I'm failing
mirreybirrey101
Posts: 9 Member
I was doing quite well, excersising lots, eating reasonably well and losing. I then had to go on a residential trip to the middle of nowhere with work for team building. There were no shops just a cafeteria that served the worst food imaginable. So I didn't really have a choice. I was there for 5 days and I FEEL awful and I feel like all the work I did over the past 4 weeks has been defeated. I look terrible, bloated- fat.....What should I do?
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Move on! 5 days don't mean anything on this journey. Just continue to do what you have done for the past weeks0
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You stated that that the food there was the "worst food imaginable" . Was this in terms of taste?
I guess not because you still ate the food and must have ate enough to keep you out of your deficit because I am assuming that you gained weight during this time?
Well it has already happened and you can not uneat that food. You can feel defeated if you want, and you can have your pity party for a day, but get back up and start again... The choice is yours..0 -
IYou stated that that the food there was the "worst food imaginable" . Was this in terms of taste?
I guess not because you still ate the food and must have ate enough to keep you out of your deficit because I am assuming that you gained weight during this time?
Well it has already happened and you can not uneat that food. You can feel defeated if you want, and you can have your pity party for a day, but get back up and start again... The choice is yours..
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No matter how many mistakes you make or how slow you progress you are still way ahead of everyone who isn't trying. Forget those five days and just don't let it turn into weeks. Start now and get back on track0
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Thank you guys xxx0
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Hi, Try refocusing - writing that week off, learning from it and how to do it better next time - set some goals and wake up tomorrow looking forward! We cannot change yesterday but we can definitely change tomorrow....
Good luck!0 -
mirreybirrey101 wrote: »IYou stated that that the food there was the "worst food imaginable" . Was this in terms of taste?
I guess not because you still ate the food and must have ate enough to keep you out of your deficit because I am assuming that you gained weight during this time?
Well it has already happened and you can not uneat that food. You can feel defeated if you want, and you can have your pity party for a day, but get back up and start again... The choice is yours..
Burgers and fries are ok. These are not bad foods.. Yeah they may not be at the top of the food chain, but it is food.
You have to choose to moderate how much you consume.. These are types of things you have to brace yourself for. Sometimes life is happening despite your diet, and you have to make choices when needed. Just eat half of it or a smaller portion.
I am not dogging that you feel bad, but all of this comes with learned behavior and new ways to adhere to things that are not within your norm..
Just keep going... You learned from this experience because you wrote this..0 -
just get back on track. sounds like you are doing great. i have week long camping trips with friends and drinking and eating all kinds of rubbish but once am home i get back on track0
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Don't beat yourself up about it. Pick yourself up, brush yourself off and work harder than ever before!0
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Use that feeling as motivation. You don't want to feel like Crap so use that to make your self get back on track. You can do it0
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Motivation comes from within. You didn't discipline your food intake on your residential trip because you lost your motivation. You can't get motivation back with a few rah rahs from people on MFP. YOU have to decide to get back on track, and once you do, the pounds will start falling again.0
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This isn't something you can fail at. It's not like an exam or a sports event - you don't get one shot and you either succeed or fail. This is more like learning a musical instrument - it's a lifelong process of practice and learning. You can't fail to learn piano, you can only quit trying.
So looking at it that way, what can you learn from this experience? What could you have done differently that would have been better? What could you do differently next time you are in similar situation?0 -
Put it behind you, learn from it and get back on the healthy train0
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Just keep telling yourself the truth. Because, the truth is, this works. And you know it from personal experience. At least you don't have to worry about looking for a solution. Recall your goals and why you chose them. I bet if you took a survey you would find most people who have succeed with MFP have cheated before!0
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mirreybirrey101 wrote: »IYou stated that that the food there was the "worst food imaginable" . Was this in terms of taste?
I guess not because you still ate the food and must have ate enough to keep you out of your deficit because I am assuming that you gained weight during this time?
Well it has already happened and you can not uneat that food. You can feel defeated if you want, and you can have your pity party for a day, but get back up and start again... The choice is yours..
Why wouldn't you keep going? If anything, this should spur you on to great diligence now.
Did you gain weight?
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You *always* have a choice.
Push away from the table. Put down the fork.
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You keep going and aim to do better, you can do this! Drink lots of water too.0
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One thing I do if burgers are all that are around is ditch the bun. Saved 200 calories + right there. :-)0
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SergeantSausage wrote: »You *always* have a choice.
Push away from the table. Put down the fork.
Yes.0 -
The sooner you begin undoing the 5 days of overeating the sooner you will be back on track to your goal.
Work events for team building that take people away from their families unnecessarily aren't real high on my list. Especially when it doesn't involve great hotels and dining. Who was the idiot who planned the event at your office and decided that feeding you crap was ok?0 -
cheezels83 wrote: »One thing I do if burgers are all that are around is ditch the bun. Saved 200 calories + right there. :-)
And skip the chips ... they are so high calorie.
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Shake it off and get back on the wagon. A lot of the bloat is probably fluid retention that will go away after several days of eating clean0
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You could also be retaining fluid from excess salt intake. Drink plenty of water, and give it a few days.0
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So, you had a rough few days and you feel like a failure? Seems a bit dramatic.
You've only failed if you don't get right back on the horse and get back to the healthy eating habits you've developed over the past few weeks.
Weight loss (and the maintenance that follows) is a long journey. Don't let a few days define the whole trip.
PS: I hate to break it to you, but this will not be the last time that you're faced with a tough "food situation". Learn how to deal with those when they arise. If literally all of the food choices are calorie bombs, just eat small portions.0 -
Agree with above you are getting things out of perspective. Log it, learn from it and move on its 5 days for goodness sake. Whats your option give up forever? Obviously you could have prepared yourself bette for the trip so have a better strategy next time plus you could always have portion controlled.0
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mirreybirrey101 wrote: »I was doing quite well, excersising lots, eating reasonably well and losing. I then had to go on a residential trip to the middle of nowhere with work for team building. There were no shops just a cafeteria that served the worst food imaginable. So I didn't really have a choice. I was there for 5 days and I FEEL awful and I feel like all the work I did over the past 4 weeks has been defeated. I look terrible, bloated- fat.....What should I do?
Watch your calories. Eat normally. Drink water. Get some exercise.
Last week doesn't matter as much as what you do today.
For the future though, even at the cafeteria you have a choice on how much to eat even if you couldn't choose the food type.0 -
You're learning to be healthy for the rest of your life, and you'll run into this many more times (holidays, vacations, dinners on the fly). Just:
* accept what you ate,
* forgive yourself (and don't beat yourself up),
* look at your food diary and see what different decisions you could have made (smaller portions, maybe a different choice from what was available),
* and move forward!
Then next time you have to eat in a similar situation, you think back to this time and say to yourself: okay, last time it was like this, I realized that I didn't *need* that bun or that mayo, and I should have skipped the fries and put double veggies on the burger.
You're not on a diet, you're learning how to take care of yourself, and that shouldn't ever stop. The only way this can be a failure is if you let it be one. Get right back to it.
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