"but it would be such a bother to LOG your food"

yup... I love me enough to bother!! how 'bout you?
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Replies

  • LadyArchangel
    LadyArchangel Posts: 124 Member
    Definitely! It works for me so it's worth it.
  • bcattoes
    bcattoes Posts: 17,299 Member
    Nope. I guess I don't love myself enough.
  • sjohnny
    sjohnny Posts: 56,142 Member
    Nope. I guess I don't love myself enough.

    Right on cue!
  • Zarethi
    Zarethi Posts: 1 Member
    I may not log every meal, but I do log the majority of the day to see where I stand. And that's working great so far, so why not.
  • Elsie_Brownraisin
    Elsie_Brownraisin Posts: 786 Member
    It was such a bother to keep finding clothes and excuses to cover my expanding waist line.

    I don't intend to go on doing it when I've lost the weight though. Every now and then I deliberately stop logging for a month or 2 to see if I can maintain without the bother and it's worked for me.
  • madhatter2013
    madhatter2013 Posts: 1,547 Member
    At least she's taking the advise people are giving her and not telling everyone else how "her way" (you know, the one that isn't working for her) is the right way.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,994 Member
    People with over weight issues normally don't log their food either. I'm betting that's 65% of the US right now. Lean people probably don't need to log their food.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
  • kshadows
    kshadows Posts: 1,315 Member
    It's way more of a bother to have to shop in the plus sized section of the store.
  • ninav1980
    ninav1980 Posts: 514 Member
    kudos if it works for you. For some people it deters them from sticking with it since it may seem tedious. It has worked for me both logging and not logging (keeping a mental tally does just the same). But, I find its actually more fun to log my food in MFP. Kind of like a visual progress report. I also like my friends giving me the thumbs up when I am under my cals! lol
  • 4aces61
    4aces61 Posts: 292 Member
    I log all foods for all meals. Even snacks. it can be a lil bit of a hassle but for me, it's well worth the effort. IMO it's no worse then weighing out your foods or portions on a scale. Maybe that's why I have been so successful this go-round.
  • I like logging because I have obsessive tendencies and like to see the lists. I keep better track that way. If I don't log I won't remember everything I ate and I'll freak a bit.
  • November_Fire
    November_Fire Posts: 165 Member
    I find it really easy. Maybe I don't eat often enough? I guess it'd be harder if I was stuck in an office with a tray of assorted snacks, maybe. Eating three meals and two snacks (and making it all myself) generally means easy logging.
  • RaeLB
    RaeLB Posts: 1,216 Member
    These women at my work go on all these ridiculous and restrictive diets and I'm like you know you just have to eat a calorie deficit and you can easily log your calories online... the response "that sounds like so much work"... :huh: ...
  • donniesaurous
    donniesaurous Posts: 176 Member
    I like logging because I have obsessive tendencies and like to see the lists. I keep better track that way. If I don't log I won't remember everything I ate and I'll freak a bit.

    Ha ha I don't freak but I do enjoy the process of logging what I eat and will do it for as long as it works for me,

    I've tried just logging exercise but I ended up putting on weight as I was 'justifying' eating far too much because I'd worked out so well!
  • KetosisTina
    KetosisTina Posts: 197 Member
    The logging is more of a pain up front. Those first few weeks when you have to look everything up. But then you have your own foods and meals created and it's not so bad.
    My hubby and I usually don't log on the weekends but we both know exactly what we are eating. The other day we opened a can of black olives for a salad and both of us said "every 3 olives is 1 carb". It was funny.
    But the only way we knew this is because we had logged our food.

    My Dr. is actually a member of MFP and it's great on visits.. he will just pull up my food log and make comments or recommendations.
  • purplemurfy
    purplemurfy Posts: 95 Member
    I find it very important to be successful at this. I log every thing I eat. And over time it became kind of cathartic.
  • kittyrevealed
    kittyrevealed Posts: 8 Member
    I love logging my food because it logs my nutrient values. It's showing me trends of where I need to adjust my food choices and maybe add some supplements to make my body happier. I am also noticing that I log a lot fewer empty calories. My calorie splurge the other day was actually juice. So, no, I am enjoying logging what I eat. It's even better when my UP bracelet adjusts what my intake can be because it sees my activity. I feel like cheering, then.
  • KetosisTina
    KetosisTina Posts: 197 Member
    I find it very important to be successful at this. I log every thing I eat. And over time it became kind of cathartic.


    There's something cathartic about a punch in the nose. —Michael Farber, Sports Illustrated, 28 Jan. 2002

    sorry I just remembered this and thought it was funny.
  • verhunzt
    verhunzt Posts: 154 Member
    I use MFP to figure out how many calories some foods have, but if I make a salad and I know that the cottage cheese has 97 calories and the veggies all together maybe another 80, then I will just log 200 "quick" calories.
    Same goes for apples or snacks throughout the day. I just use it to keep track of my calories, I don't log every single thing I eat, that would take so much time.
  • BillRicks1
    BillRicks1 Posts: 473 Member
    If you don't log it, you can't track it. If you can't track it, you can't measure it. If you can't measure it, you can't change it. If you can't change it = fail.
  • ktsmom430
    ktsmom430 Posts: 1,100 Member
    There is no denying that it takes time and effort.
    For me, it was exactly what I needed to be able to finally succeed.
    As with every aspect of becoming healthy, you have to find what works for you.
    It may very well not be a system of logging, but for many people it does work.
  • to log is such a great tool
  • bcattoes
    bcattoes Posts: 17,299 Member
    If you don't log it, you can't track it. If you can't track it, you can't measure it. If you can't measure it, you can't change it. If you can't change it = fail.

    That's just silly.
  • purplemurfy
    purplemurfy Posts: 95 Member
    I find it very important to be successful at this. I log every thing I eat. And over time it became kind of cathartic.


    There's something cathartic about a punch in the nose. —Michael Farber, Sports Illustrated, 28 Jan. 2002

    sorry I just remembered this and thought it was funny.

    Haha. Maybe carthartic isn't quite the right word. :embarassed:
  • It is a bother to log my food. I cook a lot of my own meals at home. I always vary my recipes based on what I have on hand, so I need to edit recipes and yield amounts every time I make something. I also make my own soy milk, bread, and yogurt (crazy I know, but I enjoy it) and there's no good way to know the exact nutrition amounts. I like eating without measuring everything.

    However, anything that's worthwhile is difficult. I'm giving logging another try because it seems like the only way to keep myself accountable other than joining WW (which I'd rather not do). I overeat when I'm not counting calories. Sigh.
  • establishingaplace
    establishingaplace Posts: 301 Member
    These women at my work go on all these ridiculous and restrictive diets and I'm like you know you just have to eat a calorie deficit and you can easily log your calories online... the response "that sounds like so much work"... :huh: ...

    I was That Person for so long. I would try to tally recipes manually but never keep it up because it WAS a lot of work. "But MFP is easier," everyone said. Did I listen? Well, eventually...
  • bethlaf
    bethlaf Posts: 954 Member
    yes , sure is, and being fat and out of breath is a bother too, and adding salt or bbq or eating with a fork is a bother too....

    kind of like wiping your bum after you use the facility... no , you dont HAVE to ... but why on earth would you NOT want to ???
  • BelindaComedy
    BelindaComedy Posts: 21 Member
    I like logging, personally. I tried calorie counting in the early 90's and I was eating 500 cals a day (I was 15 and didn't know). Back then I had to memorize every foods calorie count or carry a book to look up food, subsequently announcing what I was doing. This way of logging food is so easy, that it doesn't bother me. It may not be the thing for others but, I think it keeps me pretty on track.
  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,740 Member
    I had to click on this post...because I have heard this SO MANY TIMES.

    I heard it from my stepsister...she is 46, has always been lean, and still probably a size six...but not the 00-2 that she was in her twenties. I get it. She finds it a chore to log her food and frustrating when she looks up a chain restaurant item and there are 3 different calorie counts in the MFP database. She isn't that bothered, she'll probably just abandon that idea she had to lose a few lb. Fine.

    I heard it from my friend "Abby"...she is 37 and weighs over 300 lb and very depressed about her weight, avoids social contact due to anxiety. Logging food is too much trouble she says, she doesn't have time because she takes online college courses and works part-time. She regularly buys in to get thin quick schemes (IMO) like Body by Vi, Herbalife, etc. They work great -- for less than a month -- and she winds up at a higher weight than previously.

    Perhaps the MOST annoying is from my acquaintance "Jill"...at 39, she just had a baby. When she was 20-something she lost 80 lb and kept it off, but then it all came back during the last couple of years due to marrying a guy who loves to eat rich restaurant meals all the time and her first, later-in-life pregnancy. On January 1st she decided this year she would lose all of that weight again - she has a lot of health problems that her doctor says stem from carrying excess weight. She complains all the time that she has lost 4 lb in 3 months and she is spending an hour per day at the gym working her tail off. She complains that her husband won't stop buying her "bad food" and her baby takes up too much time. She messaged me on facebook wanting to know how I lost over 70 lb this past year and when I told her she said, "OH I tried that, it's soooo tedious...I'm good with working out!" And then she whines again a week later that she is only down 0.2 lb despite her 7 hours this week of intense gym time. Ugh.

    (DISCLAIMER: Yep...It is everyone's business what they do to lose weight or whether they even want to lose weight...but this can get pretty annoying)
  • ihad
    ihad Posts: 7,463 Member
    I have found it to be useful.