Food Rewarding- - Bad Habit??
QuietSheDreams
Posts: 2
I have a habit of rewarding myself with food. This seems like a bad habit to have but it's one I can't seem to quit. Has anyone had any success stopping this habit or using it to their advantage? I would love some advice.
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i do not, and will not ever reward myself with food but thats just me and how my mind works.. for me its "no rewards and you wont crave them"0
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... A bubble bath, a movie, a pedicure, a walk in a gorgeous park, a new cosmetic item, some scented body wash...there are hundreds of ways to reward/pamper yourself that do not involve food, and it's best to start changing that 'food is love' internal message RIGHT NOW.0
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Yes...reward your successes. Insted of food do rewards such as getting your nails done or purchase a new artical fo clothing. This seems to help my mind reset itself. Good luck!0
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I assume you're rewarding yourself with some type of junk food because who rewards themselves with carrots?
Eating healthy is avoiding junk food most of the time. Why would you eat healthy or lose some weight and then reward yourself with the type of food that is making you unhealthy or gain weight? Eating junk could also make you crave more junk. I know that happens to me.
There are so many things better with which you can reward yourself: a new pair of shoes, manicure, nail polish, new sunglasses, a massage, a dvd, iTunes songs for working out, new jeans, etc.
Maybe start rewarding yourself every OTHER time with food until you're ready to cut out the junk completely.0 -
I personally see no problem rewarding yourself with food.
Curious why people think it is a bad thing?0 -
I personally see no problem rewarding yourself with food.
Curious why people think it is a bad thing?
It depends on your relationship with food. If you're rewarding yourself with trigger foods that are going to cause you to binge eat, then it's probably not a good idea. If you're just looking forward to enjoying a cheesecake or something, and you know it's not going to cause you to go overboard, then it's fine. Everyone has a different take on it. Some people have "issues" with food control, and some others don't.0 -
My advice? Make all foods equal on the playing field. That's what I have done. As long as it fits into my macros and calorie limit, it's a "neutral" food. A cookie is equal to broccoli is equal to cheese is equal to ice cream. Makes food way less tempting if I know I can have it any time I want. That's not to say I don't have special meals on special occasions, like my birthday or whatever. I just don't use it as a "reward" per say. I think people get into trouble with that mindset, and that's how I ballooned up to 250 pounds.0
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I love rewarding myself with food. I don't see it as a problem unless if you lack self control.0
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I do not think there is a problem with it, especially if its all related. For example, if you stayed under your calories all week, what is wrong with rewarding yourself with a candy bar.
When I hit my goal weight I am going to reward myself with a 1lb box of See's Candies.
ETA: @Prego above makes a good point re trigger food. It depends if you can portion control/moderate what you are rewarding yourself with.0 -
I have to say, I sometimes do this too. However, I use it more like some people use a cheat day? For example, I have a friend's 21st coming up, so I'm mentally going "eat healthy, stick to it, no binges, no mess-ups - the day after the party, you can eat whatever you want!"
To be honest, it actually works to my advantage because typically I reach the 'cheat' day, which I've been using as a reward and motivation device, but I'm not craving anything and have even been sick in the past from eating some chocolate or some cheat-worthy food after the week leading up to the event/or whatever it was I was clean eating for.0 -
I personally see no problem rewarding yourself with food.
Curious why people think it is a bad thing?
It depends on your relationship with food. If you're rewarding yourself with trigger foods that are going to cause you to binge eat, then it's probably not a good idea. If you're just looking forward to enjoying a cheesecake or something, and you know it's not going to cause you to go overboard, then it's fine. Everyone has a different take on it. Some people have "issues" with food control, and some others don't.
Okay that is a good explanation. Thank you!
I usually reward myself with quality food. Something I know I will enjoy and don't normally budget in xD0 -
I personally see no problem rewarding yourself with food.
Curious why people think it is a bad thing?
It depends on your relationship with food. If you're rewarding yourself with trigger foods that are going to cause you to binge eat, then it's probably not a good idea. If you're just looking forward to enjoying a cheesecake or something, and you know it's not going to cause you to go overboard, then it's fine. Everyone has a different take on it. Some people have "issues" with food control, and some others don't.
Okay that is a good explanation. Thank you!
I usually reward myself with quality food. Something I know I will enjoy and don't normally budget in xD
:flowerforyou:0 -
My advice? Make all foods equal on the playing field. That's what I have done. As long as it fits into my macros and calorie limit, it's a "neutral" food. A cookie is equal to broccoli is equal to cheese is equal to ice cream. Makes food way less tempting if I know I can have it any time I want. That's not to say I don't have special meals on special occasions, like my birthday or whatever. I just don't use it as a "reward" per say. I think people get into trouble with that mindset, and that's how I ballooned up to 250 pounds.
I have a similar mindset, if the calories are are available in my daily allotment and I want to eat something I do. However, more often then not I eat something that's better for me all around...0 -
I keep reminding myself "don't reward yourself with food -you are not a dog"0
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A reward is a reward, whether it is food or not. Use your imagination, but if there is something special and it will be centered around food, reward yourself with something special there. Food can be a reward/treat but know your limitations.
NOW, for those "quote followers" who pick up every little thing someone ELSE says and make it theirs BEFORE REALLY examining the meaning.."those use that Dog reward with food thing"...those people are cynical and trying to DEGRADE Others who do not adopt their perspective, LIMITED as it is. What do you say to a "Shop-Aholic" or Alcoholic or Addicted Gambler...Reward yourself with a shopping trip to the Mall or A night out at the Bar or A vacation to Vegas. What do you say to someone who is not overweight and may eat chocolate cake once a month, "No, don't call eating that cake a treat/reward, are you a dog?" ALL these people are doing is trying to SHAME people for eating food and making it a Priority. HECK YEA food is a priority, just listen to the HEALTH Conscious talk! STOP trying to degrade people by trying to control how they talk or what they say...just like those who like to put down others because they use the word "Diet" instead of "Lifestyle Change".
I reward/treat Myself with food many times and I am NOT a Dog; and I reward My Dog with a sweater or car ride sometimes and he is NOT Human.
ETA: Read where someone said that they make all food equal on the playing field. My response is LMAO...if you make Chocolate cake or Ice Cream or Potato Chips...EQUAL with Broccoli or Kale or Oatmeal, you WILL be OBESE! Obesity happens when you make all food EQUAL...yea, have that piece of cake for lunch instead of a Chicken Cobb Salad....and so on. I was Obese, and food was EQUAL for Me, and I used all of the wrong foods DAILY and as a comfort...I THOUGHT they were all EQUAL! NO, Foods are NOT EQUAL, that's why one should eat certain DAILY and OTHERS maybe 2/3/4 times a year on special occasions as a treat!0 -
... A bubble bath, a movie, a pedicure, a walk in a gorgeous park, a new cosmetic item, some scented body wash...there are hundreds of ways to reward/pamper yourself that do not involve food, and it's best to start changing that 'food is love' internal message RIGHT NOW.
^this!!!0 -
Hell no. It's all lies. I reward myself with food like 10 times a day every day. Bahahaha0
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A splurge with food here and there is acceptable. A reward of food is not. For me, my rewards are new clothes, massages, manicures, day trips etc... You have to break away from food being your reason to succeed.0
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Hmm. If I reward myself, it tends to be really big. I don't reward myself for small achievements - small achievements are reward enough.
I recently rewarded my weight loss efforts with a new bike. It's expensive enough that I'm actually embarrassed to admit how much I spent on it >_>
Re: Food rewards - I might treat myself to some decadent sweets, but only if I've allotted those calories. For example, on a long ride day, I might eat half a pint of ice cream.... just cuz I can.0 -
A reward is a reward, whether it is food or not. Use your imagination, but if there is something special and it will be centered around food, reward yourself with something special there. Food can be a reward/treat but know your limitations.
NOW, for those "quote followers" who pick up every little thing someone ELSE says and make it theirs BEFORE REALLY examining the meaning.."those use that Dog reward with food thing"...those people are cynical and trying to DEGRADE Others who do not adopt their perspective, LIMITED as it is. What do you say to a "Shop-Aholic" or Alcoholic or Addicted Gambler...Reward yourself with a shopping trip to the Mall or A night out at the Bar or A vacation to Vegas. What do you say to someone who is not overweight and may eat chocolate cake once a month, "No, don't call eating that cake a treat/reward, are you a dog?" ALL these people are doing is trying to SHAME people for eating food and making it a Priority. HECK YEA food is a priority, just listen to the HEALTH Conscious talk! STOP trying to degrade people by trying to control how they talk or what they say...just like those who like to put down others because they use the word "Diet" instead of "Lifestyle Change".
I agreed with a previous poster who said she thinks its better to reward with a non-food item but I'm in no way saying food or rewarding with food is shameful. Food sustains life. However, for many users of this site or people in general with weight issues, their grasp on control might not be as firm as yours. For some it can be a slippery slope. A lot of people with weight problems, if they are honest with themselves, can admit that they have turned to food in heartbreak, in celebration, in stress, in boredom, etc. I swear I didn't have a special occasion or a new job that didn't involve a celebration dinner. That's part of the reason I got to where I am now. There is no SHAME in knowing that if you have relied on food in good times and in bad that maybe it isn't the best reward for making your weightloss and fitness goals. I know some people might be able to do it without negative consequences but so many other people yo-yo back and forth. Then they get discouraged and post things like "I was doing so good and now I have fallen back to my old habits!" And rewarding with food can contribute to that. I'll never forget my FIL-to-be losing 10 lbs and rewarding himself with a dinner out at the buffet. He gained about 8 of those lbs back. Sure, if his willpower had been stronger... but a lot of dieters didn't get to this point with their iron will. So just because someone subscribes to a school of thought that isn't your own doesn't mean they are random "quote followers" it just means someone said their answer before they could.0 -
I really dislike this. Not much annoys me on here but I've seen this a few times and I find it really degrading.
We have dedicated reward centers in our brains and food is pleasurable. If there are no mental issues with self control, binging etc, then like the other wise posters, there is absolutely no reason not to. It's a natural response.0 -
I don't agree with the dog picture, but for me, food as a reward is the downhill slope that led me here.
At first it was a reward for a job well done. Then it was also a treat after a bad day. Then it was a way to relax after getting worked up over something.
In the end, I found excuses everyday to eat bad (yeah, bad. Fast food is my trigger food, and even if all food is equal, for me it led to 3000 cal meals on top of a 2000 cal day).
So I guess as long as it is a REWARD, and not an EXCUSE, it is fine, but know yourself, and don't fool yourself.0 -
I have food I like that is not 'clean' or 'healthy', but I have it as and when, rather than as a reward. I vaguely remember using food as a reward for getting homework done as a kid, and it didn't mess things up too much.
I can use exercise as a reward for getting other things in life done, because I'd much rather be exercising than all the other stuff I have to do :laugh: This morning, if I can get the washing up done and the flooding fridge sorted, I'll Zumba on the wii.0
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