How many calories did you have for Christmas? 7,000?
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You really, really have to take those news stories about how many calories with a big grain of salt. They're usually put out by diet food industry groups with the intent of scaring people into buying their diet-versions of food.
7,000 calories is an insane amount of calories for the average person to eat in one day. A trained athlete taking an indulgence day, sure. (I've got a rail-thin serious cyclist co-worker who went through an entire pie by himself on Thanksgiving.
But the average person? Prove it to yourself -- go into a blank food diary day and start building yourself a 7,000-calorie day and see if it's a feasible amount of food to eat. I know for me, it isn't, and I'm not super-shy about food. I'd be physically ill.0 -
7,000 is quite a bit, I dont want eating to be like a job. I did however eat all the things, made merry, etc.0
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My stomach is a wimp. I could only eat 2300 calories for the day before feeling like I was going to throw everything up... when I was easily able to eat 3000 calories at a single meal a few years ago.0
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Around 2500 for about 3 days straight... I kept to my goal of working out 3-4 days this week despite all the holiday fun though!0
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I used to eat 1300 a day and these days my brother comes back home and my parents are feeding us a lot of delicious and of course unhealty food. I try to keep eating around 1300 each day, of course with full fat foods. I'm wondering, will I gain weight if I eat 1300 with mostly fatty foods?
Not sure if someone already responded to you but since it takes 3500 cals to gain a lb., it's not likely you'll gain actual weight. Water weight? Sure it's possible but that'll drop right off, just drink your water and don't weigh yourself for a day or two.0 -
2395 on Christmas Day. Have been good since though0
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Only 1849 calories. And, yet, I didn't lose!0
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7,000 calories is an insane amount of calories for the average person to eat in one day. A trained athlete taking an indulgence day, sure. (I've got a rail-thin serious cyclist co-worker who went through an entire pie by himself on Thanksgiving.
I think it could be easy depending on the type of foods you are consuming. Some foods are really calorie dense and it doesn't take a ton of it to add up over the course of a day and then you throw alcohol into the mix.
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less than 1000 over my calorie goals for the last 3 days. almost 500 over on christmas eve,less than 300 over christmas day and less than 200 over yesterday0
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Hearts_2015 wrote: »IILikeToMoveItMoveIt wrote: »1450 here. It was kinda hard too! I'm proud of myself to have been within my calorie limit.
Yea I stayed within mine too. 1600
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kailibertsch wrote: »Around 2500 for about 3 days straight... I kept to my goal of working out 3-4 days this week despite all the holiday fun though!
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akuster0211 wrote: »healthnewlife wrote: »like 1500-1600 lol i don't know why christmas has to be associated with binge eating a to of food or eating so unhealthy. enjoy time with family not eat til you can't breathe.
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I'm not in America, but made my family's traditional American dinner ... pretty much doing what my mom always would do in the US ... and I logged it out of curiosity, punching in recipes to the calorie calculator.
It came to 1,861. That's counting cheesecake and 3 glasses of wine.
If a lot of families do like my mom would do and serve several deserts, and then pass around cookies ... well, I baked cookies this year, logging the recipes, and holiday cookies have a lot of butter and tend to be in the 80-150 calorie range per cookie, from what the recipe counter tells me. So assume a dozen cookies over the course of the day and an extra slice of pie. That'd easily bring it up over 3,000.
Maybe add some shrimp for before the meal, or a plate of veggies and sour cream dip, or a bunch of potato chips, or whatever ... and spend the whole day talking with Uncle Oswald and Aunt Bertha while grabbing potato chips with dip, maybe having a coke or two, or whatever ... and you might bring it up to 4,000 or 4,500.
It's easy to see how it makes a lot of calories. (Which are hopefully enjoyed.) But I agree that it's a little hard to picture how it'd all come to 7,000. What are people supposedly eating?!?0 -
Had about 2000. Didn't eat any desserts.0
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1553 was my total for Christmas Day. That was a serious attempt to eat some of everything. I even finished off the big meal with a slice of pumpkin roll and i don't even really like it.
I honestly expected it to be way over that amount.0 -
ViolaLeeBlueberry wrote: »
It's easy to see how it makes a lot of calories. (Which are hopefully enjoyed.) But I agree that it's a little hard to picture how it'd all come to 7,000. What are people supposedly eating?!?
They've got a breakdown, but it seems a bit out of control to me. Three cups of eggnog? A huge breakfast on a day when Mom's already busy running around the kitchen? 1200 calories worth of appetizers, nuts and chips before dinner? I'm not buying it. At least I'm not buying that the average person does this, which is what the story claims. It can be done, no doubt, I just don't think claiming that everyone does this is helpful.
When I was a kid, we actually got in trouble if we ate much between breakfast and Christmas dinner. We weren't supposed to spoil our appetite for dinner. So, no piles of nuts and chips and appetizers in our house.
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ViolaLeeBlueberry wrote: »
It's easy to see how it makes a lot of calories. (Which are hopefully enjoyed.) But I agree that it's a little hard to picture how it'd all come to 7,000. What are people supposedly eating?!?
They've got a breakdown, but it seems a bit out of control to me. Three cups of eggnog? A huge breakfast on a day when Mom's already busy running around the kitchen? 1200 calories worth of appetizers, nuts and chips before dinner? I'm not buying it. At least I'm not buying that the average person does this, which is what the story claims. It can be done, no doubt, I just don't think claiming that everyone does this is helpful.
When I was a kid, we actually got in trouble if we ate much between breakfast and Christmas dinner. We weren't supposed to spoil our appetite for dinner. So, no piles of nuts and chips and appetizers in our house.
That's how it was for me growing up and that's how i am with my kids.
First thing in the morning is coffee for the adults and hot chocolate for kids, that counts as breakfast. Then after the paper shredding is over we go back to the kitchen for bagels and cream cheese. I guess that's a sort of brunch. That's it before dinner which we now have at a normal dinner time and not as a late lunch.
Things like pretzels, chips and nuts are nowhere to be found at a holiday with my family and Tthe cookies stay hidden until after dinner.0 -
I only had 1250 calories on Christmas. It didn't help that I was sick all week though. So it wasn't about being good but rather just not feeling like eating!0
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Very possible. I lost track of how much I was munching on when I was at my Mothers.0
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had 1612, over by 412 but still below maintenance, can't and don;t want to gorge any more. All the food was pretty healthy too.0
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