Are you a Diet Drag?

After spending another vanilla evening with a friend of mine who has been on a crazy crash fad diet... I had to look at myself in the mirror and ask. "Have I ever been a diet drag too?"

For the past two months she's been on some crazy 500 calorie a day restrictive diet with no carbs and no alcohol.

i have found myself in a few social situations with her where the entire evening or event revolves around her restrictive diet..how she needs her bland fish and water pronto! So we all have to change the time we normally like to eat and put the breaks on our cocktail hour and wine with dinner.

also....how at the football or hockey game she can't leave her seat.. "she might smell food." So no gathering for fun conversation and laughs at halftime where we always have done

The rest of us in the party can't have fun or enjoy ourselves in a relaxed manner.

Truth is - she's a drag to be around and I'm starting to not like her company.

I've always exercised and saved calories for my night's out with friends so I can participate in a stealth fashion and still stay on track. Do any of you have tricks you use so you're not the wet blanket of the group.

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Replies

  • elisa123gal
    elisa123gal Posts: 4,281 Member
    Nah .. it is pretty much a drag.. In theory, what you say seems logical. But the truth is, she's a drag to be around and anyone on a real restrictive diet who imposes that on a group of people in a social setting needs to examine that behavior . And I'm including myself in that. From now on.. I'm going to make sure I don't do the same thing myself.
  • LivingtheLeanDream
    LivingtheLeanDream Posts: 13,345 Member
    That friend does sound a bit of a drag, talk about being a party pooper :/
    It would be interesting to know if she has had or can maintain any success.

    I eat at deficit Mon-Thu so I can eat slightly above maintenance calories at the weekend. It works perfectly and I've been at maintenance for almost 4 years.

    I really don't want others around me in general being aware that I keep an eye on how much I eat.
  • trigden1991
    trigden1991 Posts: 4,658 Member
    I NEVER talk about my "diet" with any family/friends/colleagues as they wouldn't understand what/why I do what I do.
  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 24,706 Member
    I don't like talking about my diet either. I get asked now and then but usually opt to answer the question as briefly as possible and then redirect.

    "Yes, I eat a lot of vegetables ... I like vegetables ... those are nice shoes you've got!"
  • RachelElser
    RachelElser Posts: 1,049 Member
    yeah, no that is not an acceptable way to act! Won't leave her seat because she might smell food? Well, we'll see in after half time. Why are you guys letting her dictate the whole group. In private, talk to her and let her know her choices are her choices, but you will be continuing as you have in the past.
  • Tacklewasher
    Tacklewasher Posts: 7,122 Member
    Machka9 wrote: »
    I don't like talking about my diet either. I get asked now and then but usually opt to answer the question as briefly as possible and then redirect.

    Is it wrong to just answer "Aids"?

    :)
  • snickerscharlie
    snickerscharlie Posts: 8,581 Member
    Personally, I'd ditch the 'friend.' She sounds incredibly self-absorbed. Bring her back into the fold after she crashes and burns.

    r8kqxd5izf4a.jpg

    ;)
  • jemhh
    jemhh Posts: 14,262 Member
    No, I've never been like this.

    In general, people other than my husband do not know if/when I am cutting calories. I admit that I am not super social but when I am with friends, I in no way expect them to change plans according to whether I am dieting or not.

    The behavior you describe in the OP is attention-seeking. Your group of friends shouldn't cater to it. I'm not saying to wave food in front of her face but there's no reason for you to change everything for her.
  • BruinsGal_91
    BruinsGal_91 Posts: 1,400 Member
    Ugh. I used to know a diet drag. A group of us at work were all following Weight Watchers (back in the days of the 1-2-3 Success program). We all knew the points value of pretty much everything and it was fine when we were chatting about it among ourselves, but the 'diet drag' would carry it over into everything. If we went to a restaurant, she would bring her own low fat spread for her bread-roll. She would even bring her own food to people's houses when she'd been invited round for dinner. She was a pain in the backside and eventually people stopped inviting her out.
  • barracudamuscle
    barracudamuscle Posts: 313 Member
    I try to do the incognito mode like many others.

    It did back fire on me last year. I made chicken salad the night before (whole 30) and had my entire meal planned out for the trip to the mountains for skiing with coworkers/friends. I'd run to the car to get something(breakfast or lunch).

    I miss judged the refrigeration requirements and figured it'd be cold all day in the car so no cooler or lunch box just a grocery bag. Well in that 3 hour drive to the mountain my food got hot from the heater, cooled off some just in time for lunch. Long story short, I was hurling off the lift (thankfully not a gondola!) and got bad food poisoning. I fessed up to my coworkers/friends what I did and the jig was up.

    I ate 3 bananas and a bunch of water in the lodge after my long run down. I stayed true to the whole 30 I was on that day, I was rather embarrassed but it's a funny topic these days. I get props for being committed and no one knew the wiser that I'd been doing the whole 30 for months but still hanging out and going out until that day.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    I don't believe I am a diet drag. I enjoy social eating, so I don't skimp on the food. Those who don't know me would never guess I'm on a diet and I don't mention it. Those who know me already know how I do things so I got all the how's and why's out of the way long ago, and since I'm me as usual, and nearly nothing changed about the way we hang out and I eat, my diet usually goes unmentioned by anyone.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,426 Member
    No. I wasn't even when I did a restrictive fad diet in the past. I didn't talk about it unless someone asked me. I didn't refuse to do things or ask people to change for me. I didn't bring my own food to gatherings.
    Now I just watch my calorie intake, eat what everyone else does and still don't talk about it. I don't bring up weight loss. I don't make comments about how many calories are in food.
  • tekkiechikk
    tekkiechikk Posts: 375 Member
    Drag the drag with you at half time and tell her that learning self-control will serve her far better in the long run than the latest stupid diet she's on.
  • JoeCWV
    JoeCWV Posts: 213 Member
    No one knew I was losing weight or counting calories until they noticed the weight dropping. When asked I simply responded "yea, I've lost a few pounds." When asked how I was losing I simply replied eating less and moving more.

    As far as social situations I can eat and drink with the best of them. I plan for those indulgences and stay on track as much as possible. If I go off the rails one day, no biggie, I just pick back up the next day.

    My guess your friend is not as committed to her diet as she lets on. She sounds like an attention seeker. She's free to eat, or not eat whatever she wants. She's free to sit in the stands. You are free to let her control you, or not. The choice is yours to make.