Free day????
meg1hirschi
Posts: 39
Is it helpful or harmful??? Im trying to decide if i should have 1 a week or what not. Would love your input!!!
Thanks
Thanks
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Replies
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I am not really a fan of "free days" or "cheat days". It's so easy to go overboard on those days, thinking "I've been good all week I deserve those pancakes for breakfast, pizza for lunch, chicken wings for dinner and ice-cream afterwards".
I nice meal every once in a while though, even going over your calorie allotment won't do a lot of harm. A whole day can be a totally different story!
If it helps you to stay on track I would say, pick ONE meal a week where you eat more/not as healthy as usual. Maybe a nice weekend breakfast with french toast and bacon, or a plate of nachos while watching your favorite football team.0 -
Sounds resonable to me0
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Especially when you're just starting off, a whole *free* day can be really detrimental. Your body can feel deprived so you'll want to eat everything! And after a day of eating all the old foods you used to, it can be IMPOSSIBLE to get back on track when the next day rolls around. I speak from personal experience.
However, one *free* meal a week is different. I reserve mine for dinner on Saturday nights. While I don't go crazy, I allow myself to eat something I REALLY want, but in moderation. Yesterday, I had two slices of bacon cheeseburger pizza. I didn't go over my calories for the day, and this morning, the scale hadn't gone up. I don't feel bloated either.
What I do is to eat something I really want and then follow it with A LOT of water. I feel like this flushes out my system faster though I don't have any idea if it actually does or not.
So in short, no free DAY; just a free meal.0 -
I'm glad you brought that up, because it's something i've wondered for myself. I agree with it being possibly harmful- and I think one higher cal meal periodically is a great idea. Personally, I find that it is the mental concept that I DESERVE a treat or cheat day that gets me into trouble. That is how i justify overeating and it also makes the concept of eating healthy feel like a punishment. I am going to try to make every day interesting and healthy food-wise so I like what I am eating all the time.0
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I consider this a lifestyle change, therefore don't have cheat days or meals. I just try and keep it within my goal, regardless. If I go over, I don't fret... it is what it is.0
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I have a free day every Friday.0
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I use free days all the time and think they are helpful. I was told to take them once a week by a personal trainer. She said it helps keep your metabolism up. I also find they help with cravings. If I am craving pie, I can tell myself I can have it on my free day. Keeps me from breaking my diet. The one thing I do though is I go out and have that piece of pie. Then I don't have a whole pie sitting around the house to tempt me0
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Not for me...I wanted the fat off asap! If you work off 3500 calories in a week, and then you have a free day and eat a extra 3500 calories which isn't so hard if your eating out & drinking....you wasted your week of working out. I do it rarely....everyone has to have some fun!!0
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Don't do it. I did it for my birthday - week off. And pretty much all the healthy habits were gone and also now I'm craving carbs and sweet goodies which I didn't before. I'd say go for a bite of a cookie when you feel like it but don't over do it. It's about learning to discipline yourself and really not want the bad things anymore.... Now if I just listened to myself, I wouldn't have reversed all the good things that I have gained in the past month!0
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It depends on what works best for you. From the very beginning of my weight loss ~journey~ I've used the whole weekend as a "free day". It's been really helpful for me and has probably been the number one factor that has kept me from giving up, to be honest. If I have a craving for something "naughty" during the week, I don't go crazy thinking about it because I just tell myself it's fine, I'll have it on the weekend. It takes my mind off the craving, and sometimes when the weekend comes I'm completely over it and don't even want whatever I was craving anymore anyway.
During the week, I always eat at a deficit, so when my free days come, I'm not actually going over my calories for the week. Lately, I've been keeping a spreadsheet to track my calories on a weekly basis so I know how much I can relax things on the weekend without going over. Also, I make sure I always exercise on my free days to help balance things.
So it depends on you, really. Some people find it more helpful to avoid temptation all together. But for me, it's been amazingly helpful.0 -
Ive lost 105 lbs in 6 months , ive had cheat meals mostly once or twice a week , as to cheat days , only if I'm at my grandmothers house ,and even on those two occasions i always do portion control. the key is portion control. and just cause u cheat , do not stop you work out. the key is to limit intake and burn calories .0
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It depends on what works best for you. From the very beginning of my weight loss ~journey~ I've used the whole weekend as a "free day". It's been really helpful for me and has probably been the number one factor that has kept me from giving up, to be honest. If I have a craving for something "naughty" during the week, I don't go crazy thinking about it because I just tell myself it's fine, I'll have it on the weekend. It takes my mind off the craving, and sometimes when the weekend comes I'm completely over it and don't even want whatever I was craving anymore anyway.
During the week, I always eat at a deficit, so when my free days come, I'm not actually going over my calories for the week. Lately, I've been keeping a spreadsheet to track my calories on a weekly basis so I know how much I can relax things on the weekend without going over. Also, I make sure I always exercise on my free days to help balance things.
So it depends on you, really. Some people find it more helpful to avoid temptation all together. But for me, it's been amazingly helpful.0 -
Great question. I am trying to gain weight. And, please don't laugh, it is in fact very difficult to consume enough calories daily. It is hard to stay motivated. But, to answer the original question.....
Personally, I don't have free days. I could potentially lose any gain I had made and I wouldn't want that. I.am no scientist but reckon that any one trying to lose could potentially experience the opposite and gain their hard earned loss.
And, I also agree with other posts. Firstly, Like many MFP users, I am having to commit to a long-term change in eating habits. If I took a day off, I wouldn't eat that breakfast that I never feel hungry for. Neither would I force myself to consume 100g of mixed fruit and nut each day.
To take a cheat day would, in my mind, not help me achieve my long-term goal. So, I am going to choose not to take one. That way, if and when I have a bad day, I will understand that to be the case. I won't give up, I will do my best and accept the fact that I am only human and change is hard to achieve.0 -
What has been working for me this time around is to have one day a week where I still track my calories, but go over up to 500 calories. Most of those calories are used for alcohol, so I don't feel like I don't get to have any fun, but by still recording everything I eat it keeps me mindful (and keeps me from delving into the cheese drawer when I get home)
I think it really depends on what your mindset is like. I'm an "all or nothing" kind of person so if I have a free day, I won't just eat what I've been craving... I'll pick the foods with the highest calorie count just because I can. It's a big reason my weights been yo-yoing around.0 -
I don't really believe in cheat days anymore. I've tried that method before but instead of focusing on making healthy choices every day and enjoying those choices, I found myself looking towards the day when I could just eat anything, which isn't really healthy.
Instead I now go by a very broad 80/20 rule. My goal is to have 80% healthy food every day or every week. If One day I decide I want a candy bar, and the rest of my day or week has been squeaky clean, then I can of course have that candy bar. It doesn't matter what day of the week it is. But I keep it occasional like that, and I try to never let junk food make up more than half of any day's intake.
To me, its better to try and integrate your favorite foods INTO your healthy lifestyle. Being very strict all week and then saving one day to just binge out to your heart's content is telling yourself that healthy eating and having your favorite foods can't be done in combination, which isn't true.0 -
A whole day of cheating? Not in a million years.0
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I don't like the idea of a whole free day, now one free meal a week this would anything outside of any normal meal anything for me and still within my calorie goal (try anyway). For instance, I don't eat pasta everyday so my free meal maybe a chicken fettucine in Alfredo or a piece of cake but again in my calorie goal for the day.0
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I take cheat days but I don't go on reckless binges. Might be 500 over TDEE or on rare occasion 1k, but usually they're just days where I don't feel like keeping track.
As for whether or not you should, I don't think there's a one-size-fits-all answer.
The bottom line is that over large periods of time, you need to create an energy deficit. Cheat days will counteract that in the short-term, but if this means greater long-term compliance then they can be very useful. But that's an individual thing that will vary from person to person. Some people might use a cheat day just as an excuse to pig out.0 -
A good week off is always good, especially if youre following a program.0
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A good week off is always good, especially if youre following a program.0
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i have a free meal every now and then, or a night out where i let myself drink alcohol. one or the other once a week. but not a whole day.0
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I usually do a 'free' meal per week - keeps me happy - I 'usually' stick to this rule0
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I don't look at it as a cheat day.I just take a break from being so rigid. I do on occasion have a day or usually just one meal where I eat some of the things I have been craving.I don't do it every week though. I don't plan it in advance. Usually it is when we are going to be eating out and there is something I haven't had in a long time. I still try to use portion control (mainly so I can figure the caloris later) and I always always log everything. Even though I go over my calories for that day I find it is still much less that I would have eaten before starting MFP. I also try to eat something healthy along with the other stuff. Last time we ate out it was a brunch buffet. I ate a salad and a small cup of healthy soup before having some of the higher fat and calorie food.0
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Yes, that was my point but you put it better0
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Yes, Angiechimpanz, that was my point but you put it better0
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Yes, that was my point but you put it better0
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I usually cheat on the weekends but I still keep track of what I'm doing and don't go too far over. Like yesterday my husband and I woke up a little late and wanted lunch and since it was about 11 by the time we got out that's what we did. I had a philly and some chili cheese fries and a pulled pork potato for dinner and I was full all day and still under my calorie limit. It may not have been the best for fat content and stuff but I could have done a lot worse. My big problem is alcohol and with parties this past weekend and the one coming up jello shots are the enemy this week. Alcohol is just empy calories but I enjoy having a few drinks when I'm in the mood, especially on the weekends.0
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This doesn't seem like a good idea to me, for the reasons other people already mentioned: It can be a slippery slope, eating like that.once a week, and it encourages the idea that the other days of the week are some extra special diet, whose rules you get to ignore occasionally, instead of just being your new lifestyle.
If you want to live and eat healthy, it generally doesn't include a day set aside every week to binge on pie.0 -
Thanks for the posts; I dug this thread out on a search and it's been really helpful.
I weigh myself every two weeks and like to take that day off as a reward for the hard work. However, I challenged myself to still track the cals that I consumed.
Today I nearly doubled my allotted calorie intake because it was "free" and I felt desperate to find some better suggestions (because the binge is a bit embarrassing). I'll give the "add 500 cals" for a nice little reward once every two weeks, but not treat it like a free ticket to binge.0 -
I agree! A whole day will ruin my entire week. I pick either one meal or one snack, and I still track and I try not to go over the calorie goal to "maintain"0
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