Tips for someone with no self control!
swoodhouse91
Posts: 5 Member
Hi guys. I was wondering if anyone has any good tips or advice for someone (me) who has zero self control when it comes to food? I'm on a 3 day streak and doing well, but no matter how much I preplan meals I always actively sabotage myself when the opportunity arises. I'm starting to feel guilt and worry which I really don't want to turn into feelings of failure/giving up which always happens. Food seems to have such a hold over me due to a busy lifestyle. Any advice at all would be great!
0
Replies
-
My best tip for someone with no self control ~~ get some self control! :-)
LOL!
Anyway, what I did was just keep on going. If you slip up one meal, don't let it destroy your entire day. Just pick back up and keep on with your original plan for the day.
After doing this for a while, it will just become part of your day and routine. So once something becomes part of your daily routine, it's easier to follow and requires much less thought. You just automatically do it.
So just keep trying, if you mess up just move forward .0 -
Three anti-sabotage strategies:
(1) don't keep binge food at home or in stashes at work or school.
(2) eating less sugar and sweet stuff (including artificial sweetener and processed flour) sometimes makes people crave less sugar, but it may take 60-90 days to lose the craving, especially if you indulge in (3).
(3) if alcohol causes you to lose self control, limit it to 1 day a week.0 -
How do you sabotage yourself? Do you buy junk when grocery shopping or hit the vending machines at work? If you have a sweet tooth like me, chew gum. It really helps!0
-
i lack self-control and will power a lot of the times. like for example, i walk into the kitchen and start looking in cupboards and the fringe and sometimes i find myself just snacking. not entire proportions, but snacking is the devil.
anyway, when that happens, i tend to kind of "punish" myself with an extra 3 mile run. it's not really punishment because I love running, but forcing yourself to do an entire 6 mile run as fast as you can and then take a break for an hour, then do another 6 miles is a pretty workable punishment for me.
we don't all have the same "punishments." Maybe yours can be a hour on the stationary bike or on the spin bike.
this way your brain negatively correlates snacking or binge eating with HARD HARD cardio.0 -
The good thing about all of this losing weight stuff is that you get so many chances every day to make good decisions. You "mess up" at breakfast, you get another chance at lunch and dinner. Thankfully, one good decision generally leads to another so just try to make one good choice. It gets easier- just take it one day or one meal at a time!0
-
First, if it happens, you have to accept it and move on. Just because you have one bad day, don't give yourself permission to give up. One day of not so good eating isn't going to kill you, just like one day of eating really healthy isn't going to save your life.
When I'm having those stretch of a few days of fighting myself not to go crazy, I get on MFP and read the message boards or I google success stories or inspirational quotes. Sometimes I get so wrapped up in it I forget i was craving something. Also the success stories are definitely encouraging and motivate me to continue.0 -
I work art Haagen Dazs, an ice cream store. The temptation is great but what I started doing was making bets against my coworkers. Any single sample resulted in $20 lost. When money is on the line, it's no joke0
-
I spent 20 years not being able to control what I eat. Despite knowing the calorie content of pretty much everything I put into my mouth, I couldn't stop. I'd lose 5kg and gain 10kg. Which is why at 40 I ended up being 50kg overweight, even though I'd been "on a diet" my whole life. I can't remember a time when I didn't weigh myself, and count calories. I'd feel so deprived I'd end up blowing a day, or a week of good eating just because I couldn't keep it under control anymore. I've "started again Monday" hundreds of times.
After doing this for years, I can say for the first time in my life food does NOT control me. I do not binge at night, I do not spend all day thinking about my next meal, how many calories can I afford, if I save them up can I eat chocolate. I do not eat super perfectly for a whole week and then consume 2000 cals in one sitting because I just can't stop myself. I don't crave sugar, I don't reward myself with junk, I don't even think about it.
The calories in/calories out crowd, the advocates of "everything in moderation", those who think a sugar donut is fine if it fits in your allowance will disagree, but the ONLY thing that's ever worked for me long term is low carb. And I mean no bread/pasta/potato/rice/grains of any kind/sugar/starchy foods at all. None. 20g of carbs or less a day (mostly from green vegetables and cheese and cream in my coffee).
I'm not saying you should eat low carb, you can eat potato chips all day for all I care (as long as it's in your allowance, right guys?). All I'm sharing is what's worked for me.0 -
I work art Haagen Dazs, an ice cream store. The temptation is great but what I started doing was making bets against my coworkers. Any single sample resulted in $20 lost. When money is on the line, it's no joke
I like the idea... I work at Dairy Queen and ice cream is my favorite treat!!! I have a co-worker that is also dieting and cheats often. lol. I think i may propose this idea to her. =D0 -
Stay active on this site!!! Add lots of friends, check your news feed often - seeing other people's successes and positive posts really helps keep me moving forward toward my goals.
I also found that after a few weeks of 'clean' eating the cravings really do start to go away, it's like an addiction; when you first quit or cut back it's all you can think about but the longer you're away from it and the more healthy options you surround yourself with, the farther away it seems until you only think about it in extreme trigger situations.
Personally, I was kicking serious *kitten* until I quit MFP about a year ago thinking I could do it on my own, that was a big mistake. I didn't realize how much I needed the support of people in the same boat as me, and more importantly people who had already been where I was and beat past it! I love seeing successful people on this site, helps me believe that we can all do it!0 -
what triggers the self control is it emotional eating? are you an eater due to boredom? the truth is YOUR are in control of your self control I NEVER bring bad stuff in my home.. if I want a treat like say a bag of chips I will stop get a small bag of lays and that will be my treat ..not cheat but treat give yourself a day for a treat.. say thu nights you have that ONE thing your mising but say its ice cream dont bring a bucket in the house but go to the ice cream parlor have a small frozen yogurt then you dont feel like your punishing yourself and you have something to look forward to0
-
My best tip for someone with no self control ~~ get some self control! :-)
LOL!
Anyway, what I did was just keep on going. If you slip up one meal, don't let it destroy your entire day. Just pick back up and keep on with your original plan for the day.
After doing this for a while, it will just become part of your day and routine. So once something becomes part of your daily routine, it's easier to follow and requires much less thought. You just automatically do it.
So just keep trying, if you mess up just move forward .0 -
i just thought of this too... i buy the 90 cal snack bars (whether its fiber one, kellogg's, or quaker), and if i feel i absolutely need to have something i grab one of those and slowly pick at it. i make sure to take a long time to eat it.
Also if you like pomegranates, they take awhile to eat.0 -
This may sound sadistic, but i've found that if i have the time if i can just take the item im craving and put it in front of me, or stand in front of it in a store, or carry it with me while i shop i can pay attention to the experience of my emotions, and the addictive behaviors all surge through me and then eventually ebb..and go away and after doing that a few times, i started to see that i didn't NEED it. I could have the feeling and then let it slowly..pass.
this sounds like a really good idea0 -
my number one tip is don't buy food that makes you lose self control. I have no control when it comes to chocolate or chips so those foods don't enter my house.
my second tip is to prepare food ahead to binge on. When I get bored I tend to eat. I try and keep things like carrot or cucumber and greek yoghurt in the fridge so that I can grab them to snack on instead of grabbing something unhealthy. I also chew chewing gum if I still feel unsatisfied.
there are of course days where nothing go to plan and I try not to beat myself up over it.0 -
I love all these tips of not bringing food in your house that you know you shouldn't eat. Are you the only one living in your house? That doesn't work for me.0
-
I will echo a few things already mentioned.
If you have a particular weakness or triggers, just don’t keep it around.
Dieting is more about portions and what you eat, and not just starving yourself. Starving just make you hungry with makes the whole thing harder.
Find ways to portion control, I was having an odd craving for ice cream one day. I like ice cream and all but it’s not a big deal to me normally. But that day it was driving me up the wall… was trolling the ice cream case at the grocery store, swearing to myself when I came across some mini-drumstick cones. Only 100 calories? What the heck, had one, craving covered and that way I am not sitting there later with the rest of a tub of ice cream.
Find alternatives, my diet is a higher protein one. I have some protein diet snack bars that I actually like the taste of. That way, if I want to dig into something I shouldn’t, I go get of those. Again cravings covered and actually got in something that is better than the alternatives. You don’t have to use protein bars, is there a fruit that you like? Or a veggie?
The longer you eat healthy the more you will enjoy eating healthy things. May sound odd now but a bag of baby carrots in the fridge makes a nice snack.
I have no self control either, so I make sure I control everything else I can. :P0 -
No but the entire family deserves to eat healthy... my grandkids come over and they know they can have fruits and healthy snacks and my husband used to want to eat bad foods ( hispanic with tons of sodium) and he adjusted to the healthier lifestyle and LOVES the feeling of it.. so thats why we say don't bring it in and by the time your willpower is strong enough that you could reintroduce it your family wont want it WIN WIN0
-
Shlynn although those are healthier alternatives they really arent its the same crap just smaller size.. look at the ingredients and a great app to use is fooducate its free and you can scan your foods.. those 100 cal pack are soo deceiving0
-
No but the entire family deserves to eat healthy... my grandkids come over and they know they can have fruits and healthy snacks and my husband used to want to eat bad foods ( hispanic with tons of sodium) and he adjusted to the healthier lifestyle and LOVES the feeling of it.. so thats why we say don't bring it in and by the time your willpower is strong enough that you could reintroduce it your family wont want it WIN WIN
So do you just tell your partner who is also an adult and shares a home with you that they can't being their food home and keep it there? I don't understand how that works.0 -
well in a kinder way I did I said ya know this is really important to me and my health and our future and this food is trigger for me so while IM "detoxing" would you mind if I elliminate it till I am strong enough to just say NO.. and by then he/she will not want it either of course wiht anyone if you tell them they "cant" have something thats a battle in itself but if they know they are supporting you doing this it makes the battle that much more easy0
-
nope not the only one, I've got 2 young kids and a husband. I've only outlawed my trigger foods. If my husband wants to eat them, he can, but out of the house. My kids don't care either way. I do still buy them snacks but I buy them in smaller individual packages (which are more expensive, but I'm less likely to touch).
For me, getting rid of my trigger foods is about support. My husband is supporting me in losing weight by giving up the foods that I have no self control with, at least in the house.0 -
I have struggled with binge eating all my life, it is an addiction, the things i have done for food is awful, sometimes i can binge until i am sick!! I am working on it and so far so good but every day is hard, here are some of my tips
1. i calculate my calorie goal for a week not a day therefore if i splurge and have 500 extra calories i can usually work it out over a week that way I dont go hungry because i ate chocolate for breakfast.
2. Plan and recognise what your doing and why you are eating, i have a little laminated credit card size card that i keep with me at all times that has my goals on and some motivational quotes i read before i eat anything.
3. I often write or draw symbols on my hands that remind me of a goal.
4. Plan meals as much as possible, i sometimes prep my meals therefore i do not need to look through cupboards and think about food and possibly make bad choices, i just take out a box put in the microwave add salad and then i'm done. less time in the kitchen!!
5. Every night after dinner i have a hot chocolate as a treat then i brush my teeth once i have brushed my teeth i dont want to eat again so its stops my tv snacking.
6.The item your tempted by translate it into calories you need to burn in order to eat it. Last week i had a chaotic week and wanted a chunky kitkat more than life itself at 200 calories i would have to walk it off, or i have actually walked 3 hours to the furthest petrol station in order to have a treat even though I have a store 2 mins from my house that way i feel justified to eat it.
7. do affirmations
8. ask yourself whats more important ...
9. The most important thing is if you do mess up, forgive yourself, dont let one cookie allow you to eat crap all day long because you have convinced yourself you have failed today.
Every decision we make can take us a step toward or a step away from our goals!
I hope these are of some help0 -
Shlynn although those are healthier alternatives they really arent its the same crap just smaller size.. look at the ingredients and a great app to use is fooducate its free and you can scan your foods.. those 100 cal pack are soo deceiving
I'm not saying they're a "healthier alternative" or to eat 10 of them a day. I was saying if you ABSOLUTELY need to satisfy the craving that only (let say) chocolate can cure, it's a better choice than the 500cal blizzard from your local DQ.0 -
what triggers the self control is it emotional eating? are you an eater due to boredom? the truth is YOUR are in control of your self control I NEVER bring bad stuff in my home.. if I want a treat like say a bag of chips I will stop get a small bag of lays and that will be my treat ..not cheat but treat give yourself a day for a treat.. say thu nights you have that ONE thing your mising but say its ice cream dont bring a bucket in the house but go to the ice cream parlor have a small frozen yogurt then you dont feel like your punishing yourself and you have something to look forward to
Very Good! You may be paying more for the small quantities but you benefit more.
I also don't bring junk food into the house. That's my first line of defense.0 -
Thank you so so much everyone!! Reading all of these has definitely made me feel more determined and motivated
I'm a really good food shopper- my boyfriend is a fitness fanatic so nothing bad comes into the house. I study for 8 hours a day 5 days a week so boredom/stress eating is a big problem for me, plus I work 3-4 evenings in hospitality (unwanted food everywhere).
I'm going to give all of this a red hot go! Thanks for the support xx0 -
...i can pay attention to the experience of my emotions, and the addictive behaviors all surge through me and then eventually ebb..and go away and after doing that a few times, i started to see that i didn't NEED it. I could have the feeling and then let it slowly..pass.
Many people make what's in my opinion a big mistake: They try to fight against their impulses. That's a good way to suffer, because it makes the mind into a battlefield. But it's not a good way to control impulsive behavior.
A good way is to look those impulses straight in the eye, not be afraid to experience them as deep feelings in the body and as compulsive thinking. And looking at them, we find out they're not so scary or powerful after all.0 -
I work art Haagen Dazs, an ice cream store. The temptation is great but what I started doing was making bets against my coworkers. Any single sample resulted in $20 lost. When money is on the line, it's no joke
Hah! What a great idea-- I admire your ingenuity!0 -
It comes often when you lose self control. I always try to make distance from that kind of food that force me to gain more fat like sweets, junk foods and more.
I would like to say that regular exercise is the best way to maintain your weight. Give it first preference in your life. Walk regular, do cardio, aerobics. Yoga is also very beneficial for weight loss as well as it gives other health benefits also. You can try some natural health and weight loss supplement it help to crab appetite and help you to lose weight. Before taking any supplement first consult with your doctors for more benefits.0 -
I recommend every on of you who want to change in any or better in every area of life this book:
http://www.tonyrobbins.com/ebook/
NO, i dont get money for it.
It's a free book and that book is amazing.
If you want to change.
If you want to raise your standarts...
If you want to improve..
If you want to be really happy...
and so on..
give it a try and read it! you will not regret it!
MAD0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions