People who eat less than 2000 cals...in need of support
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Also, are you measuring/weighing your foods? It's blows my mind to even imagine five tablespoons of peanut butter on one sandwich! Is that really how much you use? If so, I'd highly recommend cutting about three to four of those out.0
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I find that the more I eat, the hungrier I am. In taking a very brief look at your diary, I would suggest investigating foods that are satiating and incorporating more of them in.
I've been struggling with my appetite being high lately, and I recently tried to eat a dinner of high protein noodles and a couple of cups of broccoli and cauliflower with full fat Italian dressing, and I couldn't finish it. I felt like I was bursting.
You don't have to get rid of anything you are already eating, you just have to incorporate more of the foods you aren't. For instance, when you eat that rice, try to have at least two servings of veggies with it and some healthy fats too. A packet of instant oatmeal will fly right through you-try making your own oatmeal with chunks of real apple, a smidge of coconut oil, your milk of choice, and some cinnamon and sweetener.
If you use google to explore satiety, you will probably learn a lot about what you can do to help fuel your body in a way that is enjoyable but also hunger satisfying.0 -
I also had a peek at your diary. i think you may be entering things wrong - there is no way you could put 5 Tbsps of PB on a piece of bread. And 10 oz of chicken - that is a lot. Use measuring spoons and a scale, if you have one, for at least a few weeks to start seeing what portions look like. And you can make some simple changes, ask your mom if you can go shopping with her and pick out a few healthier items like a low calorie fruit spread instead of high sugar jelly. Try milk in your coffee instead of flavored, sweetened creamers. These simple things add up and you will notice your calories dropping.0
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1) Food choices do make a difference in how full you feel. Protein and healthy fats generally keep me full longer than carbs do. Why don't you go shopping with your mom? Or find recipes you want to try online, show them to your mom, and see if she'll pick up the ingredients.
2) Are you weighing your food? If not you could actually be eating more than you think you are.
3) I noticed you were logging cleaning as exercise. I think this could possibly adding calories that you didn't actually burn. I have a fitbit (device tracks movement) and on cleaning days, if I don't exercise, it still considers me sedentary. If you still want to log it, that's fine, but I'd suggest only logging a quarter - a half the time actually spent.
Goodluck0 -
You're eating high calorie but not very filling food. Stop eating so much junk like peanut butter & jelly sandwiches on a regular basis (they don't keep you feeling full for long enough) and start eating loads of veg and things like lean meat or fish. You seem to have very few vegetables! Pre-exercise I'm eating around 1300 cals a day and some days am so full I'm struggling to actually make sure that I'm eating that. My exercise calories are generally my treats (treat size chocolate, Haribo and alcohol at a weekend). I make sure my meals are filling - an average evening meal will be something like a chicken breast with cajun seasoning, carrots, leeks, broccoli, green beans and courgette (zucchini if you're in the US) ie a huge plate fully of low cal, filling veg. If I have the calories spare I'll have a small baked potato or a few boiled potatoes (weighed and logged). Your diet is fully of processed stuff and you may want to think not just about losing weight but about keeping it off. Use this as an opportunity to change your eating habits for the better. That doesn't mean not having processed stuff sometimes, its about having things in moderation. Good luck0
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I'm also in favor of helping out with the shopping, as has been suggested by others I shop for my bf and I now, because I know what brands are lower calorie and fewer additives. Plus, I can get all the fruits and veggies I want, haha. Maybe you could offer to do it as a chore, to help out? If not, maybe if she goes to THREE stores, you could offer to just do the fruits and veggies/ONE store (she gives you a portion of grocery money). Hopefully if you offer and make it sound like you want to help her out, or at least go with her, she would be open to that. It certainly is hard to eat healthy when there is only junk in the house. Best of luck!0
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well, I took a look at your diary for the last 4 days or so and you are definitely eating quite large portions. 5 tbls peanut butter as a serving?? thats almost 500 calories.. that could be an entire meal. You should probably not be having 1000+ just for lunch alone. Sorry if this is harsh but its probably why you are not losing. What I would do if I was you would take the average calories you eat for the last week, and subtract 500 calories from that and start there. When you get used to that, subtract more. But you are not going to lose any weight if you are eating 2000-3000 calories a day....0
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I LOVE when my kids ask me to buy healthier items!! Just ask her! You need more fruits, veggies and non processed foods in your diet! Honestly, I love peanut butter, I eat it regularly, but 1-2 tbls is PLENTY! Your eating 5 tbls at a time, and some days your do it twice. A lot of high calorie snacking that isn't necessary. Educate yourself online reading about healthy eating. Look around here at others open diarys to get some ideas. Ask your mom to buy regular oatmeal instead of those instant packs. Its usually cheaper! When you have to eat processed foods such at mac and cheese, make sure you measure out serving size and stick to it! It is harder when your young and don't have much control over whats being brought in, but NOT impossible. Good luck, and your welcome to add me0
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How do you do it?
I always go up to at least 1800 and at most 2500 or more. I hear a lot of people having success from eating only 1200 or 1500 or something and I don't get how they do it. I always end up hungry if I manage to eat around 1800 or barely 2000 gross and getting exercise that day, and on a day when I eat what I consider normal, I probably eat 2500 cals. Do I simply eat a little too much at dinner and have snacks that are too high in calories? We don't always have fruit at home so sometimes there is not much I can do but eat high carb foods. Could it be because I am heavier so my body needs more calories to sustain my whole body and therefore I crave more food?
I am feeling very discouraged with continuing to work on losing weight because... well I feel like I just can't do it. Either I eat too much, or I exercise too little. I feel like I need to starve myself or work myself to death to get results.
I seriously am not, nor do I let myself get, hungry on my approx. 1300/daily intake. I took a look at your diary for yesterday and I basically ate similar to you except I didn't have a PB&J sandwich as snack ~ to give you an idea how I "do it" (you're welcome to look at my open diary).
For *me* I came to discover my previously super high-carb diet was actually making me hungry. I'd eat an entire box of mac & cheese, made with too much butter, and I'd feel even more starving! And so than I'd have buttered toast or PB&J ~ again and again all day in an effort to satiate my hunger. At dinnertime I assumed potatoes or pasta would fill me up, so I'd load up on that with a few dinner rolls. And yet I'd still feel famished. So while I cleaned up the kitchen I'd stuff another dinner roll ++ in my mouth. I'd go to bed so hungry, daydreaming about waking and making a box of mac & cheese for breakfast and starting the cycle all over again.
So for *me* a key to my success these past 6 months has been to lower my carb intake and up my protein. That is what helped me curb my previously un-curbable appetite.0 -
Your daily goal is usually around 2000, which leads me to believe your TDEE was calculated at about 3000. Now whether those calculations are correct is another issue, but if they are, you will indeed lose eating if you eat between them. I have a TDEE of 3000 and would lose at 2900, it would just take forever. . OP, did you figure your TDEE yet?0
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MFP put me at 1830 calories a day, based on how many times I usually exercise per week and my lifestyle. I aim for about 350 calories for breakfast, including some protein. That usually means an egg, egg whites, or even hardboiled egg whites (I don't like hardboiled yolks, so I toss those out and usually have a few whites). Throughout the day, I eat when I'm hungry. It sounds like common sense, but that was a challenge to me at first, because I was used to eating at set times and was guilty of eating out of boredom or eating emotionally. Now I've learned to recognize actual hunger and to eat something that will help to fill me up without throwing off my calorie count for the day.
A few pieces of advice I have: be careful of portion sizes, of eating too much bread, and of drinking your calories. Also make sure you're eating complete, well-balanced meals. It looks like you don't eat enough at meal time, which could be part of the reason you snack so much.
As others have said, going with your mom to do grocery shopping would be great. Healthy options aren't always expensive, and you can help to choose foods that will last a few weeks if your mom doesn't shop at the same places or for the same things every week. Whole wheat pastas and brown rice can give you complex carbs (better for you than the simple carbs from white pasta, white rice, etc.). Try to get whole wheat bread with as few fillers as possible and whole wheat tortillas rather than white ones. Beans can be a good way to add protein to a meal, and if you're willing to cook them yourself, they're really cheap. Even canned aren't bad, but watch the sodium in some brands. While some fruits and vegetables don't last as long as others, carrots and apples can last a few weeks. Canned fruit in juice (not syrup) might be a better option than no fruit at all. You can also stock up on frozen vegetables. Try to avoid a lot of peas, lima beans, and corn, since they're starchy, and getting plain ones rather than ones with sauce will help you keep calories down (and they're usually cheaper). Single-serve packets of oatmeal can have a lot of sugar, but buying rolled oats and cooking them yourself can give you better control of what goes into them.
Making lifestyle changes can be really tough at first, but healthy habits become second nature over time. You just have to stick with it and not give up on yourself if you have a bad day or even a stretch of bad days.0 -
We don't always have fruit at home so sometimes there is not much I can do but eat high carb foods. Could it be because I am heavier so my body needs more calories to sustain my whole body and therefore I crave more food?
Appetite is not necessarily a reliable indication of how many calories you need. Have you used MFP to calculate how many calories you should be eating per day to lose 1/2 pound to 2 pounds per week? Yes, if you're heavier, you will need more calories. You'll have to cut back as you lose weight, in order to keep losing. I'm short and small, and need about 1500 calories a day to maintain, not to lose. I do it by eating more protein and fewer carbs. My diary is open if you want to get an idea of what I mean. I eat back my exercise calories, because I'm not trying to lose.0 -
Ask to go shopping with your mom. She'll probably enjoy the company. Then grab some healthier items and ask her if she minds if you throw them in the cart.0
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Here's a different perspective but unless your super physically active that is A LOT of calories per day.
1. Some people need an appetite curbed for medical reasons. Not me, but I know people who just can't stop eating as a medical condition. Medicines can also do this, especially steroids.
2. Boredom. When I ate carbs I was always hungry, ate more than was intended and when I restricted calories I was hungry and very crabby and sometimes just plain emotional for no reason. IF you decide to cut/restrict carbs, it should be for a lifetime in order not to futilely lose weight only to gain it back. OR find a boredom replacement, some activity.
3. Maybe you can look for more fiber in your foods, you may be consuming to many "light" calories. This doesn't work for me but may for you.
I have an open plan if you want to see it, I've just started but I'm not hungry any more since restricting my carbs and even have a hard time getting my calories in! PLUS, I'm not crabby or emotional.
I know I may get bashed for the above, but wanted to give you another option. YMMV.0 -
I had a look at your diary..its shocking...I wouldn't eat single thing from your diary even if they were paying me for it.....I AM IN SHOCK0
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On one day you ate 10 tbsp of peanut butter...0
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I had a look at your diary..its shocking...I wouldn't eat single thing from your diary even if they were paying me for it.....I AM IN SHOCK
You wouldn't eat peaches, plums, and salad if you were paid?0 -
It's probably the content of what you are eating.
For example, I could eat around 1,400 calories some days and feel completely full. But that is because I'm mostly eating vegetables, fruits and lean meats. I also don't consume any liquid calories, and don't usually consume breads or dairy. I'm a binge eater, and I LOVE devouring my favorite foods until I'm going to throw up (peanut butter, cereal, chocolate, yogurt, etc.) but when I eat clean there is no way I can over eat. Who can eat 400 calories of broccoli? I love broccoli but it's impossible. But 2,000 calories worth of peanut butter? Easy for me.
You might want to change some of the foods in your house-that sounds hard but it really does help. What exactly are you eating? Mind if I look at your reports?
When I was trying to lose weight and eating cereals, sandwiches, etc. it was REALLY hard. I was always hungry because those foods are calorically dense but don't fill you up as long as you need.0 -
I am on 1320 calories/day. I stocked up on low-cal foods to make sure I don't go crazy. I have also learned that 9 times out of 10 when I think I'm hungry, drinking a bottle of vitamin water makes the hunger pangs go away. Sometimes you THINK you're hungry when you aren't, but if you eat every time you think you're hungry, your body will think it needs all that food. Don you like Greek yogurt? I hated it at first, but Dannon Light&Fit Greek is SOOO good, they have many fruit-on-the-bottom varieties that are 80 calories each. It's packed with protein too so one cup of that keeps me full for a long time. I've also tried FullBars but they don't work for me. Plus I feel deprived when I'm on those =/0
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Well, I'm 5'8 and 179 pounds and LOVE to eat 1800 calories a day! However, my body doesn't lose weight.
So I had to get serious and decide that its OK to be hungry sometimes. Mind over matter. My goal is 1450 a day, but I've been able to survive at 1300 a day. I'm hungry sometimes, but that's when I go for a walk or do something to get my mind off of food.
Start small... tell yourself that for one whole week you will stay at 1800 calories. See what your weight does. Did you lose? Then stick to it. If you didn't then subtract 100 calories and stick to 1700 calories for the next week. See what your weight does.
No 2 people are alike. You have to find what works for YOU!
this totally!!!0 -
The OP could very easily have a TDEE of 3000 with 'light exercise'. When I started I was at 300lbs at had a TDEE of 3500. I would've been very hangry eating 1200-1500, so there is no need to be immediately advising her to eat less, without additional information. As for WHAT she's eating, I think it just needs some tweaking, make some small steps in a healthy direction. She can hardly change her entire diet when she does not buy the groceries. Personally, I would eat any and all of what she's having, and I think her choices are mostly fine, just perhaps excessive, but I am not part of the clean eating crowd. I believe in the: if you like it, eat it, philosophy, providing you make it fit in your calorie and macro goals. You have to think about what you can do for life, not as a diet.0
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If you need help, feel free to message me. I'm not a nutritionist but I'm studying nutritional science AND have struggled with B.E.D. since I was in 3rd grade.
I'm also young and a fellow peanut butter and jelly lover- I think we'd be a great support system for each other.0 -
Someone may have already suggested this, but fiber is a good thing to keep you feeling full. Are you tracking your fiber? Many nutritionists suggest eating much morer fiber than MFP suggests, ie 25 grams a day or more. I had a quick peek at your diary and don't see much in the way of vegetables, fruits and grains - these foods can really help you. They taste yummy, make you full, and keep you healthy.
I don't have too much trouble keeping within my calories when I am cooking at home. I can control what goes in my meals and stick to foods that aren't too calorie dense, as well as getting lots of fiber. When I'm eating out a lot it is much more challenging.
Good luck. It is totally possible, but it may mean reconsidering some of your food choices.0 -
Glancing over your diary it seems that it's not that you eat a lot of food, its that the food you eat is calorically dense. it would help you stay within your goals if you incorporated more vegetables in your diet. Instead of a PB&J sandwhich, make a smoothie with 1 Tbsp of natural peanut butter, half of a frozen banana, a big handful of baby spinach or kale, almond milk, splash of water and some ice. You'll get the peanut butter craving out of the way and also have the greens to provide nutrients and help you stay full. You won't taste the greens with the PB and banana. Also, try low calorie alternatives to pasta and rice and mashed potatoes such as spaghetti squash, zucchini noodles, cauliflower mashed "potatoes" etc to help you with your veggie intake.0
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I know I eat too much peanut butter. I know I need to cut back on how often I eat peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. They are my comfort food, and eating out of stress is something I've been trying to work on for a few months now.0
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You can lose weight on lower calorie perhaps initially faster, but overtime it's more prone to plateaus and metabolic damage.0
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Bump!0
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I know I eat too much peanut butter. I know I need to cut back on how often I eat peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. They are my comfort food, and eating out of stress is something I've been trying to work on for a few months now.
This is really hard; I feel you. Unfortunately, the best thing for me was to stop and examine a stress craving before I eat. On my own, I'll start eating without even thinking, and then realize, "Hey, I've just been chowing on this bag of chips for ten minutes, what the hell?"
So, I stop and ask myself why I want chips (or whatever salty food I'm craving -- it's almost always salty). I ask if it'll actually make me feel better, and if its worth the calories. A lot of times the answer is no. Sometimes the answer is yes and I carry right along. For me, that's okay. It may not work for everyone.
It's not so much a trick as it is just an act of being conscious of what/why I'm eating.0 -
1. do the TDEE - 20% thing and make sure you set your MFP macros to include a bit more protein than they suggest on "custom."
2. get a food scale
3. weigh and measure everything.
Even if you can't control what is in the kitchen, you can still stick to your calories and macros and lose weight. It does not have to be painful.
Another option would be to take a week to log everything you are eating now, correctly. That means weigh and measure everything. Then, just subtract about 100 calories a day (subtract it from your fats and your carbs, not your protein requirement). Start there. It will be slower than TDEE - 20%, but you will lose weight and you will barely notice the different in food intake.
The next thing I'd do after all this, is to make sure you are getting around 30g of fiber per day. Use a supplement like psyllium seed husk if you need to, but try to get as much of the fiber through your food choices as you possibly can.
Good luck! This is all really simple - once you get strict about weighing and measuring so you know exactly what you are actually doing.0 -
I also had a peek at your diary. i think you may be entering things wrong - there is no way you could put 5 Tbsps of PB on a piece of bread. And 10 oz of chicken - that is a lot. Use measuring spoons and a scale, if you have one, for at least a few weeks to start seeing what portions look like. And you can make some simple changes, ask your mom if you can go shopping with her and pick out a few healthier items like a low calorie fruit spread instead of high sugar jelly. Try milk in your coffee instead of flavored, sweetened creamers. These simple things add up and you will notice your calories dropping.
I usually don't use flavored creamer but If I get the chance I will snag a few of the little cups they have at my church where they sell coffee and stuff. Normally I do use milk or even powdered creamer.0
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