How do you "cheat"
adriennemarieb
Posts: 38 Member
How do you choose to have a cheat meal?
Do you have a meal or a day that you can eat whatever you want, no restrictions?
Or do you keep it within your calorie goal?
Do you still stay in your macros?
Do you have a meal or a day that you can eat whatever you want, no restrictions?
Or do you keep it within your calorie goal?
Do you still stay in your macros?
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Replies
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So many cheats to think of but I don't do them regularly. Obviously pizza is a BIG cheat. My fav cheat is a chinese take away. (beer, wine and a chippie...ooh and a coffee slice lol0
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Fat bombs! Yeh!!! Only once a week at most. I make mine with almond butter, coconut butter, and kerrygold butter with stevia to sweeten.0
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If i'm on a challenge or trying to reach a goal, i don't cheat till my habits are in tune with the lifestyle changes, then i would have a cheat meal every 4 days to keep me sane lol works for me, its like tricking your body.
I wouldn't suggest cheat days as they are harder to recover from but if you must then really limit them0 -
I don't cheat. I'm having pizza tonight (and a lot of weekends too) and it fits in my day, so there's nothing to be cheating on.
Days when I go over are just another day. I eat it, log it and move on. Nothing cheaty about that either. Balance is key.0 -
Always within my calorie goals, I can eat whatever i feel I need. I make sensible choices and indulge when I want to. I don't think of them as cheating at all0
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After I run a halfmarathon I alwayss allow myself a meal with unlimited calories.0
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I have maybe one a month and eat at maintenance. Though on Thanksgiving I did go about 200 over maintenance since my gym closed too early for me to make it over.0
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I don't cheat. I have a lifestyle that involves healthy choices. I really dislike the word "cheat" when used to describe something people eat, as much as I dislike the fact that "diet" has become a bad word, when in reality it should simply describe the things you eat regularly. What other people call "diet" I call "the newest celebrity fad in-thing crap".0
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RoseTheWarrior wrote: »I don't cheat. I have a lifestyle that involves healthy choices. I really dislike the word "cheat" when used to describe something people eat, as much as I dislike the fact that "diet" has become a bad word, when in reality it should simply describe the things you eat regularly. What other people call "diet" I call "the newest celebrity fad in-thing crap".
+1
some days I go over my daily calorie. Life happens. I will go back to my nutrition plan as soon as I can.
I eat more on thanksgiving, Christmas, new year and my birthday. Those are my plan overeating days in a year.0 -
So far, I don't cheat. Maybe about a month from now, I will.0
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adriennemarieb wrote: »How do you choose to have a cheat meal?
Do you have a meal or a day that you can eat whatever you want, no restrictions?
Or do you keep it within your calorie goal?
Do you still stay in your macros?
I don't "cheat". I already eat with almost no restrictions - only a restriction on overall calories.
I take fewer than 10 days "off" per year - days I set no calorie goals and log to the best of my ability without trying to reach any goal. These are birthdays, weddings, Christmas, etc. On those days I try to eat "reasonably" but set no other real goals. I often end up under what my calorie goal would have been anyway.
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I don't have a reason to cheat. I fit the foods I like into my calories/macros as I can.0
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I'm with the other non-cheaters. Occasionally I have a day where I indulge more than normal; sometimes that's planned, sometimes it isn't, but I don't view it as cheating, I don't punish myself or try to "make up for it" later, I just pick back up with the next meal and keep trucking along.0
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I don't cheat. I either meet my goals, or choose not to once in awhile.0
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I see. You're all hung up on a word and haven't actually answered my question. Thanks, anyway.0
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Cheating would imply that one is going BEYOND the rules. Rules in weight loss are calories in/calories out. So if one isn't exceeding their calorie goal, then it's NOT cheating.
The issue is that many people have this assumption that calorie dense foods that are lower in nutrition are "unhealthy". Yet many of the most athletic/fit people will eat these everyday and still stay within their calorie goals and meet their macro/micro nutrient essentials.
If one has a calorie goal and exceeds it eating "healthy" foods, is that cheating?
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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adriennemarieb wrote: »I see. You're all hung up on a word and haven't actually answered my question. Thanks, anyway.
Well, your first question was "how do you choose to have a cheat meal?"
Since we have to answer that to get to the others, no one is hung up on that word. Unless you mean cheat in a different context? Do you mean cheat as in go over total calories or eating something like pizza and ice cream?
I don't cheat. Therefore, I don't consider having a meal or a day where I have no restrictions. I do have days where I don't count or I may go over. Those are not cheat days, they're just days.
Second question, I may or may not stay within my calorie goals. I don't plan cheat days. I do have days like holidays where I don't track, but again, I don't cheat on anything. I live life day by day and whatever happens, happens.
Last question: I don't track macros. I do try to get enough protein and fiber, but don't care of I go over. I usually go over my macros when I go over my calories, yes. I may or may not go over any macro on any day regardless of whether I'm under or over calories.
ETA: Oh, and I wanted to say that I don't ever restrict any type of food out of my diet. I eat whatever I feel like, so things like pizza and ice cream are always on the menu.0 -
adriennemarieb wrote: »How do you choose to have a cheat meal?
Do you have a meal or a day that you can eat whatever you want, no restrictions?
Or do you keep it within your calorie goal?
Do you still stay in your macros?
*sigh* fine
1) no, I don't have any days or even any single meals where I chuck all reason down the chute and eat with reckless abandon. I plan my eating day at Unholy O'clock in the morning and stick to it with some minor alterations, probably close to 95% of the time. The other 5% i'm mindful just not necessarily so exact.
2) I tend to look at my calorie goal over a period of time, usually a week. So long as my intake averages out to match my weekly goal, I consider that success and don't get hung up as much on the daily overs or unders. So yesterday I was over the daily goal by about 150-ish calories. The previous 2 days I felt pretty crappy and wax under by more than 300 both days. But overall my week is going to roll out fine as long as today & tomorrow stay relatively on-target.
3) macros are a whole different game for me. My doc suggested that eating in a ketogenic fashion *might* be helpful in reducing my chronic arthritis pain. So now the "rules" for macros are all different and i struggle with it. But I'm getting better. (Not better enough to evaluate if it's actually going to be beneficial wrt the pain yet unfortunately. Frankly it still comes down to if/when the desire and the potential gain come together in my head). So no, I don't often hit my macros but I do try.
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I log everything I eat and make treats and special meals fit into my goals. On the few occasions where I have a particularly high calorie meal, I log it and balance it out over the next few days. I follow a weekly goal.
I do not have "free" cheat days or meals where I don't account for my calories.
ETA: I also don't restrict any foods. I just fit them in.0 -
I used to do cheat days and now I just fit in whatever I want.
http://thecouponproject.com/losing-weight-on-a-budget-why-i-dont-do-cheat-days-and-what-i-do-instead/
One popular idea among dieters is the “cheat meal” or “cheat day.” The philosophy is simple: eat healthy for most of your meals and then you can eat whatever you want for a meal or a day as a “cheat.”
While I think you should be able to enjoy foods you love in moderation, I propose we do away with the concept of the “cheat meal.” Here’s why.
Watching your Attitudes about Yourself
In the introduction post to this series, I shared my belief that a big part of your ability to lose weight has to do with your attitudes. So much of our success hinges on our ability to be kind to ourselves and develop a healthy relationship with food.
Simply put, the word “cheat” has negative connotations – that you’re doing something wrong. You ate salad all week so now you can “cheat” by eating a double cheeseburger with fries on Sunday. Tell me, if you call that a “cheat” meal, are you truly going to enjoy it? Or, in the back of your mind are you going to feel a tinge of guilt, because you are “cheating?”
I think it’s time we stop assigning guilt to food like this, because ultimately it can cause us to have negative feelings about ourselves. If we are cheating on our diet, we must be cheaters.0 -
I party-ed with friends today, the food was so good! But it wasn't really planned, just spontaneous.0
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I cheat once a month in that we have a standing date for a monthly chef's tasting menu dinner. No way can I ask/remember/log half a dozen ingredients per sauce or relish when there are two or three such concoctions per plate, plus vegetable and protein, etc., in an eight course meal. I just log 3500 calories--these are "tasting" plates, not meals--and focus on enjoying the food and wine pairings. I also do heavier-than-normal exercise sessions the day before, the day of, and for two days after our meal. I never feel an ounce of regret or let the temporary blip in my weight bother me. In fact, I look forward to it.0
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Wow, ask a community a question and then criticize their answers. You asked how people cheat and they are telling you. What exactly did you want to hear?
I eat whatever I want within my calorie goal every day, I don't restrict any foods, so as long as I'm within my calorie goal it's not cheating.
While I pay attention to my macros, I do it more to make sure I get enough protein and out of curiosity, so I don't consider not hitting my macro goals cheating.
I have maybe one day a month that you could call a cheat day. I plan on eating more than usual, usually on holidays or a wedding or something like that. I still log as best I can, and I aim to stay within 500 cals of maintenance. I hate the concept of cheat days though, because it suggests feelings of guilt and judgement around food, which I don't believe is healthy. But it works for some people, so if it works for you, that's awesome.
Not everyone will reach their goal the same way you choose to. Hearing all the different ways people approach their eating has helped me tremendously. Best of luck.0 -
I "cheat" a lot, as long as it fits into my calorie goals and I get enough nutrients that day. As far as going over, the only time I do that is on a holiday such as thanksgiving because I know the day after I can get right back to it.0
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For me, it's only cheating if I don't log the calories so, no, it's never planned because even if I have something I have no idea of the calories on , I log my best guesstimate. I suppose I'm cheating if I willingly underestimate it tho.
And there are times I'll grab a couple handfuls of cereal or whatever and not log it.
But no meals!0 -
I just make sure to budget some calories to smash a 1200 cal chipotle burrito a couple times a week. I always log it and make sure to do a good workout on those days. I've failed miserably with cheat meals/days but I had a pretty poor realationship with food. I think most people who become morbidly obese struggle with that balance. At least I did. That's not to say it can't be done. I have friends who can pull off the cheat meal or day and swear by it.0
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