How to not gain the "Holiday 15"
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arditarose wrote: »My biggest thing is needing to feel in control. I will not just let myself gorge and then say "WHOOPS!" I either make the choice to go big, or I make the choice to stay at maintenance or a deficit.
This is why I always stick to my calorie goal (with the exception of the actual day of the holiday). If I allowed myself to have whatever I wanted throughout the whole season - whoa. Go BIG.
Yep.
Actually, I'm not really around family all THAT much during the holidays and I don't really have guests, so honestly it's not that hard for me. Aw, debbie downer.0 -
arditarose wrote: »arditarose wrote: »My biggest thing is needing to feel in control. I will not just let myself gorge and then say "WHOOPS!" I either make the choice to go big, or I make the choice to stay at maintenance or a deficit.
This is why I always stick to my calorie goal (with the exception of the actual day of the holiday). If I allowed myself to have whatever I wanted throughout the whole season - whoa. Go BIG.
Yep.
Actually, I'm not really around family all THAT much during the holidays and I don't really have guests, so honestly it's not that hard for me. Aw, debbie downer.
Yeah - it was much worse for me when I used to work at a bigger hospital, and either we'd have a sales rep bring us food, a local business bring us food, or one of the people on our staff bring in food. GOOD GOD IN HEAVEN.0 -
Some people fo have a lot of parties and holiday outings with family and friends between Thanksgiving and Christmas or travel which can wreak havoc on a diet plan. (I am not one of them this year fortunately). BUT last year I had 10 holiday parties and outings not including staying with relatives that didn't have much healthy food in the house. Other than just saying "no means no" to goodies i made my own i could say yes to. I brought a healthier dish or healthier dessert to the parties to share that i could pile on and not be too guilty. And then when i brought it home for leftovers i wasn't committing a dietary crime multiple days in a row (just don't bring too many others home with it). When we'd do things like ice skating, tree cutting, or holiday shopping, instead of eating mall food or snack shack hot chocolate and cookies, I'd bring healthy ones to share and stick to coffee (without all the sugar and creamer ) or tea. Hope this gives you some ideas0
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You/we have to take responsibility for ourselves and our choices. It's up to you how much you gain or lose during the holidays or any other time of year. No excuses!0
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The reason why people gain an average 5lbs-7lbs a year is because they "snack" on foods they don't usually consume in higher amounts from Thanksgiving all the way to New Year's!
If you just counted Thanksgiving and Christmas days, I would think that between the 2 days, one would eat 10,000 calories at max. That'd be just under 3lb pounds if it were all fat.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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Saw this item on-line "The average American will consume more than 4,500 calories and 229 grams of fat on Thanksgiving Day alone, according to the Calorie Control Council." My plan is 1200 cals/day plus I eat my exercise. My BMR is about 2,000 plus I can exercise about 500 that morning - if I eat half of "average" I'll be alright - measure and weigh. Back to normal Friday, the left overs are toxic.
The average American consumes 3770 calories a day on a regular basis so an extra 700 on Thanksgiving isn't anything.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2722815/Daily-calorie-intake-countries-world-revealed-surprise-U-S-tops-list-3-770.html
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I have never gained 15 but have gained 10 from Halloween to New Years in the past.
I am still on a high from loosing between Halloween and now. I am determined to continue it through New Years.
It isn't the holiday that messes me up but all the social events around them and the yummy gifts of food that people give. One bite so I can tell them it was delicious. Toss the rest if my family doesn't eat it.
My plan is to be on program 95% of the time. There are many days that I won't be at a social event. If I stay on program those days and not go ballistic at the social events, I should still lose. The key for me is to get right back at it after the social event. I seem to have broken my pattern of blowing it 1 day and letting that derail me for days. Just need to continue that.
I am going to try not to cook too much food but plan to send leftovers home with guests on Thanksgiving. Anything left besides turkey and salad will go into the trash. Hate wasting food like that but my trash can afford the calories better than I can.0 -
kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
If you are setting yourself up as a helpless victim instead of a sentient participant who can actually make choices, you need to have a wee chat with yourself.0 -
Oh man, I actually did put on a stone (14 lbs) over the festive period last year!! So bad, I don't know how I managed to eat and drink that much - I'm actually kind of impressed. My birthday is on the last day of November so I had a bit of a blow out, and then December just totally spiraled out of control! My partner and I both made the decision to 'just enjoy the festive period', which turned into us basically enabling each other to be as greedy and lazy as possible (and we're pretty greedy and lazy anyway). Great fun of course, but not so good for the waistline! "I don't fancy cooking." "Hey it's Christmas, let's get a Chinese." "Wellll, it's the seventh of Decemb -" "CHRISTMAS!" I dread to think how many takeaways, bottles of Advocaat and random bits of gingerbread we got through.
This year I've upped my activity and lowered my calories a bit to build up a bit more of a buffer for my birthday party and my birthday meal at the end of the month, then in December I'm going to stick to that bigger deficit which will hopefully mitigate the big eating and drinking days. My goal is to go into the New Year the same weight as November 27th, or maybe even a bit lighter.0 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »I enjoy my feast days but don't treat the entire holiday season as a free for all...I still eat healthfully and I still train regularly. If I feel like a cookie, I have a cookie..just not all of the cookies and I don't feel the need to indulge in all of the office goodies all day, every day. IDK...maybe it's just time as I've been at this for over three years, but the tables full of goodies don't really phase me much.
^^This
I'll eat an occasional treat if I can work it into my calories (I do this regularly anyway). I treat the feast days as feast days and don't worry. The rest of the month is business as usual.0 -
kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.0 -
kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I don't think not using the holidays as an excuse to overeat necessarily means denying yourself seasonal treats. I'd say the same thing, but I still enjoy myself. For example, I'd still have a mince pie, I just wouldn't have six, eat one when not hungry, and I'd pick a homemade one my friend made over a stale multipack job from the staff room.
Xmas Eve - Boxing Day is a pig-out, the rest of December is business as usual.0 -
kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
That's an excuse. Don't lay that off on other people. No matter what size anyone is, we all love food and have to make choices about what to eat and not to eat to fit into our calorie goals. And no one is saying you have to saying no to anything, you have just have to make choices that make that 'something special' fit into your calorie goals for the day. Every day. That's how to enjoy the holidays without gaining the weight.0 -
kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
No one said "say no to something special". This poster said don't use the holidays as an excuse to OVER EAT. And honestly, the definition of over eating varies from person to person.
And I find it incredibly rude to point out that this person only had 18 lbs to lose. So what? That doesn't mean that losing that weight wasn't difficult or shouldn't be recognized.0 -
Yeah I have a few days in December where I don't log but don't necessarily go CRAZY. For instance we have a family Christmas party every year and there are SO many goodies and sweets and I just can't help myself but I will skimp out on my breakfast or eat something very light and save most calories for then. I typically end up filling up pretty quickly (eyes are always bigger then your stomach) and don't end up eating for the rest of the evening! Also on Christmas eve and Christmas I don't log. I just want to enjoy the days and not worry. I of course dont go crazy either (well maybe a little). I think its important to just relax and let yourself have those couple days to enjoy yourself instead of trying to keep track.0
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kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
Nope, not sad. Responsible and adult. If I want that goody whatever-it-is, I have it! I just don't have 10 of them and I work it into my allotment for the day. On Christmas Day I set my goal to maintenance and enjoy. I still log, and if I go over? No biggie, it's just a day.0 -
lol - it's just another day. The only difference it will actually be easy to get all my calories in during the holidays. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.0
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lol - it's just another day. The only difference it will actually be easy to get all my calories in during the holidays. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.
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kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I find it hilarious that you think overweight people 'love food' more than people with less to lose. I'm a foodie, I love food and have never been overweight. The same goes for many famous chefs and restaurant critics. Being greedy and not knowing when to stop is not the same as 'loving food'. That's a ridiculous excuse. I guess if someone blows all their money on hookers it's not their fault because they 'love sex'more than the rest of us? Jeez0 -
Keeping my goals in mind helps me to enjoy all the goodies responsibly. I pick and choose my splurges carefully, they have to be worth it!
I aim for maintenance calories the week of Thanksgiving, and the two weeks around Christmas/New Year's.
I think the fact that I tend to eat treats every day makes me less likely to "eat all the calories" on special days - it's not like this is the last slice of pie I'm ever going to eat. Even aiming for maintenance, I might go over on 1 or 2 days over the season (usually in beverage form ), but I don't sweat it, 1 or 2 days can't derail me.
I think it's really important to figure out how to enjoy yummy food without drastically over-indulging or allowing yourself to feel guilty and have that snowball into a long period of back-sliding.0 -
kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I'm sorry. But you don't know my history. My profile says I've lost 18lbs, but in 2012 I lost 50lbs. I lost control and gained some back, so I I came back, reset my page and lost it again. I LOVE food. I think about it all the time, still after losing 50, regaining 20, then losing 18. From that "losing" control, I learned something. Food isn't everything. I'd much rather turn down a piece of pie at a holiday than my pants not fit right. That's me. The OP asked how I'd get through the holidays. I get through them by thinking they aren't a reason to overeat. I didn't say I won't have one, but I have a habit of having one, then another, then not giving a crap and eating 10 more. My defition of overeating is eating more than you should. And the holiday's are not an excuse to over do it. They come around 1 time a year, every year. My birthday is in 2 weeks. It happens the same time EVERY year. But that doesn't mean I'm SUPPOSED to eat cake. No one is going to care if I do or not. And I probably will, but I'll make room for it.
Don't cast stones when you don't know someone's background.
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Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I find it hilarious that you think overweight people 'love food' more than people with less to lose. I'm a foodie, I love food and have never been overweight. The same goes for many famous chefs and restaurant critics. Being greedy and not knowing when to stop is not the same as 'loving food'. That's a ridiculous excuse. I guess if someone blows all their money on hookers it's not their fault because they 'love sex'more than the rest of us? Jeez
Wow that's probably the worst comparison I've ever seen... As I said though, it must be nice to be able to be satisfied on a small amount of food. It's not always the case for all of us.
But anyway, I still think it's sad to say no to something because you've reached your calorie goal (which technically would be overeating), if it's something you only get once a year. Sorry, but that's what it is. I can't imagine ever saying no to something I love and won't have again for a year, when I could just eat 50 less calories the next few days to make up for it. I didn't mean necessarily go over by 1000 calories (which I've done for Holidays, and without guilt, couldn't care less if you call that being greedy or not knowing when to stop). But technically, even going over by 200 calories is 'overeating'.
If it's really such a huge deal for you to go over your calories for the Holidays that you wouldn't eat a treat that you think you love, then nope, I don't think you love food as much as I do, and sorry if it offends you but that's what it is...0 -
Look u just have to make a plan and stick with it , and if that plan involves eating the 52,500 extra cals is it? Go for it but for god sake OWN IT LIKE A BOSS! No guilty , NO I hate my self/ feel so missery post -___- , and if u choose to stick the best possible to your calorie goal and only eat extra calories for the 3-4 holidays do the same, own it.
Ask yourself what do I want , and go for it.
Plus lets be honest u dont gain 15 lbs at once, u got 4-6 weeks to rehearse , weight yourself and detour in case u Dont like the numbers u see.
Good luck!0 -
Say you eat an extra 4000 calories
Go do some exercise
Get a few 90 minute cardio sessions in
It is just fuel. Work it off and don't get a complex over it. The whole holiday weight gain thing is silly
Just work it off.0 -
Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I find it hilarious that you think overweight people 'love food' more than people with less to lose. I'm a foodie, I love food and have never been overweight. The same goes for many famous chefs and restaurant critics. Being greedy and not knowing when to stop is not the same as 'loving food'. That's a ridiculous excuse. I guess if someone blows all their money on hookers it's not their fault because they 'love sex'more than the rest of us? Jeez
Wow that's probably the worst comparison I've ever seen... As I said though, it must be nice to be able to be satisfied on a small amount of food. It's not always the case for all of us.
But anyway, I still think it's sad to say no to something because you've reached your calorie goal (which technically would be overeating), if it's something you only get once a year. Sorry, but that's what it is. I can't imagine ever saying no to something I love and won't have again for a year, when I could just eat 50 less calories the next few days to make up for it. I didn't mean necessarily go over by 1000 calories (which I've done for Holidays, and without guilt, couldn't care less if you call that being greedy or not knowing when to stop). But technically, even going over by 200 calories is 'overeating'.
If it's really such a huge deal for you to go over your calories for the Holidays that you wouldn't eat a treat that you think you love, then nope, I don't think you love food as much as I do, and sorry if it offends you but that's what it is...
You keep saying "giving up things we have 1x a year, but WE ARE ADULTS. We can make holiday food whenever we want. If I want stuffing in July, I'll make it. If I want pumpkin pie in April, I'll make that too. Last Christmas my mom brought chocolate covered macaroons. I love a macaroon, but I can love them all year long. I had a goal and it wasn't to eat all the macaroons. And I also know that if I ate one of those tasty buggers, I'd eat the whole tray.
Is it so bad that I love my size 6 pants more than I love a cookie that will put me over my calorie limit? I'm gonna go with no. But you can think otherwise...it's a free world.
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Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I find it hilarious that you think overweight people 'love food' more than people with less to lose. I'm a foodie, I love food and have never been overweight. The same goes for many famous chefs and restaurant critics. Being greedy and not knowing when to stop is not the same as 'loving food'. That's a ridiculous excuse. I guess if someone blows all their money on hookers it's not their fault because they 'love sex'more than the rest of us? Jeez
Wow that's probably the worst comparison I've ever seen... As I said though, it must be nice to be able to be satisfied on a small amount of food. It's not always the case for all of us.
But anyway, I still think it's sad to say no to something because you've reached your calorie goal (which technically would be overeating), if it's something you only get once a year. Sorry, but that's what it is. I can't imagine ever saying no to something I love and won't have again for a year, when I could just eat 50 less calories the next few days to make up for it. I didn't mean necessarily go over by 1000 calories (which I've done for Holidays, and without guilt, couldn't care less if you call that being greedy or not knowing when to stop). But technically, even going over by 200 calories is 'overeating'.
If it's really such a huge deal for you to go over your calories for the Holidays that you wouldn't eat a treat that you think you love, then nope, I don't think you love food as much as I do, and sorry if it offends you but that's what it is...
Not sure why you addressed this to me (rather than the many others who laughed at your nonsensical statement) but I never mentioned 'going over' during the Holidays . I don't actually count calories and eat whatever I like ( I am just here to track my protein due to pregnancy/breast feeding) so your whole attitude to food makes no sense to me and seems really screwed up. I don't think of food As a Commodity or a 'treat'. It's a wonderful part of life. I have been lucky enough to eat in some of the best restaurants in the world. That doesn't mean if you take me to Applebee's that I want to eat everything on the menu. 'Loving food' is not an excuse for stuffing your face ( and I couldn't stuff my face with amazing food because I couldn't afford it). The analogy with sex still stands. You can say you 'love sex' because you sleep with everything with a pulse. Or you can say you 'love sex' when it means something. So stop judging other people for not 'loving food' as much as you do.
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Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I find it hilarious that you think overweight people 'love food' more than people with less to lose. I'm a foodie, I love food and have never been overweight. The same goes for many famous chefs and restaurant critics. Being greedy and not knowing when to stop is not the same as 'loving food'. That's a ridiculous excuse. I guess if someone blows all their money on hookers it's not their fault because they 'love sex'more than the rest of us? Jeez
Wow that's probably the worst comparison I've ever seen... As I said though, it must be nice to be able to be satisfied on a small amount of food. It's not always the case for all of us.
But anyway, I still think it's sad to say no to something because you've reached your calorie goal (which technically would be overeating), if it's something you only get once a year. Sorry, but that's what it is. I can't imagine ever saying no to something I love and won't have again for a year, when I could just eat 50 less calories the next few days to make up for it. I didn't mean necessarily go over by 1000 calories (which I've done for Holidays, and without guilt, couldn't care less if you call that being greedy or not knowing when to stop). But technically, even going over by 200 calories is 'overeating'.
If it's really such a huge deal for you to go over your calories for the Holidays that you wouldn't eat a treat that you think you love, then nope, I don't think you love food as much as I do, and sorry if it offends you but that's what it is...
Using your reasoning is why I have to eat at a deficit now. I don't trust myself yet to overeat with the intention of eating less the next day. Not sure I ever will trust myself on that. Would rather save the calories up front. I don't want to to fall back into the habit of saying I will worry about it later.
I only walk for exercise at a pace that doesn't burn many calories so I know I can't walk away the calories either.
I think it's sad that I got myself where I am. Passing on goodies is sad too but not the end of my world. I can buy, cook or bake anything I want, whenever I want.
Being able to walk up stairs without feeling like I am a minute away from a heart attack is much more yummy than any food could ever be.
I love food. Never met anyone that doesn't have their favorites.
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I REALLY dislike that we have somehow turned late November through early january into the amorphous season called "Holiday".
To my way of thinking, the 4 weeks preceding Christmas are Advent. Advent is supposed to have a mild penitential quality. So overeating then is actually contrary to the spirit of the season.0 -
Saw this item on-line "The average American will consume more than 4,500 calories and 229 grams of fat on Thanksgiving Day alone, according to the Calorie Control Council." My plan is 1200 cals/day plus I eat my exercise. My BMR is about 2,000 plus I can exercise about 500 that morning - if I eat half of "average" I'll be alright - measure and weigh. Back to normal Friday, the left overs are toxic.
**I think you mean your TDEE is 2000, not BMR0 -
Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »kristen6350 wrote: »The key to not gaining at the holidays? Not using the holidays as an excuse to over eat.
I have a rule at work - if I didn't bring the food in, I don't eat it. I don't need candy, cookies, cakes and pies.
NO ONE other than myself is in charge of what goes in my body. If I don't want it, I say no. Even if I do want it, I say NO.
I find it sad. I can't imagine saying no to something special I never get the rest of the year just because 'I don't want to use it as an excuse to overeat'.
But you only had 18 pounds to lose so I guess you don't have the love of food that some of us do, so it's probably easier for you to think this way. That must be nice.
I find it hilarious that you think overweight people 'love food' more than people with less to lose. I'm a foodie, I love food and have never been overweight. The same goes for many famous chefs and restaurant critics. Being greedy and not knowing when to stop is not the same as 'loving food'. That's a ridiculous excuse. I guess if someone blows all their money on hookers it's not their fault because they 'love sex'more than the rest of us? Jeez
Wow that's probably the worst comparison I've ever seen... As I said though, it must be nice to be able to be satisfied on a small amount of food. It's not always the case for all of us.
But anyway, I still think it's sad to say no to something because you've reached your calorie goal (which technically would be overeating), if it's something you only get once a year. Sorry, but that's what it is. I can't imagine ever saying no to something I love and won't have again for a year, when I could just eat 50 less calories the next few days to make up for it. I didn't mean necessarily go over by 1000 calories (which I've done for Holidays, and without guilt, couldn't care less if you call that being greedy or not knowing when to stop). But technically, even going over by 200 calories is 'overeating'.
If it's really such a huge deal for you to go over your calories for the Holidays that you wouldn't eat a treat that you think you love, then nope, I don't think you love food as much as I do, and sorry if it offends you but that's what it is...
Did @kristen6350 say she was going to deprive herself of treats she loves? No. She said she was going to make choices not to overeat based on prioritization. I'm all for indulging, but I'm also all for making logical decisions about what calories are worth it and what aren't. It's entirely possible to fill a plate with reasonable portions of all the foods you love and not blow out your numbers. It's also possible to save up calories for the days leading up to the event to bank them for a bigger meal, a second piece of pie, etc. Those are both strategies that demonstrate planning and awareness. Abdicating responsibility and saying that you're doomed to gain because "holidays" is I think what this poster is stating is what she's choosing not to do, in order to not jeopardize her success.0
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