What did you eat to get heavy?

A lot of weight loss forums/success stories focus on what to eat to lose weight. But I'd like to switch it up and talk about what people ate to get to their heaviest? And how did they change that and what is different now? I've noticed on weightloss shows they often show overweight people, pre-diet, gorging on junk. I know that for me, it wasnt so simple.

How I gained:
For me, I got into a bad habit of eating exclusively restaurant foods with hidden fats and calories. Id always skip breakfast then order a salad, but it'd be loaded with cheese, fried chicken, buttered croutons, etc. I would fluctuate between starving and stuffed. I noticed high fat foods put weight on me moreso than say, starches like bread and pasta. I ate a lot of desserts too. I was never a binger or a snacker, I just ate the wrong foods and was def guilty of waiting too long between meals- then Id make the wrong choices.


How I lose:
Well, I just started but Ive completely changed everything. FIrst of all I try to eat "clean"- meaning mostly whole organic food fresh food. Nothing in a bag..For example, I eat fresh cucumber salads w lemon & sumac with bit of hummus. But I dont buy pre packaged hummus. That stuff has so many preservatives in it. Real hummus has a shelf life of only 1-2days in the fridge. I try to do as much plant based eating as possible- green salads with lemon and olive oil, brown rice in squash, with 2-3 oz of fresh animal protein at each meal. I eat grains like rice or a slice of homemade bread. I really steer clear of pre packaged food. I avoid restaurant food I think its all bad.

I always eat breakfast. Ive learned I can not do a grain or fruit based breakfast. Some people do smoothies in the morning. I actually do smoothies for dessert sometimes, only a few ounces 1/day but it cures any sugar craving and is full of fiber. I add spinach and some chia seeds too.

For breakfast I have the same thing everyday bc its easy: whole wheat organic lavash + raw spinach+ egg whites+ 1slice cheddar (my only dairy), and fresh avacado. I get so much energy and I find that I never get too hungry so when lunchtime arrives I dont overeat or choose the wrong thing. Breakfast is sooo important to me.

I eat 3 meals/day one snack (smoothie). I used to skip meals all the time which lead to crazy appetite swings and inadvertant overeating and poor food choices and sugar cravings. I always drank a lot of water, but now I exclusively drink water and nothing else. Before, I drank a ton of diet coke.
«13456

Replies

  • queenbekks
    queenbekks Posts: 58 Member
    Pizza and wine! With a side of pizza and wine! :) Eating out is definitely what got me here, too. Its just so darn convenient!
  • kalisk
    kalisk Posts: 6 Member
    Honestly I ate all the same stuff I do now, just a lot more of it and a lot more often.
  • Sreneesa
    Sreneesa Posts: 1,170 Member
    Too much daily wine.

    And I liked burger and fries and ranch. So I would eat burger, fries and ranch most days.

    High calories. Not necessarily overeating for me...that with several glasses of wine. lol
  • runningagainstmyself
    runningagainstmyself Posts: 616 Member
    I ate all the things. 'Nuff said.
  • This content has been removed.
  • Deborah105
    Deborah105 Posts: 183 Member
    For me it was fast food and junk. Junk junk junk. Love my Doritos the damn things. And I USED to love quarter pounders. Luckily, fast food is heinous-tasting to me these days, but those Doritos, even though they always give me a tummy ache the 3-4 times I eat them a year, still sing to me.

    You did not ask for a critique of your food plan, which is fantastic, but my unsolicited advice would be to eat the yolks in those eggs. That fat is so good for you and the nutrients are in there as well. JMHO.

    Carry on with your plan. BTW - you rock that bathing suit! Lovely!
  • tanashai
    tanashai Posts: 207 Member
    How I gained:

    Slowly for me too. I got the 'freshman 15' and then was preggers straight after graduating. I actually lost some there (morning sickness) and then when I gave birth and had the kiddo to take care of, I wasn't sleeping right so I snacked a lot, stress ate, and generally ate too much crap. Ladle on some depression (I didn't even REALIZE I was depressed, but looking back, I really was), a healthy dose of denial and sheer laziness and voila-200 lbs on a 5'7" frame. I just ate too much!

    How I lost:

    Ate less and tracked it. Nothing was cut out per se-I certainly still eat pizza, chocolate and ice cream and the occasional alcoholic beverage, but I ate less of it and told myself that those treats would still be there later. Over 60lbs later, I'm trying to keep that mentality even though I'm now maintaining :) That's kinda tricky, lol. I drink a lot of water too, almost no juice (other than occasionally ice tea) and only rarely drink soda. And I get out to exercise more.
  • Nikoruo
    Nikoruo Posts: 771 Member
    Well. I was fat to begin with. Always was a big gal. Born big, grew big, and grew bigger. hahaha.

    Eating unhealthy sure didn't help but it wasn't the only thing that made me so big. :o
  • ILiftHeavyAcrylics
    ILiftHeavyAcrylics Posts: 27,732 Member
    To gain weight I just ate a little too much and moved a little too little over the years. My weight crept up gradually.

    To lose I ate smaller portions. That's it. I didn't do anything that I couldn't do forever. Now I lift weights, walk a lot, hit my macros, and try to get plenty of veggies.
  • Elsie_Brownraisin
    Elsie_Brownraisin Posts: 786 Member
    Lots of booze, crisps. chips, cheese and pretty much what I eat now, but portion sizes to feed 3 :embarassed:
  • cadaver0usb0nes
    cadaver0usb0nes Posts: 151 Member
    Too much fast food and not enough home cooked meals.
  • emilyisbonkers
    emilyisbonkers Posts: 373 Member
    a lot of alcohol, flavoured cider being the worst.. Crisps all the time.. doritoes covered in cheese and then melted.. kfc, greggs, bread
  • litsy3
    litsy3 Posts: 783 Member
    Too many starchy carbs - I still eat them now but when I lost the weight I took a break from them for a while, long enough to totally change my idea of what counts as a portion size. I used to think the recommended serving of pasta on the packet was a joke because I could easily eat at least twice that much. Now I think it's a normal serving and possibly even slightly more than I want because I'm short. I stopped building my meals around starches and started building them around protein instead.
  • lewispwest
    lewispwest Posts: 498 Member
    Just before I started MFP I kept buying own brand chocolate bars you can get in like 8 packs such as milky ways, mars bars and twixes and just grabbing two or three at a time and chowing down. Add that to constant takeaways, fizzy drinks and no exercise over a good few years and that's how I got so bad.
  • Everything.
  • tiffanycherie
    tiffanycherie Posts: 97 Member
    Eating out too much.
    Not paying attention to calories and portion sizes. Once I started logging my food I realize how little attention I paid to this
    Waiting too long to eat and then devouring everything in site
    Being lazy, not moving my butt
  • aalbert_82
    aalbert_82 Posts: 95 Member
    I was slim until age 14/15 (mid 90's) when bagels were all the rage. Unfortunately this was also during the low fat craze. I didn't even know what a calorie was but I was counting fat grams. I used to eat three bagels a day as snacks, between meals, because they only had two grams of fat. As I got older I became a lot more educated about nutrition. I no longer followed fads, but portion sizes became my issue.
  • For me it was fast food and junk. Junk junk junk. Love my Doritos the damn things. And I USED to love quarter pounders. Luckily, fast food is heinous-tasting to me these days, but those Doritos, even though they always give me a tummy ache the 3-4 times I eat them a year, still sing to me.

    You did not ask for a critique of your food plan, which is fantastic, but my unsolicited advice would be to eat the yolks in those eggs. That fat is so good for you and the nutrients are in there as well. JMHO.

    Carry on with your plan. BTW - you rock that bathing suit! Lovely!

    thx beauty!
    I avoid the yolks only bc I dont like the taste. Thats why I add the avacado, for the fat. :) But I agree with you, yolks are our friends too
  • DancingMoosie
    DancingMoosie Posts: 8,619 Member
    I think my weight gain was a combination of not enough exercise/no strength training, and bad food choices. I drank too much alcohol, which also led to snacking. I had a bad habit of eating rolls of saltines with slices of cheese, large bread rolls (bolillos) with butter at dinner, chips without portion control, and heavy lunches followed with snacks.

    I exercise more and smarter now (incorporating circuits, weights, cardio and HIIT) and make slightly better food choices. I still eat snacks and sweets, but my portions are better and alcohol consumption is way down. I also don't let little mistakes derail my day or week.
  • Will_Thrust_For_Candy
    Will_Thrust_For_Candy Posts: 6,109 Member
    I ate all the food, all the time. I did not discriminate.
  • broox80
    broox80 Posts: 1,195 Member
    My God OP, you are stunning!!!!!!

    And it was a crap ton of fast food and closet eating for me. I still eat fast food but I just eat it differently now.
  • Sunitagt
    Sunitagt Posts: 486 Member
    Generally ate too much. Would go out to fast food after work every day. I was always heavy but it got a lot worse as an adult when I wasn't eating home cooked meals regularly. But I think it just took me growing up you know? Gaining some more responsibility for myself. I knew it wasn't good for me when I was doing it, that it was too much food, but I did it anyway.

    Now we only eat out once to twice a week, be it fast food, a restaurant or take out. On Wednesday we're going to get a Costco pizza because the husband really wants it, and then go to Jack in the Box for dinner later, but since it's just once and it'll still be more-or-less within my calorie target, that's ok. Didn't really cut anything out, just cut back in general.
  • Jbarbo01
    Jbarbo01 Posts: 240 Member
    I ate large quantities of some of the food I eat now but I also ate a lot of junk and fast food. I ate general tso's chicken with white rice, an entire order dinner size, egg rolls, and egg drop soup. I would go to McDonalds and get large orders of big mac and fries with diet soda of course...because that mattered and I would eat taco bell, Wendy's, Popeyes. A lot of fried chicken and fried food and cheesy food like cheetos and cheez-its. I wasn't ever big on sweets though, sugar wasn't my downfall. All of my junky go tos would put weight on me like no one's business because i ate as much as I wanted in front of the TV, which distorted my hunger signals. I ate for emotional reasons that I've sorted out for the most part.

    To lose weight, I eat primarily healthy and clean foods but I eat junk food in smaller quantities too. I tend to avoid trigger foods often like fried chicken or cheesey things though. I eat mostly vegetables, a lot of fruit, whole grains, and meat but I eat candy, french fries, burgers, cake, donuts, bread, etc but all in WAY smaller quantities. I was so shocked to learn how much less food I can subsist on after counting points. I ate so much unnecessary food and my body told me so by putting it on my hips. After years of trying fad diets, like Paleo, Plant based, etc I will say anyone with emotional eating issues should not cut out food groups completely it does not lead to long term success. I've had the best success counting calories/points, weighing and portioning food, and eating primarily clean versions of my favorite foods but having what I want when its important too.
  • Honestly I ate all the same stuff I do now, just a lot more of it and a lot more often.

    Same here. :)
    I haven't changed what I eat, just the portion sizes of everything and/or frequency.
    Take tonight for example. A week back I made a homemade cheesecake with 2 cups of sugar (I forget the weight of this, but I did weigh it) and 900g of full fat Philadelphia (amongst other ingredients). I put all the ingredients into mfp, and it came back as 13,000 calories for the entire thing. Yep you read that right, it wasn't a typo, thirteen thousand cals. Pre-losing weight I'd have shared it with my husband and demolished it in 2-4 sittings. Now I'm being more mindful I gave ¼ of it to my in laws. Cut ½ of it up into 8 pieces for my husband, and cut the remaining ¼ up into 16 small bite sized pieces, and froze them. Tonight I'm having a piece as a snack :) 24g about 2cm cubed, 211calories. I'm not depriving myself of anything now.

    Edit to say I've even had a KFC and lost weight because I accounted for it. :) I just don't have 3-4 take always a week anymore.
  • thavoice
    thavoice Posts: 1,326 Member
    A lot of weight loss forums/success stories focus on what to eat to lose weight. But I'd like to switch it up and talk about what people ate to get to their heaviest? And how did they change that and what is different now? I've noticed on weightloss shows they often show overweight people, pre-diet, gorging on junk. I know that for me, it wasnt so simple.

    How I gained:
    For me, I got into a bad habit of eating exclusively restaurant foods with hidden fats and calories. Id always skip breakfast then order a salad, but it'd be loaded with cheese, fried chicken, buttered croutons, etc. I would fluctuate between starving and stuffed. I noticed high fat foods put weight on me moreso than say, starches like bread and pasta. I ate a lot of desserts too. I was never a binger or a snacker, I just ate the wrong foods and was def guilty of waiting too long between meals- then Id make the wrong choices.


    How I lose:
    Well, I just started but Ive completely changed everything. FIrst of all I try to eat "clean"- meaning mostly whole organic food fresh food. Nothing in a bag..For example, I eat fresh cucumber salads w lemon & sumac with bit of hummus. But I dont buy pre packaged hummus. That stuff has so many preservatives in it. Real hummus has a shelf life of only 1-2days in the fridge. I try to do as much plant based eating as possible- green salads with lemon and olive oil, brown rice in squash, with 2-3 oz of fresh animal protein at each meal. I eat grains like rice or a slice of homemade bread. I really steer clear of pre packaged food. I avoid restaurant food I think its all bad.

    I always eat breakfast. Ive learned I can not do a grain or fruit based breakfast. Some people do smoothies in the morning. I actually do smoothies for dessert sometimes, only a few ounces 1/day but it cures any sugar craving and is full of fiber. I add spinach and some chia seeds too.

    For breakfast I have the same thing everyday bc its easy: whole wheat organic lavash + raw spinach+ egg whites+ 1slice cheddar (my only dairy), and fresh avacado. I get so much energy and I find that I never get too hungry so when lunchtime arrives I dont overeat or choose the wrong thing. Breakfast is sooo important to me.

    I eat 3 meals/day one snack (smoothie). I used to skip meals all the time which lead to crazy appetite swings and inadvertant overeating and poor food choices and sugar cravings. I always drank a lot of water, but now I exclusively drink water and nothing else. Before, I drank a ton of diet coke.
  • thavoice
    thavoice Posts: 1,326 Member
    A lot of weight loss forums/success stories focus on what to eat to lose weight. But I'd like to switch it up and talk about what people ate to get to their heaviest? And how did they change that and what is different now? I've noticed on weightloss shows they often show overweight people, pre-diet, gorging on junk. I know that for me, it wasnt so simple.

    How I gained:
    For me, I got into a bad habit of eating exclusively restaurant foods with hidden fats and calories. Id always skip breakfast then order a salad, but it'd be loaded with cheese, fried chicken, buttered croutons, etc. I would fluctuate between starving and stuffed. I noticed high fat foods put weight on me moreso than say, starches like bread and pasta. I ate a lot of desserts too. I was never a binger or a snacker, I just ate the wrong foods and was def guilty of waiting too long between meals- then Id make the wrong choices.


    How I lose:
    Well, I just started but Ive completely changed everything. FIrst of all I try to eat "clean"- meaning mostly whole organic food fresh food. Nothing in a bag..For example, I eat fresh cucumber salads w lemon & sumac with bit of hummus. But I dont buy pre packaged hummus. That stuff has so many preservatives in it. Real hummus has a shelf life of only 1-2days in the fridge. I try to do as much plant based eating as possible- green salads with lemon and olive oil, brown rice in squash, with 2-3 oz of fresh animal protein at each meal. I eat grains like rice or a slice of homemade bread. I really steer clear of pre packaged food. I avoid restaurant food I think its all bad.

    I always eat breakfast. Ive learned I can not do a grain or fruit based breakfast. Some people do smoothies in the morning. I actually do smoothies for dessert sometimes, only a few ounces 1/day but it cures any sugar craving and is full of fiber. I add spinach and some chia seeds too.

    For breakfast I have the same thing everyday bc its easy: whole wheat organic lavash + raw spinach+ egg whites+ 1slice cheddar (my only dairy), and fresh avacado. I get so much energy and I find that I never get too hungry so when lunchtime arrives I dont overeat or choose the wrong thing. Breakfast is sooo important to me.

    I eat 3 meals/day one snack (smoothie). I used to skip meals all the time which lead to crazy appetite swings and inadvertant overeating and poor food choices and sugar cravings. I always drank a lot of water, but now I exclusively drink water and nothing else. Before, I drank a ton of diet coke.
    pretty much exact same stuff i am eating now losing 32 lbs in the last 12 weeks, just alot less of it.
  • tefleon
    tefleon Posts: 32 Member
    I gained in two stages.

    Seven year ago I changed jobs and it involved travelling; hotel food Monday - Friday with little chance for any exercise. Yes the hotel might have had a gym but by the hours were long in the office and when you got back to the hotel room so it was pretty much whatever room service did. Full fat, creamed soups all with buttered veg.

    That took me from a size 32 waist to a size 36-38. I have four suits and a tux in my cupboard that I out grew in this period. My tux I once. 12 months later when I needed it again I couldn't even squeeze into it and rather than face up to anything I pretended to be sick to get out of the evening.

    Then a couple of years ago I changed positions and started to work from home. No more hotel food! But what actually happened was that my commute, the last minute the dash through an airport or the walk around an office complex now only took 10 steps between rooms. I started to spend upwards of ten hours on my PC each day; six days a week with few real breaks. Since I knew a lunch break wasn't on the cards I'd make a maybe a cheese and biscuit platter for that 1 hour conference call. Maybe a round of mini sandwiches and some crisps for the next call. Breakfast at 8am then a brunch around 11. Sandwiches at 1pm and then something when the kids got home around 4pm. Dinner with the wife was around 6pm and supper before bed.
    When I did leave the the house for work it would include restaurants, full latte choco coffees and a muffin.

    18 months of doing this and I went from a 36-38 inch waist to 40.

    The last six months, I stopped cycling. I had spent some of the time at home cycling with a friend to do 140 mile ride. I did 40 miles per week although being the fitter and skinny one of the group I'd sometimes not break sweat on these rides as we trundled along at 5-7mph. Over the last six months, from about Nov 2013, my bike didn't move and that pushed me over the 100kg mark and into a pair of 42 inch jeans, which I only just squeezed into.

    The kicker, the thing which made me make a change, was a night out with my wife about a month ago. She looked amazing and I stood in the bedroom, squeezed into a pair of jeans knowing only my comfy, elasticated, around the house shorts now fit. I could only look at her knowing I'd ruined her night before we'd left the house.
    We went out and I couldn't sit the whole evening; my wife stood next to me but I could see the embarrassment in her face when people mentioned in passing "you've gained a little weight". My trousers straining under the pressure of the fat they force above the belt line and my shirt buttons pulled to the extremes, the threads holding them in place just managing to withstand the stretching Half way through the night food was served and I stood holding a paper plate with a pork pie and a slice of cake on. My wife look at it, looked at me and then poured her drink over the top of it so I couldn't eat it.

    That was the moment I know I needed to do something.


    Edit: I've just read that back and it's the first time I've actually addressed the reason I've ended up the size I am. :(
  • rightoncommander
    rightoncommander Posts: 114 Member
    For me it wasn't about what I ate, it was about bad eating habits - the main ones were eating a large lunch and grazing after my evening meal.

    The weight went on really slowly and I was still reasonably fit, so it was easy to deny there was a problem, but with my family history of type 2 diabetes, I eventually accepted I needed to lose weight. Tried dieting and lost weight, but it came back within a few months.

    I now think changing your diet is the worst thing you can do to lose weight and keep it off - the changes you make need to be permanent to work permanently. What you eat and how much are two separate problems, best tackled separately. That's why I like MFP - you figure out your own way of hitting that magic number that will lose you the weight. Without MFP, I'd never have figured out that those two simple changes to my eating habits would make such a difference - in my case, it's probably the difference between a long and active old age and a short, impaired retirement in years to come.
  • PinkCupcakes84
    PinkCupcakes84 Posts: 235 Member
    Everything
  • RllyGudTweetr
    RllyGudTweetr Posts: 2,019 Member
    I pretty much ate food.