I'm not doing this anymore
Replies
-
Luckily I never had that issue. I can't eat or drink anything that someone else has eaten/drank from. Just can't do it. I do not like reheated leftovers from takeout or restaurants either, it is definitely the texture that bugs me lol0
-
The clean your plate concept was around when I grew up in the post WWII, UK, '50's. Food was still rationed, and scarce. We were poor as well, so everything was eaten.
I was our family garbage can then, and once I had my own family the habit continued. It was, and still is, a real effort not to clean the plate, but like others have said, box it for later.
Now, if those boxes in the fridge are not eaten by the 2nd lunch, they are out.
Well done jsmesflowers, and all who can break a lifetime habit.
Cheers, h.
It also took a long time for me to learn to just cook less, and avoid homemade left overs.
0 -
I used to eat my dd's leftovers too and now I just put them away for her to eat later or toss them. They don't have to go in my body just because no one else is eating them.
I threw away half a pie today that no one else in the house was eating. Half a pie. I would have never done that a couple of years ago. I don't want to use my calories on that much pie now.0 -
My husband is like that. Never wants to waste anything, and if it's something he doesn't want he tries to convince me to eat it. But I'm a "the money is gone whether we eat it or throw it away" type person. I was raised by a "clean your plate" mom and that was one of the first things I changed once I was on my own. I did not raise my children that way.0
-
Someone could write a bestselling diet book on that very concept! I had to stop finishing my kid's food and joining the "clean plate club", in order to lose weight.0
-
100 percent understand, got toddler twin boys and I just have to tell myself it's ok if I throw away those chicken nuggets, lol ;-)0
-
I used to push my plate over to my boyfriend and he'd happily clean it for me. Since he's started losing as well, I box it, "forget" it at his house, and suggest that he have it for lunch tomorrow. It all works out.0
-
I used to hate hate hate throwing food out and I too ate off of my kids plates. As if the servings in restaurants aren't already big enough.....0
-
My little children used to automatically hand me their toast crusts.
0 -
jsmestflowers wrote: »Maybe this is something that only a parent would get.
So I would go out to eat with my family, and no doubt I would end up finishing what they did not eat (Wife and 2 little guys (8, 12)) Man.. I just really hated to throw that away knowing it cost good money...and I'm not like broke or anything..just..well..you know.
So one of the things that I have been NOT doing since I started my diet is that.
I didn't even really think about it till the other day when I was at Chick-fila..my wife was like "Do you want the rest of my sandwich"..my first inclination was "Hell yeah I want the rest of that sandwich!" BUT instead I said..."Thats the devil half a sandwich! I want none of it!"
(BTW for those of you that don't know me, I really don't think that the devil has anything to do with that sandwich, I just joke a lot)
Guess the point is..don't finish other peoples stuff.
very good post. its all these little awful habits that end up on our butt and abs and thighs and,...0 -
withaflourish wrote: »I never understood the clean plate club - that's teaching kids to eat past the point of being full just because you have likely overserved them.
The Clean Plate Club wasn't so much a problem when I was a child at home, but sure was in American restaurants until I got into the habit of planning to bring half home.
0 -
I feel you! Realized I was doing that too. My toddler never finishes her food so I was always finishing her pretzel bites, ice cream, Mac and cheese, etc. So hard to get out of that habit! But it's been 3 weeks and I've done well with passing over what's left. Good job!0
-
jsmestflowers wrote: »Maybe this is something that only a parent would get.
So I would go out to eat with my family, and no doubt I would end up finishing what they did not eat (Wife and 2 little guys (8, 12)) Man.. I just really hated to throw that away knowing it cost good money...and I'm not like broke or anything..just..well..you know.
So one of the things that I have been NOT doing since I started my diet is that.
I didn't even really think about it till the other day when I was at Chick-fila..my wife was like "Do you want the rest of my sandwich"..my first inclination was "Hell yeah I want the rest of that sandwich!" BUT instead I said..."Thats the devil half a sandwich! I want none of it!"
(BTW for those of you that don't know me, I really don't think that the devil has anything to do with that sandwich, I just joke a lot)
Guess the point is..don't finish other peoples stuff.
Good for you, well done, definitely tip I'll follow0 -
Devil's half! Love it! Your awesome encouragement! Friend me if you want. Love encouraging people!0
-
I used to be like that too, I'd finish my husband's meal on the basis that I'd be throwing good food away and wasting it. Guess what? It still ends up waste... it just goes through me first and some sticks along the way. Now I put what I haven't already logged into the bin.0
-
withaflourish wrote: »When I was little, people still smoked in restaurants. My Nana was a smoker and a very thin person - the minute she had eaten what she wanted from her plate she would light up, and ash into her plate - so she wouldn't pick from it. Gross, I know - but it kept her from eating another bite
I read an interview with some celebrity who said she poured water on her fries when she had had her fill. I do that now too.0 -
I have learned to box up half of restaurant meals before I take a bite. Then I spread out the rest on the plate. I'm not wasting food, I don't have to decide when to stop, and I have a nice meal the next day. I was raised to be a member of the clean plate club. And I'm very glad my grandson is not being raised that way.0
-
This is one thing I have really been conscious about while raising my son, I never ever force him to finish his plate, but rather give reminder questions like "is your tummy full?". If he says yes, I can always wrap it up for later, especially since small children can only consume small meals at a time, and he will likely be hungry again before bedtime. Good for you OP, every little bit helps, especially the "devil's sandwich" lol0
-
I like to cook and i always make too much food. Now i vacuum seal and freeze small portions for consumption through the month. This way i get to eat good food without eating over my weekly calories. Sous vide cooking makes reheating easy without over cooking.0
-
Yep, good lesson. Add that to my list, right below "stop eating those samples at Costco". Every little bite adds up0
-
If I don't want to take left overs home with me, I'll dump a whole lotta salt all over the plate. It stops me from picking at the food and overeating.0
-
kshama2001 wrote: »Hey...I thought the French fries I steal from my fiance's plate had no calories...???
Exactly! Food from other people's plates is zero calories everyone knows that lol but seriously though I grew up the same way, you can't leave until you clear your plate etc., and my husband and I agree that when we have a kid we won't do that to them. I really think it just leads to bad habits and honestly the kid isn't going to starve, they will eat when they're hungry you don't have to shove food down their throats to keep them alive lol
That actually reminds me of a friend my mom had, their son was 8-9 years old and would LITERALLY only eat Wendy's chicken nuggets. They bought them for him every single meal for years. To this day I still think they're crazy because 1) they let it get to that point, and 2) if they had called his bluff and just served him what everyone else was having he would eventually have to eat. I remember them talking about how the therapist said it was just a preference and there was nothing wrong with him, it still amazes me to this day lol0 -
jsmestflowers wrote: »Maybe this is something that only a parent would get.
So I would go out to eat with my family, and no doubt I would end up finishing what they did not eat (Wife and 2 little guys (8, 12)) Man.. I just really hated to throw that away knowing it cost good money...and I'm not like broke or anything..just..well..you know.
So one of the things that I have been NOT doing since I started my diet is that.
I didn't even really think about it till the other day when I was at Chick-fila..my wife was like "Do you want the rest of my sandwich"..my first inclination was "Hell yeah I want the rest of that sandwich!" BUT instead I said..."Thats the devil half a sandwich! I want none of it!"
(BTW for those of you that don't know me, I really don't think that the devil has anything to do with that sandwich, I just joke a lot)
Guess the point is..don't finish other peoples stuff.
I relate. It's all about what you want more...to stick to your calorie deficit or that extra food.
Love your humor!0 -
Thanks all!0
-
I have always been known as the human trash can when it came to food. Something left over, it would be passed to me to eat and I would. It is one of those things which I have made a massive effort to stop. I won't finish up the families left overs and generally keep my self to 1 serving of whatever food is on offer.
As for the children thing, my wife and I make our daughter clear her plater at meal times, but we also make sure she has a small portion of food and we keep extra back in the oven if she is hungry.
It's amazing to me when I see children who are "full" from their main dinner suddenly have huge amounts of room for the dessert.0 -
withaflourish wrote: »I never understood the clean plate club - that's teaching kids to eat past the point of being full just because you have likely overserved them.
I think the whole "clean plate" thing was impressed upon my mom, who was born in the post-WWII era... Growing up I can remember her being on Weight Watchers many times... She never impressed clean plate upon us for just that reason--she thinks it led to her weight issues. I think my membership in "clean plate" is more because I'm a bit (well maybe a lot) OCD.
My son is 15 now and I'm trying not to be the clean plate police, but it's tough because he's in the midst of his pubescent growth spurt and he's an athlete with about 5% body fat--he needs to eat more but he just picks at his food usually (and he's a super-slow eater). Maybe that bodes well for him later in life, but right now it's so frustrating!
0 -
Excellent post, thank you for sharing!
I only recently read a quote on these forums about coming to terms with throwing away "perfectly good food" when you're full:
"It's wasted either way; the question is, do you want it to damage you on the way out, or not?"
It has helped me really come to terms with the idea of being conscientious when making food choices BEFORE i fill my plate - i can cut waste ahead of time, rather than struggling with foolish guilt at the table.0 -
I am still a member of the clean ur plate club, it's ingrained deep. But I never ever spouted that mantra to my children and I am amazed that they can eat till they are full and then push a plate with food still on it away from them! Half of me is going "omg the WASTE", the other half is thinking "thank god, thank god" and I toss the leftovers to the chickens. My children are teens and young adults and never been overweight.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K 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