Doritos are not meth.
stephdeeable
Posts: 1,407 Member
I’m hesitant even as I write this, because I don’t want this to turn into some horrible flame war thread, because I write this with good intentions and not to judge or bully anyone. But it’s been on my mind for some time so I want to write it out…
Everywhere I look on this site I see threads or comments where people are losing their damn mind because someone brought cupcakes into work, or their mother-in-law made pasta for Sunday dinner, or they had to drive past a Taco Bell last Wednesday and it’s been giving them night terrors. They refuse to eat these things in moderation, or fit them somewhere in their daily/weekly/monthly goals and instead spend hours freaking out and obsessing about what they ate, didn’t eat or almost ate.
If someone brings cupcakes into my work, and I decide I’d like one – I eat it, I think “What a delicious cupcake.”, log it as best as I can in my food journal and continue with my day. I never think about it again, I don’t skip dinner or do an extra workout or pray to the Weight Loss God. I don’t shiver and sob on my bathroom floor while rubbing Sensa crystals all over my body. I ate a cupcake, I didn’t hit someone with my car and keep driving, so why should I feel guilty?
I’m not saying I don’t make bad choices some days. The other day I ate an entire bag of tortilla chips and an entire jar of queso dip. And not throughout the day or at a casual social event. I sat on my couch and crammed about 1500 calories into my mouth in 20 minutes. Did I regret it afterwards? Of course I did. Do I now think I have a queso addiction and refuse to have it in my house? No. There is a bag of chips in my cupboard and a jar of dip in my fridge. I like to enjoy a serving of each some nights after work.
The big picture is, food can not own or control us. We have power over our own minds. You are not addicted to chocolate. You are not addicted to carbs. There’s no shifty dudes hanging out in the alley trying to sell you Cheetos. Doritos are not meth. Losing weight to me has nothing to do with looking smokin’ hot in a bikini, one of my biggest goals is to continue to learn and implement my own self control. To learn how to keep things in balance, and make good decisions. I will slip up sometimes and moderation can fly out the window, but I’d rather learn from my mistakes than constantly worry about these “bad foods” and when they’re going to get me. I want to be free from these restrictions we put upon ourselves.
I’m not saying you have to keep eating junk food. If you don’t want to, don’t. If you want to eat clean (whatever that actually means), then go nuts. Just stop giving food more power than it has. I am so sick of people talking about food like it’s a drug. “Oh, I can’t control myself around sweets.” Yes, you can. You just never have. “I can’t have chips in my house!” Sure you can. Sometimes you’ll ration them out serving by serving throughout the week, and sometimes you’ll eat the entire bag at once and regret it afterwards. In my opinion, you will learn more from that than from walking through life with your eyes closed pretending chips don’t exist.
They do exist. And they are delicious.
Everywhere I look on this site I see threads or comments where people are losing their damn mind because someone brought cupcakes into work, or their mother-in-law made pasta for Sunday dinner, or they had to drive past a Taco Bell last Wednesday and it’s been giving them night terrors. They refuse to eat these things in moderation, or fit them somewhere in their daily/weekly/monthly goals and instead spend hours freaking out and obsessing about what they ate, didn’t eat or almost ate.
If someone brings cupcakes into my work, and I decide I’d like one – I eat it, I think “What a delicious cupcake.”, log it as best as I can in my food journal and continue with my day. I never think about it again, I don’t skip dinner or do an extra workout or pray to the Weight Loss God. I don’t shiver and sob on my bathroom floor while rubbing Sensa crystals all over my body. I ate a cupcake, I didn’t hit someone with my car and keep driving, so why should I feel guilty?
I’m not saying I don’t make bad choices some days. The other day I ate an entire bag of tortilla chips and an entire jar of queso dip. And not throughout the day or at a casual social event. I sat on my couch and crammed about 1500 calories into my mouth in 20 minutes. Did I regret it afterwards? Of course I did. Do I now think I have a queso addiction and refuse to have it in my house? No. There is a bag of chips in my cupboard and a jar of dip in my fridge. I like to enjoy a serving of each some nights after work.
The big picture is, food can not own or control us. We have power over our own minds. You are not addicted to chocolate. You are not addicted to carbs. There’s no shifty dudes hanging out in the alley trying to sell you Cheetos. Doritos are not meth. Losing weight to me has nothing to do with looking smokin’ hot in a bikini, one of my biggest goals is to continue to learn and implement my own self control. To learn how to keep things in balance, and make good decisions. I will slip up sometimes and moderation can fly out the window, but I’d rather learn from my mistakes than constantly worry about these “bad foods” and when they’re going to get me. I want to be free from these restrictions we put upon ourselves.
I’m not saying you have to keep eating junk food. If you don’t want to, don’t. If you want to eat clean (whatever that actually means), then go nuts. Just stop giving food more power than it has. I am so sick of people talking about food like it’s a drug. “Oh, I can’t control myself around sweets.” Yes, you can. You just never have. “I can’t have chips in my house!” Sure you can. Sometimes you’ll ration them out serving by serving throughout the week, and sometimes you’ll eat the entire bag at once and regret it afterwards. In my opinion, you will learn more from that than from walking through life with your eyes closed pretending chips don’t exist.
They do exist. And they are delicious.
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Replies
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EXTREMELY LOUD CLAPPING!!!!!!!0
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I once tried to eat some doritos
Ended up eating an entire party bag (the $4 bag) in like an hour.
Doritos: Not even once0 -
Spicy sweet chilli Doritos are pretty much like crack to me. If I eat one, I freebase the entire bag. Open mouth, pour in chips. That's why I don't buy them.
I think you'll find that's the case with people who legitimately fear junk food. They know that one cookie means a dozen. You'll also find that these people are usually in their first baby steps to change their lifestyle or they're not even working on changing their lifestyle and are just "on a diet".
If people are finding some security in their fears right now, let's them. 20, 30, 50 pounds down the road, they'll figure it out. They'll figure out that one cookie did not make them 75 pounds overweight. Until then.................. we all do what works for us.0 -
:drinker:0
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Great post!0
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I didn't read your entire post but I do agree with what I read. That said, Doritos seriously are a danger for me. I can take any other kind of snack and portion out one serving and be happy with it. We haven't had Doritos for months and we got some the other day and two days in a row I ate 3 servings at a time. I kept thinking, just a few more, just a few more. Will I swear them off forever, no. They're too yummy. Will I try to be smarter about eating one serving at a time? Maybe.0
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True story.
Meth makes you skinny.0 -
Now I want Cool Ranch Doritos...mmmm....0
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Evidently, binge eating on a single food was never your issue.0
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Fantastic post.
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Darn, I wondered why I could never get buzzed off them! :laugh:0
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Eat Doritos in moderation? Unpossible!
Seriously. It's not even remotely likely.
So yeah, avoiding food which so easily defeats one's willpower is a good life choice.0 -
I absolutely agree. However, there are a few foods for each of us that we tend to go nuts on. Last year, I banned poptarts (blueberry and brown sugar cinna) from my house because I can just eat a whole box in one sitting. this year, I have banned fruit snacks. They are the only things that are hard for me to just sit and eat a proper portion.0
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EXTREMELY LOUD CLAPPING!!!!!!!0
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So... I shouldn't have crushed those Doritos and snorted them? Hunh. I guess I did it wrong...0
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Yep, the more you obsess about the slip ups, the more they seem to happen!0
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:flowerforyou:0
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They do exist. And they are delicious.
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Spicy sweet chilli Doritos are pretty much like crack to me. If I eat one, I freebase the entire bag. Open mouth, pour in chips. That's why I don't buy them.
This made me LOL so hard!
For me it's chocolate. If I get even a LITTLE taste, I need more. Very much like Meth! BUT...I also know that I'm not going to live my life not ever tasting chocolate again. Just not going to happen!0 -
I agree with you! Moderation really is key and if someone wants to purely eat clean then good for them. I unfortunately run into issues like lack of time so I have to eat processed every so often and the odd chip never really hurt me. I even had some dino-sours last night and it was glorious processed sugar and gelatin heaven!
I also realized I can fit my favorite food in every day of the week if I wanted to if I just tweaked how I used to eat it so now I can be happy with moderation0 -
Very nicely stated. :drinker:0
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On a serious note: I agree with you completely! I never deprive myself of anything, I eat what I want, just less of it.
I now really want a 40g bag of Doritos with a whole pot of low fat houmous!0 -
Great post. Except that Doritos are meth. I haven't bought them in years, because I know I can't stop eating them once the bag is open. If I go to a party where they have Doritos out, I'll be the lady scraping the cheese dust out of the bowl when all the chips are gone.0
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Evidently, binge eating on a single food was never your issue.
Yes, it actually was my issue. That's the whole point of this to me, to work through my issues and learn from them rather than hide from them the rest of my life. Learning that food is not comfort is my biggest mind block to fight though.0 -
Nor were the ???????????? of cheese pizza I ate Saturday :noway:0
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While I do agree with your stance, in how it applies to me, I also recognize that I'm not in someone elses mind or body. I don't have food fear, but I do understand the power of addiction. Food addiction does not apply to me. That in no way makes me believe it can't apply to someone else.0
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Agreed! But I may or may not be eating spaghettios later so I am clearly not an authority on anything.0
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TOTES AGREE! sadly the people who do freak out are the ones who don't stick with MFP or view it as a diet and not a lifestyle change. Completely banning yourself from junk food is not always feasible and why should it be?! I have lost 40lbs and I did not do by giving up alcohol or the occasional ice cream or fast food. I do work out extra on days I know Ill be in a party food situation, or if Im going out to the bars, etc...but thats life!0
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There’s no shifty dudes hanging out in the alley trying to sell you Cheetos
I love it.0 -
Evidently, binge eating on a single food was never your issue.
Hot Cheetos. They will haunt me for the rest of my life.0
This discussion has been closed.
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