What diet do you recommend that isn't so expensive

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Replies

  • BringingSherriBack
    BringingSherriBack Posts: 607 Member
    The "eat less and move more" diet. You simply eat less of the things you would normally eat and move (exercise) more.
  • nopotofgold
    nopotofgold Posts: 164 Member
    I totally Do. Its the reduce amount of calories, work out, and most importantly portion control. You get to enjoy things, improve your over all mood and health, and to top it off its only as expensive as the gym/ work out equipment you buy on top of your normal food cost. You wont Lose the weight fast but you will keep it off longer.
  • CoolDad67
    CoolDad67 Posts: 324 Member
    Another fan of this diet. It can even include Dairy Queen Blizzards! :love:

    I'm another fan of the portion control diet. I'm on a journey to loose around 100 lbs and have currently lost about 30 of it.
    I even had a Dairy Queen Blizzard yesterday like the above poster.

    I've tried other diets such as Sugar Busters, Atkins, etc. and found that they are hard to maintain as well as expensive and hard to shop for. I'm now in it for the lifestyle change and it is working better than ever before.
  • Ready2Rock206
    Ready2Rock206 Posts: 9,487 Member
    Stop throwing money at the latest fad diet. Problem solved.
  • AlyssamR6712
    AlyssamR6712 Posts: 114 Member
    I follow a "mostly" Paleo style diet... Meat, Veggies & Fruits from the local farmers market.. don't get much cheaper than that! Good Luck with everything!
  • marycmeadows
    marycmeadows Posts: 1,691 Member
    and that's exactly why you gained the weight back. you need to learn how to eat real food, in moderation, because DIETS ARE NOT A LONG TERM SOLUTION. DIETS ARE TEMPORARY.
  • lijepa1979
    lijepa1979 Posts: 16 Member
    Portion control and a bit of movement. Even if you don't have a gym membership, you can go walking, get some handweights, or do an exercise video. When you use the word "diet" like that, you are assuming it is a temporary fix. You need to make a lifestyle change, as in something you can live with for the rest of your life.
  • deborahgillion55
    deborahgillion55 Posts: 21 Member
    Hi everyone :-)
    I would like to share my thoughts about this program which I'm very happy to be a part of. Many people like me are in the same predicament of obesity to one extent or another. We have the opportunity to encourage and help one another along the way. We can discuss other concerns important to us also. It makes so much sense and we have been blessed with this program. Haven't you heard that the best things in life are free?

    If anyone is interested, these are the rules I go by now that I've started MFP :
    *I shop smart @ the grocery store to have a variety of healthy food choices.
    *Be honest to yourself and stay @ or just under your myfitnesspal numbers each and every day. If you sway a little just jump right back on the myfitnesspal wagon.
    *Drink plenty of water to flush and cleanse your cellular system.
    *You are on your way to the you, you want to be and save money in the process.

    I started MFP Aug 5,2014 and am happy with the weight I have lost. I feel much better and have a positive outlook ahead. Don't be too hard on yourself. Be patient, it takes time to loose the extra pounds because you didn't put them on in a day.
    Best of luck to all and myself. May you meet your goals with minimal difficulty and much success. We are here to help one another in difficult times.:smile:
  • TeaBea
    TeaBea Posts: 14,517 Member
    Eat the food you like in smaller quantities than you ate to gain weight. It doesn't have to be any more complex than that.

    This!^

    The great thing about measuring & logging real foods......you actually LEARN something. I've figured out what portions should be and about the caloric "price" of foods. Some foods have much steeper "price" than I thought....some aren't worth it anymore.
  • icrushit
    icrushit Posts: 773 Member
    My suggestion would be nothing overly special, namely eat more real food (ie less processed food), cut out/ cut back the added sugar (including alcohol, at least during weight loss), and only eat starches, grains and bread in moderate amounts.

    Try that for a while, weigh yourself at least once a week (first thing in morning, pre-food, post-bathroom), if losing, carry on, if not cut back more on the added sugar, starches, grains and bread until you are. Exercise and get at least a 30 min walk every day if you can. When you lose what you wish to lose, add back in the things you cut out, little by little, until you're holding your weight.

    If you feel hungry AND your intake is reasonable, swap some of the carbs in your diet for fat/ protein, as these will fill you, and help you stick to the plan.

    I know this is probably extremely simplistic, but it would be the advice I would have given to my past self, with the benefit of hindsight and what I know now :)
  • AmyRhubarb
    AmyRhubarb Posts: 6,890 Member
    I recommend forking out the cash for a decent food scale, then cook and eat regular food in proper portions, weighing and measuring whenever you're dining at home. :smile: Accurate logging & consumption of foods you plan to stick with for the rest of your life is the best diet - especially if you plan out menus ahead of time and shop for what's in season and on sale.
  • lifeskittles
    lifeskittles Posts: 438 Member
    If you MUST do the meals...Lean cuisine and Healthy choice meals are almost the exact same thing to those more expensive meal plans
  • sweetnsassy4evr
    sweetnsassy4evr Posts: 7 Member
    Try to eat within 45 minutes of waking up and eat every 2.5 to 3 hours. You don't have to eat big portions or specific foods but keep track of calories and try to get lots of fresh fruit and veggies and some protein. A can of drained tuna with pepper is a great snack with lots of protein and only 100 calories and it's cheap. If you cut down on the snacks like candy and chips you won't be as hungry and won't crave as much. But be sure to have a little sweet something now and then so you don't feel the need to binge. I find that apples and pickles help me if my sweet tooth is starting to act up. If you eat every 2.5 to 3 hours (before you get really hungry) you won't get to the point where it costs a fortune for one meal because you want everything in the store. Good luck!
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,342 Member
    On Cambridge I was allowed nothing but there shakes and soups was hard going but done the job.

    If it had "done the job" you wouldn't be here.

    IMO you need a fundamental rethink of what you're doing.

    QFT - I don't understand how people can gain all their weight back after a crash diet and still say the diet worked. If it didn't set you up with the tools you needed to maintain, it didn't work.

    MFP is free. You can eat what you want within your limits which means you can make it very financially viable by sourcing food that is in season, on sale, or generally cheap in any event. You will learn about food and nutrition and what works for you and in turn you will learn the tools to keep the weight off.
  • gothchiq
    gothchiq Posts: 4,590 Member
    Instead of doing a diet that has a name like Cambridge or South Beach and all that, make up your own meal plan by selecting high nutrient low calorie foods of types that you like and cooking from scratch. Track the calories on here so that you eat the right amount. Measure and weigh things so that you know what you are getting. It's cheap to get a food scale on Amazon.com for example. The cheapest way to eat is to prepare all your own food from scratch and stay away from prepackaged processed items, or these diets that always call for things no one can afford. Chicken is cheap and good for you. Get chicken breasts, remove the skin, eat 4 oz portions. Get fresh or frozen vegetables; pay attention to specials and coupons that your store may have. Apples and bananas are cheap and low cal and good for you. Bake potatoes and have a small one or half a large one, seasoned with salt and spices not butter. Eggs are nutritious, cheap, and low calorie. Greek yogurt is good and doesn't cost a fortune, again compare brands and use coupons. I bake my own whole wheat bread rolls. cheap and better for you and each roll is 170 calories. The way to eat the right proportions of food types without doing a lot of complicated analysis is to do the My Plate method. 1/4 of your plate is protein, 4 ounces (meat, fish, or eggs), 1/4 is starch, half a cup (potato, rice, corn, Lima beans etc) and half is either all nonstarchy veg, or half nonstarchy veg and half fruit. Like say a cup of green beans and a big slice of cantaloupe.

    I use coupons, store cards, etc to make things cheaper. If the store coupon says "$1 off any frozen food" then that includes good stuff like frozen vegetables, it doesn't have to be junk. There are many legitimate sites for downloading and printing coupons. Red Plum, coupons.com and your store site itself.
  • kaseyr1505
    kaseyr1505 Posts: 624 Member
    I'm on the eat what I want, in a smaller portion diet. It's worked well so far!
  • gilmore606
    gilmore606 Posts: 45 Member
    bro you need that cabbage soup diet works every time and cabbage is way cheap
  • Icandoityayme
    Icandoityayme Posts: 312 Member
    I do the eat what you want as long as you stay in your calorie and macro goals and exercise diet. Works for me. I refuse to spend money on fads.
  • gilmore606
    gilmore606 Posts: 45 Member
    bro don't listen to these haters talkin about a lifestyle change and healthy choices what you need is a magic bullet and cabbage soup is the weight assassinating fully automatic battle rifle of magic diets take it from me peace out
  • Wenchiness
    Wenchiness Posts: 126 Member
    Don't diet. No no no! Eat what you want within your calorie guide and do it forever. Most people regain if they diet, change habits instead.
  • cincysweetheart
    cincysweetheart Posts: 892 Member
    Eat whatever you want (just at a calorie deficit, MFP is free and can help you out with that.). I suggest healthy, whole foods because it'll improve your health and you'll feel more satisfied than if you were to say...eat McDonalds all the time. (Although mcD's can still be part of the diet on ocassion.) Shop sales and use coupons. Fresh fruits and veggies in season. Move more.

    It's the diet nobody wants to hear, but it will work and can be kept up long term, which is the key to makng sure you don't gain it back.
  • amykuh
    amykuh Posts: 27 Member
    xx
  • MyOwnSunshine
    MyOwnSunshine Posts: 1,312 Member
    I'd recommend a website called "MyFitnessPal" that let's you track your calories and exercise for free. I've heard good things about it. :tongue:
  • Kalikel
    Kalikel Posts: 9,603 Member
    Stop paying to lose weight! It is so not necessary!

    Eat less food. Right there you save money. :) People are always saying that eating healthy food is much more expensive, but it isn't. I saw a dramatic decrease in my food expenditures when I switched. I don't even know why people say that. To excuse bad eating habits? I just don't know. But you can eat well for less, no doubt.

    Walking is free. So are jumping Jacks, dancing, stomach crunches and push-ups.

    A gym membership is nice and some are pretty cheap, but you can lose weight without one,

    Paying for diets - why? If you're determined to lose, you will! You needn't give anyone any money. If you aren't determined to lose, you could spend a million dollars and it won't help. The thing that works is YOU. Save that money for new clothes. :)
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Stop paying to lose weight! It is so not necessary!

    For once, I agree with you. All the way through the new clothes.

    It really is so much more simple (and free) than people want to make it.
  • leggup
    leggup Posts: 2,942 Member
    You can lose weight eating ramen all day (a very cheap US food). It's about how much you eat that determines how much you weigh. The best, cheapest diet, involves buying a food scale and using it to weigh and log food that you 1. Can afford 2. foresee yourself eating for the rest of your life.