I'm burning out, help
kelmc11
Posts: 5 Member
I've been tracking all my food and working out 5x a week since September. Lost 19 lbs (YAY!!) I am 1 lb away from my target and I am burned out, I am tired of food journaling and I just want to snack and be lazy. Suggestions?
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Replies
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Take a 1 week 'diet' break. Eat at full TDEE. Or take a 1 week break from exercise, but don't change what you've been eating.
Try some new recipes.
Try a new workout routine.0 -
I am in the same boat of burnout. Religiously logging every bite, working out 7 times per week, etc. I like the 1 week diet break. Not to eat unhealthy but rather to chill a little for a week. Good advice!!!0
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Its good to give yourself a break once in a while. Just make sure that when you do lose that final pound you don't fall into old habits, it would be a shame to let all that hard work and great success go to waste by gaining it all back!0
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From this time on see it as one more journal and one more workout to reaching your goal.0
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definitely take at least a couple days off! enjoy (which is what I personally do on the weekends to try to keep myself from burning out over the week) a few meals without needing to log them and take a couple days off exercise
(but try to eat within how much you usually eat)0 -
If you're only a pound from your goal, why keep up with journal? By now you've established your routine. You know what's good for you and how much. Keeping a food journal is great for when you need to establish habits and have a good amount of weight to lose (or in something like contest prep). But to do it everyday for the rest of your life is a bit much if you ask me.0
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If you're only a pound from your goal, why keep up with journal? By now you've established your routine. You know what's good for you and how much. Keeping a food journal is great for when you need to establish habits and have a good amount of weight to lose (or in something like contest prep). But to do it everyday for the rest of your life is a bit much if you ask me.0
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Gosh.. i'm getting tired of this and i've only been doing it two months. I have decided i want to eat more intuitively and not have to log every bite. I just started logging at night at the end of my day to see how i'm doing. I think you are so close to goal it is time for you to relax and realize you can't log every bite forever..you have to learn to eat right and not gain on your own. go for it!!0
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Take a 1 week 'diet' break. Eat at full TDEE. Or take a 1 week break from exercise, but don't change what you've been eating.
Try some new recipes.
Try a new workout routine.
This.
Change what exercise you do. Change how much you eat.
Or, take a week or two as a break from things. A break helps sometimes.0 -
I agree with the others who suggested taking a break. Here's a great article about diet breaks: http://www.bodyrecomposition.com/fat-loss/the-full-diet-break.html0
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Calculate your maintenance calories and practice staying within +/- 3 pounds. When you have achieved that for a month, go without logging or weighing for two weeks.0
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Take a break! I would make sure it is a defined break (i.e. with an end date) so that you don't backslide, but it sounds like you need it.0
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When I got close to my goal weight, I took one weekend day off each week from logging. Didn't mean I binged, but it was nice to be able to, for instance, just grab a handful of potato chips if I wanted some, rather than measuring out an exact portion. Or go out to eat without checking the nutritional information. Or have a drink or three at a party without asking your host the calorie count in her punch.
When I got to my goal weight, I extended that to both weekend days, as well as any holidays or vacation. Since I've been maintaining since June 2011, I'd say that's worked pretty well for me.
Any time I start to feel burned out on logging, I take a break from it. Sometimes just for a day, sometimes for a few weeks. And when I feel refreshed, I get back to logging again.
I think of it like keeping a balanced checkbook. I can go a while by just keeping a running tally in my head of how much is in the bank, but eventually, I need to enter all those receipts and checks, and make sure I can pay all my bills. In an ideal world, I'd be so filthy frickin' rich I'd never run out of money, and in an ideal world, I could eat whatever I want without gaining weight. The world is not ideal. :laugh:0 -
When I got close to my goal weight, I took one weekend day off each week from logging. Didn't mean I binged, but it was nice to be able to, for instance, just grab a handful of potato chips if I wanted some, rather than measuring out an exact portion. Or go out to eat without checking the nutritional information. Or have a drink or three at a party without asking your host the calorie count in her punch.
When I got to my goal weight, I extended that to both weekend days, as well as any holidays or vacation. Since I've been maintaining since June 2011, I'd say that's worked pretty well for me.
Any time I start to feel burned out on logging, I take a break from it. Sometimes just for a day, sometimes for a few weeks. And when I feel refreshed, I get back to logging again.
I think of it like keeping a balanced checkbook. I can go a while by just keeping a running tally in my head of how much is in the bank, but eventually, I need to enter all those receipts and checks, and make sure I can pay all my bills. In an ideal world, I'd be so filthy frickin' rich I'd never run out of money, and in an ideal world, I could eat whatever I want without gaining weight. The world is not ideal. :laugh:
Amazing advice.0 -
I avoid the word "diet". What I did was not a diet it was a lifestyle change both in terms of what I ate and my activity level. Think in terms of a sustainable lifestyle instead of some kind of deprivation.0
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When I got close to my goal weight, I took one weekend day off each week from logging. Didn't mean I binged, but it was nice to be able to, for instance, just grab a handful of potato chips if I wanted some, rather than measuring out an exact portion. Or go out to eat without checking the nutritional information. Or have a drink or three at a party without asking your host the calorie count in her punch.
When I got to my goal weight, I extended that to both weekend days, as well as any holidays or vacation. Since I've been maintaining since June 2011, I'd say that's worked pretty well for me.
Any time I start to feel burned out on logging, I take a break from it. Sometimes just for a day, sometimes for a few weeks. And when I feel refreshed, I get back to logging again.
I think of it like keeping a balanced checkbook. I can go a while by just keeping a running tally in my head of how much is in the bank, but eventually, I need to enter all those receipts and checks, and make sure I can pay all my bills. In an ideal world, I'd be so filthy frickin' rich I'd never run out of money, and in an ideal world, I could eat whatever I want without gaining weight. The world is not ideal. :laugh:
Amazing advice.
YES!0 -
When I got close to my goal weight, I took one weekend day off each week from logging. Didn't mean I binged, but it was nice to be able to, for instance, just grab a handful of potato chips if I wanted some, rather than measuring out an exact portion. Or go out to eat without checking the nutritional information. Or have a drink or three at a party without asking your host the calorie count in her punch.
When I got to my goal weight, I extended that to both weekend days, as well as any holidays or vacation. Since I've been maintaining since June 2011, I'd say that's worked pretty well for me.
Any time I start to feel burned out on logging, I take a break from it. Sometimes just for a day, sometimes for a few weeks. And when I feel refreshed, I get back to logging again.
I think of it like keeping a balanced checkbook. I can go a while by just keeping a running tally in my head of how much is in the bank, but eventually, I need to enter all those receipts and checks, and make sure I can pay all my bills. In an ideal world, I'd be so filthy frickin' rich I'd never run out of money, and in an ideal world, I could eat whatever I want without gaining weight. The world is not ideal. :laugh:
Agree x 3
Also remember this is a lifestyle change and if you want to successfully balance your weight loss for life, you can't have the "all or nothing" mentality. Keep yourself active, you don't have to be obsessed but you shouldn't ever feel like throwing everything out the window because you're bored of dieting. I believe that is the mentality that makes most people gain back all of the weight they worked so hard to lose. Keep a positive outlook! And have fun and relax once in a while.0
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