Christmas Hors d'oeuvres
pursuitofoblivion
Posts: 21 Member
Christmas day at my parents house usually involves massive amounts and varieties of hors d'oeuvres. All day, before and after meals. I have no control over the food served. Ever since I was a little kid this format has resulted in me eating nonnnnstooopp, essentially binging. Watching a Christmas movie? also eating. opening gifts? also eating, going for a walk? eat first then afterwards. Catching up with relatives? Do it while eating!
I know that I am capable of controlling the amount I eat, but I find it much more difficult than controlling my day to day intake. Possibly because it creates feelings that socializing and being involved in the family requires eating this stuff. They're eating it, why not me? Logically I know that I can be part of the celebration without totally gorging myself. However, being as I find it so difficult, would it be better if I just forego hors d'oeuvres and save my appetite for actual meals/desserts? I think that it is harder for me to limit myself to a little than it is to forego something entirely. Is there any other way I am more likely to control my intake? I know that it really is just making the choice to eat right, but sometimes when it comes time that choice is harder than it sounds. What can I do to make it easier?
I know that I am capable of controlling the amount I eat, but I find it much more difficult than controlling my day to day intake. Possibly because it creates feelings that socializing and being involved in the family requires eating this stuff. They're eating it, why not me? Logically I know that I can be part of the celebration without totally gorging myself. However, being as I find it so difficult, would it be better if I just forego hors d'oeuvres and save my appetite for actual meals/desserts? I think that it is harder for me to limit myself to a little than it is to forego something entirely. Is there any other way I am more likely to control my intake? I know that it really is just making the choice to eat right, but sometimes when it comes time that choice is harder than it sounds. What can I do to make it easier?
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Replies
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Here's what I do to help control myself...
Those 5 pigs in a blanket = 250 calories = 20 minutes on the elliptical. It could take me 3 minutes to eat them, and 20 minutes to work off. Is that worth it? Nope.
How about those 4 mini quiche? 190 calories = 30 minutes on the treadmill. Worth it? Nope.
Individually these don't seem like much, but remember how very quickly it adds up.0 -
Are there any healthy/healthier items? Ex: shrimp cocktaiL? Also, can you eat bfst before you go so your not starving when you get there? Also, make sure you drink a lot of water to help you......0
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If you know what will be around, pre-log the whole day including the treats you want to eat, then spread them out throughout the day. You will know what you are allowed and you won't go crazy trying to log all day. Also, save a few hundred cals or so and you will have a little wiggle room.0
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Here's what I do to help control myself...
Those 5 pigs in a blanket = 250 calories = 20 minutes on the elliptical. It could take me 3 minutes to eat them, and 20 minutes to work off. Is that worth it? Nope.
How about those 4 mini quiche? 190 calories = 30 minutes on the treadmill. Worth it? Nope.
Individually these don't seem like much, but remember how very quickly it adds up.
That's an awful mindset, judging foods by how long it may take to burn those cals off. Sets up a terrible relationship with food0 -
do 50 push ups in between each appetizer you eat.
Or just don't sweat it and get back to your routine on Friday0 -
I will take any good appetizers that you are passing up.
I focus on my fitness & weight goals 90% of the year, this is part of the 10% that I don't worry about and just enjoy it all, I will go way over my normal calorie goal, I will enjoy every single bite, and than I will get back to staying within my goals.
I also do not think of exercise as punishment for food choices.0 -
Here's what I do to help control myself...
Those 5 pigs in a blanket = 250 calories = 20 minutes on the elliptical. It could take me 3 minutes to eat them, and 20 minutes to work off. Is that worth it? Nope.
How about those 4 mini quiche? 190 calories = 30 minutes on the treadmill. Worth it? Nope.
Individually these don't seem like much, but remember how very quickly it adds up.
That's an awful mindset, judging foods by how long it may take to burn those cals off. Sets up a terrible relationship with food
Yeah but it works sometimes! The thing is though... if it fits your calories, you don't have to burn the calories off. That's what I don't like in the 'it takes one hour on the treadmill to burn a croissant so I won't have one' mentality. Eating treats can fit your calories just fine without having to make up for it with cardio.
So just have one pig in a blanket and one mini quiche.0 -
Another option - enjoy what you are eating. Don't worry about fitting into your calories this one day...BUT, that means truly enjoying what you are eating. Don't eat unless you are paying attention to your food - eat what you really like. Be a bit more mindful when you are eating and what you are. You can still have a few apps, but don't just stuff them in. You can still eat at all the meals, but only take one helping (or two if you truly, truly want it). It is one day, and a good day to enjoy the food (all the food), but you can still be smart about it.
Example - I'll be having creme brûlée french toast, then going to a friend's house for lunch/dinner. I'm sure we'll start with cheese, and I'll have some, but only a small plate amount and not seconds. We'll have turkey with all the fixings - I'll have it all - and we'll see what I want second of, while also knowing I'll want dessert too. And I'll be drinking wine throughout. Will I go over my calorie amount? Heck, yes. But today I'm sticking to my goal and I do tend to end up in a week hitting my goals quite well.0 -
I agree with being mindful of what you eat. I try not to watch tv while eating anymore... it seems to help with satisfaction so I don't have to stuff my face.0
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Be picky. Choose only your very favorite things to nibble on. You don't have to eat everything there.
Take a small portion of stuff you really like and eat it slowly. Drink a full glass of water with it to slow you down. (I seriously made two cookies last 2 hours the other day during a family game night this way.)
Bring a large veggie or fruit tray to the gathering. Eat lots of vegetables or fruit for snacks. You can eat a lot more of those without too much concern.
Don't eat any snacks/appetizers and do something else with your hands. Sip a drink. Knit. Do a craft or puzzle. Take pictures. Help clean up. Play with the kids. Chew gum. Just be busy.
Don't stress about it.0 -
pursuitofoblivion wrote: »Christmas day at my parents house usually involves massive amounts and varieties of hors d'oeuvres. All day, before and after meals. I have no control over the food served. Ever since I was a little kid this format has resulted in me eating nonnnnstooopp, essentially binging. Watching a Christmas movie? also eating. opening gifts? also eating, going for a walk? eat first then afterwards. Catching up with relatives? Do it while eating!
I know that I am capable of controlling the amount I eat, but I find it much more difficult than controlling my day to day intake. Possibly because it creates feelings that socializing and being involved in the family requires eating this stuff. They're eating it, why not me? Logically I know that I can be part of the celebration without totally gorging myself. However, being as I find it so difficult, would it be better if I just forego hors d'oeuvres and save my appetite for actual meals/desserts? I think that it is harder for me to limit myself to a little than it is to forego something entirely. Is there any other way I am more likely to control my intake? I know that it really is just making the choice to eat right, but sometimes when it comes time that choice is harder than it sounds. What can I do to make it easier?
Only you can know what is easier for you. If skipping the hors d'oeuvres altogether is easier, then do that. Or, you could plan out exactly how many you will allow yourself in advance. IDK if that would make it easier or harder for you, though, because we are not all the same.0 -
Here's what I do to help control myself...
Those 5 pigs in a blanket = 250 calories = 20 minutes on the elliptical. It could take me 3 minutes to eat them, and 20 minutes to work off. Is that worth it? Nope.
How about those 4 mini quiche? 190 calories = 30 minutes on the treadmill. Worth it? Nope.
Individually these don't seem like much, but remember how very quickly it adds up.
That's an awful mindset, judging foods by how long it may take to burn those cals off. Sets up a terrible relationship with food
Not necessarily. Just because it might do so for you, does not mean it would for someone else.0 -
It's Christmas, the most you'll gain is 1lb unless you're bionic. Just enjoy the day!!! Stop thinking about calories and just enjoy your friends and family and the all the treats that come with the day. You can get back to calorie counting and macros after.
Edit: You people seem to forget, this is a life long commitment, after you're done losing you'll either maintain or bulk, either way you'll still be counting those calories/macros. ENJOY YOURSELF.0 -
It's one day. Eat, log, move on.0
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I would just eat them and be merry.
I don't stress myself out over food, especially good food on a holiday.
This is a lifestyle change..do you plan to avoid these things for the rest of your life? If no, then you have to work them in and just go with it.
They're not going to ruin progress0 -
I ate to my heart's content yesterday. Nearly 1000 calories over what I should stick to, to lose weight slowly. I enjoyed every thing I ate/drank very much. Logged it all today and had a good laugh with my daughter about the amount. The scale smiled with me today and told me I weigh 300g less. Just enjoy your Christmas snacks, it'll be over soon.0
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