I feel so bad for eating Toblerone
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gailramsden wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »Make it fit into your calories if you don't want to live without it forever. I eat chocolate and treat all the time and still lose.
The problem is that once I have a piece I will litrally eat the whole bar!! And then want more, i will try to limit myself to once a week perhaps? thanks hun xx
but you only ate 2 pieces, right? so, you ARE learning a new behavior. you DIDN'T eat the whole bar.2 -
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I buy the mini ones at the counter of the grocery store and don't log them. And don't feel bad.0
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gailramsden wrote: »Thanks to everyone and their advice, I didn't mean to upset anyone with my post sorry I think im just a bit emotional at the moment
Chocolate deprivation will do that to you I eat chocolate Every. Single. Day. One square of really dark, really high-quality chocolate. 50 calories or so. It's nothing.0 -
VintageFeline wrote: »I enjoy a Jaffa Cake, haven't had any in ages though.
My current daily treat of choice is a Galaxy caramel cake bar. 150 calories of delicious.
You can get regular candy bar sized Toblerones but really, who is down for that? Airport sized or go home!
But in all seriousness, east the foods you like. If you have to "reward" yourself for eating a salad with chocolate then I feel like this isn't going to be easy for you long term. It is a learning curve at first but honestly, eat what you want within your calories and don;t assign emotions to food. It is all fuel (and FYI, fat is not evil either, it's actual an essential dietary requirement).
Heck yeah!
Got my sis-in-law and family coming over for a visit next month. Apparently my darling niece has already put a load of Cadbury's Buttons in her suitcase for me. I love that girl!
Sorry, America; I love living here, but your chocolate just doesn't cut it.3 -
gailramsden wrote: »That's a very skewed perspective! Did anyone (including yourself) get hurt?
You "slipped up" - it won't be the last time in your life.
Maybe complete deprivation isn't the way? Work it into your calories and enjoy as a treat would be an alternative strategy.
xxx
With all due respect, I don't think sijomial was being critical; just trying to put things in perspective.0 -
gailramsden wrote: »That's a very skewed perspective! Did anyone (including yourself) get hurt?
You "slipped up" - it won't be the last time in your life.
Maybe complete deprivation isn't the way? Work it into your calories and enjoy as a treat would be an alternative strategy.
xxx
Oh, honey, first -- stop ending all your posts with kisses to strangers because that's creepy.
Second, I think you could use some therapy. No one criticized you. You overreacted spectacularly to eating a couple pieces of chocolate and now you're overreacting spectacularly to some excellent and actually gentle advice about your original overreaction.
I completely agree with your second point, but please don't tell people not to put kisses or smileys or whatever in their messages. People communicate in different ways and a virtual 'x' isn't necessarily a real kiss, but just signifies affection for some. Nothing wrong with that. To be honest, I don't like it when strangers call me 'honey' - I find it condescending, but I accept people have different ways of communicating.
I'm just saying this because clearly the OP is quite sensitive and defensive and I don't think criticising the way she communicates is helpful on any level.
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Don't start feeling guilty every time you slip up - it'll create an unhealthy relationship with food. You're not any less of a person or bad for eating some chocolate
It's really hard and kind of unhealthy to cut out all chocolate and bad food - make it fit, use your calories wisely. Let yourself have a treat and then the cravings won't be half as bad - you always want something more if you're telling yourself you can't have it!
You're doing great, just be positive.1 -
gailramsden wrote: »Any suggestions??
Are you getting sugar from another source? Sugar acts like a drug. There is a high, there is a come down and there are physical withdrawals.
Since so many calories come from sugar, many of our initial cuts come from sugary items. The cravings may be a physical response to a massive drop in sugar intake and not just a mental thing. It's why we often feel so bad in the beginning. You may want to reduce your intake slower.
We all have those foods, though, I can go "ham" on some Kashi Oatmeal Dark Chocolate Cookies. It's even worse since they are supposed to be "healthy." But that is different from when I binge on peanut butter with a spoon. In that case I simply may not have enough fat in my diet.
My advice for someone new. Just focus on logging. Don't make value judgments on the foods at this point. Just log.
Focus on a accurate log of everything you consume.
You will eventually have to make a decision though. On whether you want to continue on this journey. Diet implies temporary. Thinking that is a reason the vast majority of people gain everything back. Continuing on this journey means, you will never eat how you used to. forever.
You don't have to give up Chocolate. (Some chocolate is actually good for you). But you will have to give up something else in its place.
The only reason I don't eat Mcdonald's french fries often is because they don't make me full. (not enough protein or fiber). But i don't exclude them. They are delicious, I just get a small when I do. I do exclude sodas though and that's forever.
Whatever you decision going forward, I wish you happiness and good fortune.0 -
The last time I tried losing weight (few years ago) was by going to one of these NHS free courses where they weigh you, give advice, give rules for weight loss and even give exercise sessions in the weekly slot. It was full of older ladies who couldn't exercise much so I didn't quite fit in when it came to exercising and I wasn't doing as well as the old ladies in the weight loss as they were able to eat lettuce all day and I was always hungry due to breastfeeding and disturbed nights. Really wasn't the right time for me to seriously try and lose weight. Anyway the lady running it told us about the time she had bought a stack of Easter eggs and had them hidden in her wardrobe for Easter but she couldn't take the temptation and scoffed the lot and described it so well it conjured up visions in my head. Feeling a bit deprived of anything sweet or calorific for a couple of weeks and breast feeding at the time so always hungry I succumbed to the same fate. Visions of this situation played over in my head and eventually I went to my own secret stash of Easter eggs bought in preparation for Easter and scoffed the lot too. I fell off the wagon big style and also left the weight loss sessions in disgust. I couldn't believe I was capable of doing anything like that and was very disappointed with myself as you can imagine.
This time round I'm having chocolate as an allotted snack in the day so that won't happen again. I rarely have chocolate usually but when I crave it I really want a piece. I have some SlimFast ones that taste like Mars Bars and Snickers bars, gorgeous and under 100 calories. I'm actually feeling quite treated on my diet. Maybe you could have one of those every other day?0
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