Tired of some folks
Replies
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Gallowmere1984 wrote: »I feel the same way every time I see the phrase "fell off the wagon".
Apparently they need to be strapped in and forcibly restrained like an ill-tempered child in a car seat.
Lol. Love it.2 -
OP, I'm kind of glad you started this thread. As others have said, sometimes it's good to vent.
So I'd like to vent about my real-life coworkers. There are a few that continually whine that they can't lose weight. They've seen me lose 65 pounds through CICO and working out consistently again. Some have asked, "How'd you lose weight?" I just tell them, "I watch my calories and work out. I don't eliminate whole food groups. Everything in moderation, etc."
So fast forward a couple of years and they STILL are running around in circles. "I'm not eating sugar." "I'm eating low carb." "I'm eating high fat." "I'm taking these supplements to suppress my appetite." "I'm doing Keto." "I can't work out because I have this, this, and this obligation." "My foot hurts." You get the idea.
Meanwhile, I continue on my merry way eating things I enjoy - some days in a deficit, some days in a surplus, some days at maintenance - and working out. I keep my mouth shut and watch in amusement, frustration, and irritation.
Thanks for letting me vent!!33 -
OP some people like to complain it makes them feel better
you can either tell them to do something about it if they keep yakking on about the same thing
or you can zone them out3 -
Yes @missh1967, things like that. Uuggghhhhh! And if you say something you either "thing your all that" or your "hating" . Can't win!4
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Think*1
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You just have to zone out and do you.
I'm in my third year of doing this (working on vanity stuff now) and back in my first year, I think I was down about 45 pounds at that point, I hadn't seen my sister for a while, and we were vacationing together. She sat me down. She even had a notebook and wanted to know everything. I went over it all. We sat for two hours going over it all. She's a former Weight Watcher's leader!
She's just not ready in her head to make those changes. Deep down she knows how this all works, but some friend of hers told her about Trim Healthy Mama, and that's what she's doing. I think in two years she's lost 5 pounds doing some weird food combining ish that ignores everything she knows deep down to be true.
She's doing her, I'm doing me.
By the time I'm done, I'm shooting to have lost 100 pounds. This morning, I'm 3 pounds from that, but that's largely due to being massively sick and I'm sure the scale will rocket back up tomorrow now that I'm eating again
And what I just said there? Is what you need to remember. You do you, and you'll get to your goals while those other people spin their wheels.23 -
once you have told these people our magical way of losing weight if they dont want to hear it, then its up to them. I have learnt this awhile back and rather than find it annoying i find it amusing. What many people want is some complicated method usually endorsed by a celebrity to then carry on as normal because then at least they have tried.
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I dont have cheat days.. I have Oh F* days. Then the next day I try harder.13
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I know exactly what you mean. I get irritated too. This weight loss journey takes patience, hard work, dedication and some sacrifices. If you're not ready to do what it takes to lose weight then you're not ready, you shouldn't be torturing yourself.2
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What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.2 -
Maybe they're tired of you8
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I guess one of the success of CiCo (in my case) is that I do not have cheat days because I do not need cheat days.
There's always a tasty, delicious, non-disruptive option for every food everyday.
When I started MFP journey (5 months ago, 18 Kilos lost so far) I decided to eat more of waht I considered "good food", After 5 months, I review my dairy and I realized that I am taking away a lot of that "good food" for two reasons:
- I don't like it
- MOST IMPORTANT, I don't NEED it to reach my daily goals.
Now, of course I have days where I exceeded the goals (Christmas was less than a month ago), but I planned ahead (and forward) and accepted the extra intake. But they were not "cheat days" since I did not decided to skip the diet on dispair. I made my decision mainly on social constraints (not to let family down, not to skip the tradition, etc)
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Monchichi3 wrote: »What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.5 -
Monchichi3 wrote: »Lounmoun wrote:What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.
Mindset. I believe I have control, not some food company. How I exercise that control varies. Sometimes I exercise that control by limiting my access to some items, sometimes I do it by only taking a small portion and putting the rest back on the top shelf of the pantry.
I have notes to myself about the realizations I've had regarding food and my relationship to it on our refrigerator. I see them every day. They reinforce just who's in charge every time I'm in the kitchen.
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Monchichi3 wrote: »What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.
"Manufactured" foods are just food. Some of it tastes good...some of it doesn't. That all depends on the person who is eating it...just like moderation is up to the person eating. Somewhere along the line we have to take responsibility for ourselves. Either learn to moderate those foods or if that isn't possible...restrict those foods for a while.
I love Peanut Butter M&Ms...reduced fat Cheezits...Goldfish. I am not good at moderating those foods...so for now I don't buy them. Should the manufacturers of those foods make them vile tasting so that I won't overeat them? They are in business to make a profit...so yes...they make their foods taste good so that you will come back and buy more. That is good business practice. If I manufactured a food item you better believe that I would want to make it taste so good that you would come back for more.
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Monchichi3 wrote: »What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.
"Manufactured" foods are just food. Some of it tastes good...some of it doesn't. That all depends on the person who is eating it...just like moderation is up to the person eating. Somewhere along the line we have to take responsibility for ourselves. Either learn to moderate those foods or if that isn't possible...restrict those foods for a while.
I love Peanut Butter M&Ms...reduced fat Cheezits...Goldfish. I am not good at moderating those foods...so for now I don't buy them. Should the manufacturers of those foods make them vile tasting so that I won't overeat them? They are in business to make a profit...so yes...they make their foods taste good so that you will come back and buy more. That is good business practice. If I manufactured a food item you better believe that I would want to make it taste so good that you would come back for more.
I am not ignorant to business concepts.
The majority who talk about eating the "foods they like" aren't talking about food that doesn't taste good to them.
l will save the rest of my thoughts for a different thread.1 -
Monchichi3 wrote: »Monchichi3 wrote: »What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.
"Manufactured" foods are just food. Some of it tastes good...some of it doesn't. That all depends on the person who is eating it...just like moderation is up to the person eating. Somewhere along the line we have to take responsibility for ourselves. Either learn to moderate those foods or if that isn't possible...restrict those foods for a while.
I love Peanut Butter M&Ms...reduced fat Cheezits...Goldfish. I am not good at moderating those foods...so for now I don't buy them. Should the manufacturers of those foods make them vile tasting so that I won't overeat them? They are in business to make a profit...so yes...they make their foods taste good so that you will come back and buy more. That is good business practice. If I manufactured a food item you better believe that I would want to make it taste so good that you would come back for more.
I am not ignorant to business concepts.
The majority who talk about eating the "foods they like" aren't talking about food that doesn't taste good to them.
l will save the rest of my thoughts for a different thread.
I'm sure you read "Salt, Sugar, Fat" and yes, there is some damning stuff in that book.
That still doesn't mean we're hapless victims of the food industry and that those foods jump in our carts, out of the pantry and into our mouths.
There's some room between where you're coming from and what we're saying to find balance.5 -
Wow, I'm the opposite. I get more annoyed that some people feel that it is their place to judge another person, especially when each persons weight loss journey is going to be different than anyone else.
Judgemental people make things so much more complicated than needed.
Wow you must have seriously deep wells of understanding to work from such a open and accepting place and such a giving nature that you can still find time to search out and comment on threads where people are failing to live up to your high standards. Yet without sounding at all judgemental
Shame we can't all be that perfect
Keep sharing the love5 -
GottaBurnEmAll wrote: »Monchichi3 wrote: »Monchichi3 wrote: »What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.
"Manufactured" foods are just food. Some of it tastes good...some of it doesn't. That all depends on the person who is eating it...just like moderation is up to the person eating. Somewhere along the line we have to take responsibility for ourselves. Either learn to moderate those foods or if that isn't possible...restrict those foods for a while.
I love Peanut Butter M&Ms...reduced fat Cheezits...Goldfish. I am not good at moderating those foods...so for now I don't buy them. Should the manufacturers of those foods make them vile tasting so that I won't overeat them? They are in business to make a profit...so yes...they make their foods taste good so that you will come back and buy more. That is good business practice. If I manufactured a food item you better believe that I would want to make it taste so good that you would come back for more.
I am not ignorant to business concepts.
The majority who talk about eating the "foods they like" aren't talking about food that doesn't taste good to them.
l will save the rest of my thoughts for a different thread.
I'm sure you read "Salt, Sugar, Fat" and yes, there is some damning stuff in that book.
That still doesn't mean we're hapless victims of the food industry and that those foods jump in our carts, out of the pantry and into our mouths.
There's some room between where you're coming from and what we're saying to find balance.
I never heard of this book.
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I get this with my dad. He's 73, diabetic and overweight, if not obese. All of his weight (and I mean all - his face, arms and legs are all skinny) is carried in his belly. He's been using MFP for probably almost two years, and also has a fitbit. Yet, he hasn't lost anything. He insists he logs everything and stays under his goal, but I know he doesn't. He doesn't log the oil he uses. He doesn't log the butter he uses. He doesn't log drinks and he doesn't use accurate entries. He takes my grandad (who has dementia and can't cook) out for lunch a few times a week, but my dad just uses generic entries for those. He just clicks the first one he sees or even sometimes the lowest one he sees. He blames his lack of weight loss on his medication. He's been going to the gym since november so that ought to help a little, but I think he's probably just eating more to compensate because it makes him hungrier. He's also the type of person who always thinks they are right and won't hear otherwise. At this point I've decided to just leave him to it.3
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Therealobi1 wrote: »OP some people like to complain it makes them feel better
you can either tell them to do something about it if they keep yakking on about the same thing
or you can zone them out
@MrsKila - You're spot on. It's frustrating. What tempers my replies though are my wife, daughter and a good friend. They all finally started after watching me for a year, saying they're going to do something, and never doing it, and then finally starting after seeing my results.
My wife is down 20 lbs now, and started strength training.
The forum folks - I'm learning how to just not see their threads any more lol.3 -
I think we have trouble being truthful with ourselves. . When things don't go my way I usually know why .. now I can make excuses but the results are the same ..so a good start is don't lie to yourself ..
Good luck and hang in there4 -
Therealobi1 wrote: »OP some people like to complain it makes them feel better
you can either tell them to do something about it if they keep yakking on about the same thing
or you can zone them out
@MrsKila - You're spot on. It's frustrating. What tempers my replies though are my wife, daughter and a good friend. They all finally started after watching me for a year, saying they're going to do something, and never doing it, and then finally starting after seeing my results.
My wife is down 20 lbs now, and started strength training.
The forum folks - I'm learning how to just not see their threads any more lol.
I've perfected the fine art of skimming contributions from certain posters. I'm sure some feel the same about me.9 -
I dont have cheat days.. I have Oh F* days. Then the next day I try harder.
Me too! My cheat days are never planned, I think people use the word 'cheat day' when really it was a 'oh fuk, I may as well start again tomorrow....kinda day!!' ...a perfectly normal part of a weight loss journey and something that happens to me at least once a week....even after losing 53lbs.
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GottaBurnEmAll wrote: »Therealobi1 wrote: »OP some people like to complain it makes them feel better
you can either tell them to do something about it if they keep yakking on about the same thing
or you can zone them out
@MrsKila - You're spot on. It's frustrating. What tempers my replies though are my wife, daughter and a good friend. They all finally started after watching me for a year, saying they're going to do something, and never doing it, and then finally starting after seeing my results.
My wife is down 20 lbs now, and started strength training.
The forum folks - I'm learning how to just not see their threads any more lol.
I've perfected the fine art of skimming contributions from certain posters. I'm sure some feel the same about me.
And me
Human nature, I'm sure there's someone for everyone here, with a mix this large.1 -
Monchichi3 wrote: »GottaBurnEmAll wrote: »Monchichi3 wrote: »Monchichi3 wrote: »What I would like to say to those people is stop restricting so much that you feel you need a cheat day. Drop that kind of mindset and you will probably have more sustainable weight loss. Just eat the food you like every day in smaller portions. Learn to moderate.
This mindset is what also gets some into trouble. Not all manufactured foods were designed to be eaten in moderation. How does one moderate certain foods purposely designed to eat more?
Many regain weight by slowly eating more and more "foods they like" (foods manufactured for the purpose of eating more) and then they are back at square one. Then they become people referenced in the op. For those that have the type of discipline to sustain eating everything in moderation, kudos.
"Manufactured" foods are just food. Some of it tastes good...some of it doesn't. That all depends on the person who is eating it...just like moderation is up to the person eating. Somewhere along the line we have to take responsibility for ourselves. Either learn to moderate those foods or if that isn't possible...restrict those foods for a while.
I love Peanut Butter M&Ms...reduced fat Cheezits...Goldfish. I am not good at moderating those foods...so for now I don't buy them. Should the manufacturers of those foods make them vile tasting so that I won't overeat them? They are in business to make a profit...so yes...they make their foods taste good so that you will come back and buy more. That is good business practice. If I manufactured a food item you better believe that I would want to make it taste so good that you would come back for more.
I am not ignorant to business concepts.
The majority who talk about eating the "foods they like" aren't talking about food that doesn't taste good to them.
l will save the rest of my thoughts for a different thread.
I'm sure you read "Salt, Sugar, Fat" and yes, there is some damning stuff in that book.
That still doesn't mean we're hapless victims of the food industry and that those foods jump in our carts, out of the pantry and into our mouths.
There's some room between where you're coming from and what we're saying to find balance.
I never heard of this book.
I think you'd like "Salt, Sugar, Fat". The author spoke to many food corporations executives and scientists. The book delves into how ultra-processed foods are engineered to be hyper-palatable and thus hard to moderate.2 -
^^^^I think I may read this book.0
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I try to just worry about me.7
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Have a Snicker's bar -- teasing aside -- When you're committed it's difficult to hear non-committal statements -- but everyone's at a different place. I've been committed to exercise and diet since May. My only cheat day was a brownie for my September birthday. And I'll do that again this year. Congrats on your commitment. Patience towards those who haven't jumped in all the way.3
This discussion has been closed.
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