What is your RED FOOD and how do you overcome the urge to eat it?
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kshama2001 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »But soon I will have strawberries coming out my ears.
I'm jealous. I love fresh strawberries so very much.
If you're in Plymouth County, MA, you can have some plants! They literally spread like weeds and I freecycle dozens of them each year.
Chicago, so oh well. ;-)
My problem is I garden on the roof in pots. I had strawberries one year but was unable to protect them adequately over the winter.
Speaking of red foods, tomatoes are usually my greatest success (other than herbs) in the pots. My nemesis is the wind and sometimes squirrels.0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »
I don't believe that applies. In order for weight loss to succeed long term then people have to make sweeping changes in the way they live. If this includes giving up their favorite foods then this will last until the next highly stressful event. Which considering the way the world works these days is probably arriving round about next Tuesday. The key isn't restricting foods. It also isn't sticking to your calorie limit religiously every single day without fail because that is miserable and you won't do that either. You just have to have more good days than bad don't binge unless it's a really special occasion and keep yourself active. However this requires an effort of will and people grab on to almost any temporary solution in order to avoid facing this fact. But it's just a patch job. The first thing that really pushes you will have you binging on your "red food" before you can sing the first line of the lumberjack song. Because it's become the forbidden fruit that you secretly crave and resist with all your might. Rather than tasty food that you occasionally allow yourself.
People want to push the big red button, Flip the skirt and eat ALL the cake. Forbidding something gives it power. Restricting foods is false stability. And it WILL fail. Believe me ... been there.
There are indeed many path's up the mountain.
It's just a shame most of them have landmines.
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ceoverturf wrote: »Red M&Ms, Red skittles, tomatoes, apples (sometimes) , strawberries just to name a few
Mine is red jelly beans. I don't have a problem with limiting chocolate. Red skittles make me sick after eating several. But red jelly beans (or any color of jelly beans) don't have a natural stopping point. They're soft, so they don't last long and they just turn to sugar water in your mouth.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »ceoverturf wrote: »Red M&Ms, Red skittles, tomatoes, apples (sometimes) , strawberries just to name a few
Mine is red jelly beans. I don't have a problem with limiting chocolate. Red skittles make me sick after eating several. But red jelly beans (or any color of jelly beans) don't have a natural stopping point. They're soft, so they don't last long and they just turn to sugar water in your mouth.
Starburst put out bags of only red jelly beans for Easter. Needless to say, that didn't last longer than a week for me.0 -
Easy. Any kind of sweets. Plz friend.0
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DeguelloTex wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »0
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Queenmunchy wrote: »I avoid things like bread, pasta, rice, etc because they tend to make me feel hungrier or I don't stop at just one serving. I just set myself up for success by prepping meals on weekends and freezing. I make some breakfasts - frittatas/egg bakes, some soups/chilies/stews, make sure I have things like cauliflower rice or zucchini on hand for zucchini noodles. Basically I plan ahead so I can grab what I need already portioned out. No real thought - every meal fits the plan.
My kinda girl! I need to do this!0 -
I think peanut butter and hersheys jarred spreads and nutella are mine at times at times I have the control on but other times its irresistible!0
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Baby back ribs. Oh how I love them, and OMG how many calories they have.
I resist with willpower, and the promise that a couple of times per year I will eat them with abandon and without regret.0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »DeguelloTex wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »
Yes it is. You just don't like it. Because I heavily disagree with you.
Many paths up the mountain indeed.
Use a real argument. Not one from a fortune cookie. At least before accusing me of being "unreasonable".
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kshama2001 wrote: »
I don't believe that applies. In order for weight loss to succeed long term then people have to make sweeping changes in the way they live. If this includes giving up their favorite foods then this will last until the next highly stressful event. Which considering the way the world works these days is probably arriving round about next Tuesday. The key isn't restricting foods. It also isn't sticking to your calorie limit religiously every single day without fail because that is miserable and you won't do that either. You just have to have more good days than bad don't binge unless it's a really special occasion and keep yourself active. However this requires an effort of will and people grab on to almost any temporary solution in order to avoid facing this fact. But it's just a patch job. The first thing that really pushes you will have you binging on your "red food" before you can sing the first line of the lumberjack song. Because it's become the forbidden fruit that you secretly crave and resist with all your might. Rather than tasty food that you occasionally allow yourself.
People want to push the big red button, Flip the skirt and eat ALL the cake. Forbidding something gives it power. Restricting foods is false stability. And it WILL fail. Believe me ... been there.
There are indeed many path's up the mountain.
It's just a shame most of them have landmines.
Thanks for that thoughtful answer, which I believe has more potential to help than your original one.
I'm going to disagree with you at some later point
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kshama2001 wrote: »DeguelloTex wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »
Yes it is. You just don't like it. Because I heavily disagree with you.
Many paths up the mountain indeed.
Use a real argument. Not one from a fortune cookie. At least before accusing me of being "unreasonable".
Hinduism.
ETA, actually many religions. I've also heard this from Buddhist teachers and Unitarian ministers. But I believe I heard it first in the context of Hinduism.
I am a pluralist, not an exclusivist.
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Like others said, eating too much of anything is the problem. That said, this time I started out in March doing super low carb for the first time ever. I felt good at first, great even. Now a few weeks ago I decided, you know what, I am not going to live the rest of my life without eating pizza, spaghetti, etc. So I realized low carb is not really for me. I had started snacking like crazy on peanuts, and snacking is what gets me in trouble! I was still in deficit, but the more I snacked, the hungrier I got, therefore, the effects of low carb on my appetite was gone.
Since I added carbs back in, not only have I not gained any back, I am pretty much losing at the same rate, about 1 pound a week, on average. (I went a whole month without losing, on low carb!)
So my answer is, my red food is snacking, in general. Since I started just eating what I like again and not limiting myself to low carb I am a lot less hungry, and I don't find myself needing to eat between meals. Who knows, maybe eventually I can handle adding stuff like crackers, cookies, ice cream back in, but for now it's just easier to not do it. Now, if I sleep late and only have 1 meal (I eat breakfast and dinner) I will eat something later at night so my calories aren't too low for the day, tonight will be that night, I'll probably have cereal and maybe an atkins shake.
But everyone is different. I know low carb/keto works amazingly for others. I am trying to still watch the carbs, keep them moderate, but it wasn't giving me anymore weight loss than I usually lose just watching calories, and since I plan to eat carbs in the future, I figure I should figure out how to do it now--like not eating 2 bowls of spaghetti at a meal! lol0 -
asflatasapancake wrote: »
OMG that looks soooo good! lol Pizza0 -
Popcorn is my last weakness. I don't buy it anymore to eat at home so I only eat it when I go to a movie. That's seems to be the only thing that I will just continue to munch on. As far as just regular meals I've been trainging myself to simply eat smaller portions of everything. I do cut back on my carb intake just by choice so I have limited my breads and pastas but more so because those foods also tend to be high in calories by the time I add the butter or sauces that I tend to like on them.0
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Red foods?
Like beetroot? I like beetroot on my subway and burgers.0 -
But seriously I can't think of a food that if I eat it I will magically gain weight.
All foods if I eat too much I will gain weight.
But the closest thing I can think of is sushi. Those sushi and sashimi combo boxes, or sushi rolls. I think I am logging them incorrectly and they are I fact a lot more kj than I think.
I had sushi twice last week and Gained, only thing I ate last week out of the ordinary. But meh not concerned. Lost this week.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »ceoverturf wrote: »Red M&Ms, Red skittles, tomatoes, apples (sometimes) , strawberries just to name a few
Mine is red jelly beans. I don't have a problem with limiting chocolate. Red skittles make me sick after eating several. But red jelly beans (or any color of jelly beans) don't have a natural stopping point. They're soft, so they don't last long and they just turn to sugar water in your mouth.
Starburst put out bags of only red jelly beans for Easter. Needless to say, that didn't last longer than a week for me.
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I used to be one of those people who said "I can't eat cereal, I'll gain weight" or "I can't eat rice". Now I understand the science and will never say that again. Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.0
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my red food is donuts. I ate 12 last Friday which then lead to eating other sweets and pastries..0
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arditarose wrote: »Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.
Agree with this.
Most overrated food ever, IMO. Most boring thing to overeat possible, unless someone feels compelled to binge on rice cakes.
(Just my opinion, of course. People should eat what they like and taste is subjective, yeah, yeah.)
;-)0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »arditarose wrote: »Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.
Agree with this.
Most overrated food ever, IMO. Most boring thing to overeat possible, unless someone feels compelled to binge on rice cakes.
(Just my opinion, of course. People should eat what they like and taste is subjective, yeah, yeah.)
;-)
Cereal overrated?
Have you ever had 4 weetbix with a little bit of white sugar?
What cereal do you eat?
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lemurcat12 wrote: »arditarose wrote: »Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.
Agree with this.
Most overrated food ever, IMO. Most boring thing to overeat possible, unless someone feels compelled to binge on rice cakes.
(Just my opinion, of course. People should eat what they like and taste is subjective, yeah, yeah.)
;-)
I think there are some awesome cereals out there but..I would need like 7 bowls to be satisfied. Cracklin' Oat Bran is da bomb.
But yeah, I used to be one of those people who would said "cereal makes me gain weight" and now that I understand weight loss, I still haven't had the urge to eat it.0 -
arditarose wrote: »I used to be one of those people who said "I can't eat cereal, I'll gain weight" or "I can't eat rice". Now I understand the science and will never say that again. Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.
Me and my Coco Puffs are offended. Awesome cereal, which results in a bonus of chocolate milk? How dare you shame it so?0 -
I don't restrict foods I just listen to what my body is wanting. Believe it or not, I do like my saute'd veggies with some whole wheat pasta, and a sprinkling of parmesan cheese over it....over lets say.....a handful of m&m's because that plate of heaven will get me more of a rush then those silly@$$ m&m's.0
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lemurcat12 wrote: »arditarose wrote: »Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.
Agree with this.
Most overrated food ever, IMO. Most boring thing to overeat possible, unless someone feels compelled to binge on rice cakes.
(Just my opinion, of course. People should eat what they like and taste is subjective, yeah, yeah.)
;-)
It's ok to be wrong (about the cereal, not necessarily rice cakes).
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mantium999 wrote: »arditarose wrote: »I used to be one of those people who said "I can't eat cereal, I'll gain weight" or "I can't eat rice". Now I understand the science and will never say that again. Still don't eat cereal though because it sucks.
Me and my Coco Puffs are offended. Awesome cereal, which results in a bonus of chocolate milk? How dare you shame it so?
lol. But I'd rather have meat for breakfast and ice cream for dessert. Coco puffs are decent though. Cinnamon Toast Crunch too.
Okay maybe that was harsh. Cereal tastes great.0 -
Cool ranch Doritos..can't put the dang bag down once I start! But I still eat them from time to time just have to be very careful!0
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do you know that a large chocolate shake from Dairy Queen is about 700+ calories....that blew me away when I read that....0
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