What to do when you over eat

The weekends are the hardest for me. I lose track of the food I consumed, with friends over drinking wine and ordering pizza I get lost. Should I guest how many calories I consumed and eat less the following day?
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Replies

  • auddii
    auddii Posts: 15,357 Member
    Just start logging the next day and move on. If I over eat sometimes I'll undereat the next day by a few hundred calories, but usually not the equivalent amount that I was over (well, if I was way over). And I still try to eat above my BMR. (If you don't know what your BMR is, there is a calculator in the apps section of MFP.)

    ETA: And a lot of times I just accept that I messed up and eat normally and within my calories the next day. One day of slipping up won't mean much in the long run. Although you might see a spike on the scale, but that's usually water weight from increase in salt (we never seem to randomly binge on healthy foods...)
  • Thanks that is good advice. I just order the adkin baking mix I am going to try to make my own pizza that way I know what is in it and i can try to make it more healthier with fewer calories and carbs.


    V/R, Von
  • RonandDi
    RonandDi Posts: 120 Member
    I try to figure out as close as I can how much I ate, but I don't worry too much about how much over I go (although it is an eye opener at times). I look at it this way, I am not going to stop doing the things I enjoy. If I am good about what I eat 5 days a week, it is better than the 1 or 2 days a week that I was before. If you deprive yourself from all that you enjoy, you will never be able to keep it as a lifesytle.
  • syntaxxor
    syntaxxor Posts: 86
    If it's a once a week lapse, I don't care and move on. If it happens twice in a row; I generally fast on the following day.
  • Most delivery places have their nutritional value posted on the internet. You can also at least eyeball how much wine you put in your glass and put in "red wine, x ounces."
  • tricksee
    tricksee Posts: 835 Member
    If it's a once a week lapse, I don't care and move on. If it happens twice in a row; I generally fast on the following day.

    +1
  • KANGOOJUMPS
    KANGOOJUMPS Posts: 6,474 Member
    i work my butt off over time all week, then i drink like a fish all weekend,.
    works for me.
  • 2credneck208
    2credneck208 Posts: 501 Member
    I log everything even on the weekends before the food goes in my mouth. If you go over go for a walk or turn on some music and dance.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    I don't worry about it. For me, it's about my overall diet and fitness, not what happened on an isolated day. I'm also starting to see that I'm eating more intuitively these days...after 6 months of logging and a complete dietary overhaul, I find that I just naturally make adjustments these days and that my internal fuel gauge seems to be functioning properly these days. I've noticed that when I have a "bad day" (like the BBQ we had this past Saturday) that my body will naturally crave veggies and fruit and overall lighter fare the next day or two. I don't even really have to think about it anymore.

    I'm to the point now that I'm considering eating intuitively for awhile rather than logging. I'm pretty close to maintenance and with my diet being what it is, it's pretty difficult for me to go over my maintenance level of calories on any kind of routine basis...heck sometimes it's difficult for me to hit my 2,200 gross calories per day (to lose 1/2 Lb per week) without adding a bit of junk food.
  • shmoony
    shmoony Posts: 237 Member
    These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.
  • RonandDi
    RonandDi Posts: 120 Member
    These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.

    Your talking extremes. I doubt anyone is saying it's okay to eat 7000 calories every weekend. But even if you did, chances are you would only maintain. 500 calories through a week is well within the margin of error.
  • twelfty
    twelfty Posts: 576 Member
    go and excersize if you've over eaten by 500 calories a fast paced walk for an hour would burn it off
  • shmoony
    shmoony Posts: 237 Member
    These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.

    Your talking extremes. I doubt anyone is saying it's okay to eat 7000 calories every weekend. But even if you did, chances are you would only maintain. 500 calories through a week is well within the margin of error.

    I know its an extreme example, but I see so many people on here complaining about there inability to lose weight as they say things like "I watch what I eat 'for the most part'" and "I ususally only slip up on the weekends". Unless you log EVERYTHING you binge on over the weekend, you will not lose, becasue it's very very easy for the cals to get into the 3000-4000 range if youre not careful. I think those forgotten days are the number one reason for peoples faulure.
  • charliehefferon
    charliehefferon Posts: 223 Member
    These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.

    Well aren't you a rude person!!! I don't think it's EVER acceptable to call people fat - even less acceptable on sites like this!! If you have something constructive to say, try it without insults.
  • charliehefferon
    charliehefferon Posts: 223 Member
    The weekends are the hardest for me. I lose track of the food I consumed, with friends over drinking wine and ordering pizza I get lost. Should I guest how many calories I consumed and eat less the following day?

    I find the best way to track things like weekends is to pre log.... If you know your having a takeaway and wine with friends, log it before you go out. That way, you will see how much you are over before doing it - it may put you off having dessert! Also, it may spur you on to workout that little bit longer/harder to make up for going over xx
  • shmoony
    shmoony Posts: 237 Member
    These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.

    Well aren't you a rude person!!! I don't think it's EVER acceptable to call people fat - even less acceptable on sites like this!! If you have something constructive to say, try it without insults.

    FAT is what people are and why theyre here. The sooner we stop coddling fat people and and stop making out to be a handicap or something poeple don't have a choice about, the sooner it the epidemic will change.Being fat is not like having downs or autism, or your skin color, or being short, etc. etc. If I posted a big sign at the McDonald's drive thru that said "Stop eating here Fatso", I bet at least one out of two people would rethink their food choice. Sorry if I champion the tough love movement.
  • theskinnylist
    theskinnylist Posts: 286 Member
    If it's a once a week lapse, I don't care and move on. If it happens twice in a row; I generally fast on the following day.
    Yo tambien.
  • mike_ny
    mike_ny Posts: 351 Member
    I think of both my diet and workouts as week long events and not as daily ones, so if I overeat or can't fit in a workout, the numbers for the week still have a bit of leeway to make some adjustments. I still try to maintain daily calorie deficits and don't eat less than my BMR, though. I know I obviously can't double up on a workout or overdo it on exercising, but I may be able to increase activity in some other ways. At worse case, it pushes my goal dates out a bit. We all have occasions where we have to be social and will overeat and/or miss workouts.

    If it becomes a regular or ongoing thing, then at that point you're really off your original plan and it's probably time to re-assess what your realistic goals and options are.
  • CristinaL1983
    CristinaL1983 Posts: 1,119 Member
    These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.

    Your talking extremes. I doubt anyone is saying it's okay to eat 7000 calories every weekend. But even if you did, chances are you would only maintain. 500 calories through a week is well within the margin of error.

    I know its an extreme example, but I see so many people on here complaining about there inability to lose weight as they say things like "I watch what I eat 'for the most part'" and "I ususally only slip up on the weekends". Unless you log EVERYTHING you binge on over the weekend, you will not lose, becasue it's very very easy for the cals to get into the 3000-4000 range if youre not careful. I think those forgotten days are the number one reason for peoples faulure.

    I agree with you for the most part.

    I go over some days, probably once or twice a week. However, I am careful to make sure that my weekly average is correct. I ate at almost maintenance one day last week and was still under for the week. I log everything.

    I don't think it's too bad an idea to be over one day as long as you make sure it averages out. I don't tend to agree with the "it's just one day, move on" thought process. One day can ruin your deficit for the week.
  • auddii
    auddii Posts: 15,357 Member
    I agree with you for the most part.

    I go over some days, probably once or twice a week. However, I am careful to make sure that my weekly average is correct. I ate at almost maintenance one day last week and was still under for the week. I log everything.

    I don't think it's too bad an idea to be over one day as long as you make sure it averages out. I don't tend to agree with the "it's just one day, move on" thought process. One day can ruin your deficit for the week.

    While it may wipe out a deficit for the week, what's the problem with that? You stay the same for one week. If you don't let it become a habit and don't use it as an excuse (well, I ate like crap yesterday, I might as well have this 1500 calorie meal because the whole weekend is blown), then you can control the problem. But, if you're 2000 over, and you decide to cut 500 calories from your next four days, you might be hungry, and then (possibly) it could lead to binging. At least it does for me. It's not the end of the world. I recognize what I did, and move on. The guilt associated with trying to fix a mistake isn't worth it to me.
  • otterish
    otterish Posts: 50 Member
    I have a custom food called "OMFG Why?" which is worth 500 calories. When I go crazy or just miss logging, I run a quick estimate and enter the calories in increments of that.
    Then start fresh the next day, usually with extra water.
  • 1ConcreteGirl
    1ConcreteGirl Posts: 3,677 Member
    No such thing as over-eating.

    Just carb loading for a run.
  • These responses are the reason people are fat! "Don't worry move on", "one day won't ruin your plan" etc. If a woman indulges on weekends, she can very easily undo everything she has worked for throughout the week and then some. If one's TDEE is 2000, and one is eating at a 500 calorie deficit all work week, thats 2500 cals under. If one then eats 3500 calories a day over the weekend (which is very easy to do drinking wine and ordering pizza), that puts her at a 500 calorie surplus for the week. The responses to her question should be, "Stop indulging on the weekends". The question shouldn't be how or whether to log it, it should be, how can I stop doing it.

    I didn't get fat because I indulged once a week or even two. It was years of overindulging almost everyday. I would think that is also the case for many others
  • arrawyn79
    arrawyn79 Posts: 275 Member
    I have a custom food called "OMFG Why?" which is worth 500 calories. When I go crazy or just miss logging, I run a quick estimate and enter the calories in increments of that.
    Then start fresh the next day, usually with extra water.

    LOL that's awesome!
  • CristinaL1983
    CristinaL1983 Posts: 1,119 Member
    I agree with you for the most part.

    I go over some days, probably once or twice a week. However, I am careful to make sure that my weekly average is correct. I ate at almost maintenance one day last week and was still under for the week. I log everything.

    I don't think it's too bad an idea to be over one day as long as you make sure it averages out. I don't tend to agree with the "it's just one day, move on" thought process. One day can ruin your deficit for the week.

    While it may wipe out a deficit for the week, what's the problem with that? You stay the same for one week. If you don't let it become a habit and don't use it as an excuse (well, I ate like crap yesterday, I might as well have this 1500 calorie meal because the whole weekend is blown), then you can control the problem. But, if you're 2000 over, and you decide to cut 500 calories from your next four days, you might be hungry, and then (possibly) it could lead to binging. At least it does for me. It's not the end of the world. I recognize what I did, and move on. The guilt associated with trying to fix a mistake isn't worth it to me.

    Of course, everyone should do what works best for them and I'm not saying that my way is the best for everyone.

    I should have been more clear when I said that. For me, moving on from going over for a day will lead me to feel like I already messed up my week and I'll be sloppier with calories. If I can "fix" it, I feel a lot better and am more likely to do well the rest of the week and still lose the same amount of weight come the end of the week.
  • lrbassmom
    lrbassmom Posts: 123
    I'm one of those that go over on the weekend.

    I watch it as much as I can, try to make healthy choices and I will log my calories and exercise but if I don't, I don't sweat it. My life is about living and enjoying and making exercise, activity, and weight loss a part of it. It was only when problems with my BP and cortisol levels started going up that I really started to get serious about my weight. Also, My personality is one of those that if I deprive myself I will go nuts and just give up. I figure it's better to not deprive and learn ways to cope and adjust when I trip up. Like I tell my husband, I'm human, imperfect and I'm treating my 25 lb weight loss journey as a 2 year process.

    I say, log it, forget it, throw in some extra activity the next day, maybe eat a little under, then move on.
  • fattyfoodie
    fattyfoodie Posts: 232 Member
    I always used to go over on the weekend as well. Then I started attending Weight Watchers and my weigh in day is Monday.

    Guess which two days are now my best??
  • Pinkkfrost
    Pinkkfrost Posts: 29 Member
    I always used to go over on the weekend as well. Then I started attending Weight Watchers and my weigh in day is Monday.

    Guess which two days are now my best??

    ^^^ Lol omg this is genius.
  • bcattoes
    bcattoes Posts: 17,299 Member
    The weekends are the hardest for me. I lose track of the food I consumed, with friends over drinking wine and ordering pizza I get lost. Should I guest how many calories I consumed and eat less the following day?

    Yeah, or just exercise a little more to burn off the extra.
  • jez4ever
    jez4ever Posts: 190 Member
    Not sure if this has already been discussed...I didn't read all of the post, but bad eating on the weekends is Not an unusual challenge. What I do is plan ahead. I know exactly what I plan on eating for the next day or for the entire week