Have you tried GLP1 medications and found it didn't work for you? We'd like to hear about your experiences, what you tried, why it didn't work and how you're doing now. Click here to tell us your story
I ate bad food
Rebecca0224
Posts: 810 Member
This morning my boyfriend and daughter went to the store and came home with a couple donuts. My daughter wanted to share one with me so I ate it, it wasn't good not the least bit. After I finished it I was sad because I ate bad food. Since I started counting calories I don't eat food that doesn't taste good and after I finished this half a donut I regretted it. All day it has been popping in my that I finished it and it wasn't good in fact it was awful and tasted like oil and sugar. I have now decided that I will stick with glazed donuts. I think this is bothering more than it should but it was just so bad.
0
Replies
-
It is bothering you more than it should have. Just think of it as something you're not going to do again especially since you've realized you didn't like it as much as you would have thought.
Now, if you truly enjoyed it.....I would say to somehow fit this in as a treat now and then.
It's only one day and one moment. Move on and don't beat yourself up.
5 -
Ah so when you say bad you mean just poor quality and not tasty? I think have all been there, calorie counting or not! We just learn never to eat it again and move on. Or make a donut you do like fit into your day soon to remind you what the good stuff tastes like!2
-
Prelogging can help with eating food and then regretting it. If I see how many calories something has in advance I'm more likely to decide it's not worth it.1
-
Don't worry, you'll forget it soon enough. I've had this too. I've been counting and logging for more than a year. I'm maintaining at the moment. But ever since I started I stopped eating mediocre/bad tasting food too. It is just not worth the calories. You will get used to it eventually and stop doing it. It is a habit to eat whatever and you will lose it with time.0
-
There was a thread the other day about regret after wasting calories on food you didn't enjoy. There's nothing to be done about it once it is gone, but I do agree with you that it's a shame when you waste calories on something that doesn't live up to them.6
-
There's a thread recently about eating out and being dissapointed about the food choices taste wise. Everyone does it, now you recognize that you don't care for non glazed donuts anymore. Learn from it, and you can move on. The learning process is what makes life interesting :-)1
-
I hate it when I waste my calories on something that tastes bad.
Oh well a glazed donut never let me down:), so I think your plan is good:).2 -
It was probably more important to make your daughter happy by letting her share with you than to worry about the 145 calories or so represented by half a doughnut. It's your daughter you "spent" the calories on, not the doughnut, and that's nothing to regret.14
-
kshama2001 wrote: »Prelogging can help with eating food and then regretting it. If I see how many calories something has in advance I'm more likely to decide it's not worth it.
It's not that it was too many calories it was that it was awful and disappointing. If I want something I make it fit my calories. If it tasted good it would have been fine but it was awful.1 -
gebeziseva wrote: »Don't worry, you'll forget it soon enough. I've had this too. I've been counting and logging for more than a year. I'm maintaining at the moment. But ever since I started I stopped eating mediocre/bad tasting food too. It is just not worth the calories. You will get used to it eventually and stop doing it. It is a habit to eat whatever and you will lose it with time.
I usually stop if it's not good but my daughter was so excited to share with me, it would have broke her heart if I didn't eat it.3 -
It was probably more important to make your daughter happy by letting her share with you than to worry about the 145 calories or so represented by half a doughnut. It's your daughter you "spent" the calories on, not the doughnut, and that's nothing to regret.
That's why I finished it because it made her happy but it was so disappointing0 -
Rebecca0224 wrote: »It was probably more important to make your daughter happy by letting her share with you than to worry about the 145 calories or so represented by half a doughnut. It's your daughter you "spent" the calories on, not the doughnut, and that's nothing to regret.
That's why I finished it because it made her happy but it was so disappointing
Then play her smiling face in your head and not the disappointment of a bad tasting donut.7 -
Alatariel75 wrote: »There was a thread the other day about regret after wasting calories on food you didn't enjoy. There's nothing to be done about it once it is gone, but I do agree with you that it's a shame when you waste calories on something that doesn't live up to them.
It is SO much worse when it's an entire meal, especially if you've banked calories for a splurge and then it's dire. Sad panda.3 -
Rebecca0224 wrote: »It was probably more important to make your daughter happy by letting her share with you than to worry about the 145 calories or so represented by half a doughnut. It's your daughter you "spent" the calories on, not the doughnut, and that's nothing to regret.
That's why I finished it because it made her happy but it was so disappointing
Here's the thing: When we're trying to lose weight we're focusing on food as food. But food very often isn't just food. Human beings are social animals, and we make social occasions out of things like meals. Sharing food is one of the most important social things we do regularly. Even the most sacred rite of the world's most numerous religion is about food; a ritual meal. Can you imagine a Catholic turning down the Eucharist because it didn't fit into her calorie goal for the day, or being disappointed because it was so tasteless and chewy?
This doughnut wasn't a doughnut. It was your daughter being delighted to share something with you. If you focus on how disappointing it was as food, you're framing it in an unhelpful way. Forget how it tasted. Remember instead how happy your girl was to be sharing with her mom. That's her loving you.10 -
VintageFeline wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »There was a thread the other day about regret after wasting calories on food you didn't enjoy. There's nothing to be done about it once it is gone, but I do agree with you that it's a shame when you waste calories on something that doesn't live up to them.
It is SO much worse when it's an entire meal, especially if you've banked calories for a splurge and then it's dire. Sad panda.
My boyfriend is taking me out to lunch for my birthday and I'm trying to pick the perfect restaurant so I don't have that problem.2 -
I came to this thread expecting the usual "oh no I ate a jellybean and that's bad evil food" and was pleasantly suprised. Totally agree 100% that if you are going to eat donuts, eat good ones. Same with cake, pizza and chocolate6
-
Rebecca0224 wrote: »It was probably more important to make your daughter happy by letting her share with you than to worry about the 145 calories or so represented by half a doughnut. It's your daughter you "spent" the calories on, not the doughnut, and that's nothing to regret.
That's why I finished it because it made her happy but it was so disappointing
Here's the thing: When we're trying to lose weight we're focusing on food as food. But food very often isn't just food. Human beings are social animals, and we make social occasions out of things like meals. Sharing food is one of the most important social things we do regularly. Even the most sacred rite of the world's most numerous religion is about food; a ritual meal. Can you imagine a Catholic turning down the Eucharist because it didn't fit into her calorie goal for the day, or being disappointed because it was so tasteless and chewy?
This doughnut wasn't a doughnut. It was your daughter being delighted to share something with you. If you focus on how disappointing it was as food, you're framing it in an unhelpful way. Forget how it tasted. Remember instead how happy your girl was to be sharing with her mom. That's her loving you.
That helps, now I don't feel as bad. Thank you6 -
Not sure how long you've been on this journey but there will be more food disappointments. I went on a short vacay and it seemed everything I ate wasn't that great. I saved calories for the weekend and it was just meh.
Try not to let food determine your moods.2 -
leanjogreen18 wrote: »Not sure how long you've been on this journey but there will be more food disappointments. I went on a short vacay and it seemed everything I ate wasn't that great. I saved calories for the weekend and it was just meh.
Try not to let food determine your moods.
If it doesn't taste good I stop eating. I would rather go hungry than eat food I don't enjoy and I think that is why it's bothering me so much.0 -
Nothing bad about donuts but it's a pity the one you ate wasn't as delicious as it should have been. There are no bad foods just some are more calorie dense and have little nutrition so need to be eaten in moderation.
We can enjoy these sort of treats just save calories for them.
My advice is to log it and move on.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 392.8K Introduce Yourself
- 43.7K Getting Started
- 260.1K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.8K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 413 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.9K Motivation and Support
- 7.9K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.6K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.5K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions