose weight at the same time.0 -
Have him order a small thin crust or flat bread with veggies for you. It will be satisfying without too much fat or calories.0
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Now I want pizza and after the last four days of Junkfest 2013, I really can't have it! I hate this thread.0
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So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
It's about learning what moderation and self-control is and not about avoidance.0 -
I've had half a pizza at least once a week every week since I joined here almost two and a half years ago. I've been maintaining within 5 pounds of my goal weight for two years.
Pizza is not the devil. And a husband who wants to continue to eat food he enjoys is not the devil, either.0 -
You have enough remaining calories to eat a few pieces of pizza, if you want to. But if you really don't want to, because pizza is generally seen as not a part of your new life-style diet, then don't. In the meantime, tell your husband that if he wants to order and eat pizza, he can eat it in the garage. Sounds to me like he is an insensitive lout, not uncommon for our gender. Doesn't he need to change his diet? High fat, high sodium, high calorie - he needs to pay attention to what he is eating too.
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So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Will politely disagree with your mindset. I spent all of my teen years on one "diet" or another, and failed miserably each and every time. Oh, sure, sometimes I'd drop the weight, but I would feel so deprived & hated refusing everyday normal foods others enjoyed. At age 20-21, I dropped 40 lbs (approx, I'm not exactly sure). How? By copying the way my college roommates ate. Yep, just followed their lead: eat when hungry, enjoy everything in moderation, no deprivation. I didn't count calories or anything. I just decided I was sick of "dieting". Just ate like my "normal" sized roommates. Today, I'm 51, 5ft tall, 115 lbs. I take no medications, all my labs & BP are excellent, and I'm active & happy. I eat pizza about once a week. I'll take a slice or two, add a salad & beverage and I'm satisfied. The "diet" mentality does not work for most. IMO.0 -
So strange to me that she is coming on here for motivation and support and people are acting like posts that say "Shake your head and say no" and pointing out the calories and bad contents that are in pizza are put down and made fun of.
If you're on a diet and trying to be healthy, how does overly processed cheese/dairy, (probably) non-whole grain crust, and sugar-laced pizza sauce work into a healthy diet?! Person A eats 1500 calories of pizza and Person B eat 1500 calories of whole grains and vegetables, who do you think is going to be healthier, have more energy for exercise, and feel better overall and probably slimmer? I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
If she doesn't want it, she doesn't have to eat it. End of problem.
Maybe she isn't full of will power as you are? Look i know if a pastrami sandwich being made in my house.. and next to it is my greek salad and a bowl of split pee vegan soup... no matter what this app is telling me, that pastrami is getting in me...
but if that pastrami isn't there... i'm eating healthy
Just sayin. husband could eat **** food outside of the house and when at home, support his wife to getting what she wants and i'm guessing what he wants...0 -
cause it bears repeating...
Byn... Hate to tell you. There is no food pyramid anymore. It's my plate. Plates are round. Pizzas are round. Eat the pizza!0 -
I have pizza in the oven at this very moment.
And now it's in mah belleh.
I hope you ate some too.0 -
It never fails, the minute I start to get back on track, my husband orders pizza. Now, I feel like depriving yourself of EVERYTHING is a bad way to go, but pizza is just really bad.... With the activity that I've done today, according to mfp, I'm left with some 1,500 calories remaining (crazy, because I only started with 1,400 this morning, and I've already had breakfast, lunch and a snack!) but I feel like that's a little crazy. Should I allow myself a piece of pizza (or two? lol) this evening when my husband orders? Or should I try to will my way out of it, and go hide while the pizza is out? It's really hard, because my husband won't NOT order it to make life easier for me, because he wants it and is going to get it, unfortunately... lol but I can't really blame him. What do you guys think?
Pitt. I'd have 4 slices... And a beer.0 -
Have some pizza and wash it down with beer!0
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I assumed she came on here for motivation on how to say no, because if you read her original post it sounds like she DOESN'T want to eat the pizza, and needs some help and a little push to say NO!
Actually, she came on here to see if she should eat the pizza or not. From the OP:Should I allow myself a piece of pizza (or two? lol) this evening when my husband orders? Or should I try to will my way out of it, and go hide while the pizza is out?
The thoughtless hubby crap was a secondary issue. It sounded more like a vent to me. To which I call it crap because, why should she impose her healthy choices on him if he is not ready or motivated to make that change for himself yet. All that would do is generate resentment and friction in their relationship.
I want some pizza now.0
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