Struggling with weight watchers
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I stopped taking Weight Watchers seriously the day I had a packet of 80 calorie apple cider mix for breakfast and it took literally all of my points (which most likely would have been used for food with actual nutritional value) away from me and I had to use my extra points. Also, the apple cider packet was gross, but that's neither here nor there1
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One interesting thing is that their recipes they suggest actually don't look that bad. However, they use a lot of reduced fat cheese and I'm kind of iffy on anything "light". It seems to me like those products are more processed.
I actually like the recipes, but I use foods that are a little "less processed" when I make them. You can find a ton of their recipes on Pinterest0 -
I had the same experience with WW. Lost great and felt great on the old Points Plus program. The current program was restrictive misery. I love the accountability and support of WW meetings, but calorie counting and exercising feels more empowering and right for me.
I laugh every time I see the Oprah commercial where she shouts about eating bread. That was the first thing I had to eliminate from my diet on the new WW program. 1 bagel was 12 points and I got 22 points for the whole day, lol.2 -
I did WW around 2003 (flex points were just being introduced) I lost weight - about 15 lbs- but was miserable and just felt bad about myself all of the time.
I developed a really unhealthy relationship with food and ballooned up to 270s.
Using mfp and just calorie counting I not only have an awesome relationship with food and myself but I am down 80 lbs and it is soooooo much simpler... And free.
I am definitely a "live and let live" person and don't try to push y experience on others... But when I see my friends and family battling with weight loss or fads I let them know this is a simpler way....1 -
newheavensearth wrote: »I left last week after a major blowout with a receptionist with no tact and a leader who couldn't understand why someone who exercises about 2 hrs per day would need to eat Fitpoints back (exercise calories). A lot of members are adding protein supplements to food to lower the points values. If you eat a 200 calorie dessert, you need to live off of tuna or chicken and veggies for the rest of the day. The list of foods I was avoiding or eliminating was constantly growing. I lost most of my weight on the old Program and it taught me so much about healthy eating. I've been battling the same 7 lbs for a year on the Smartpoints plan.
Yeah I cancelled mine today after tracking both WW and MFP yesterday and meeting my calorie goal with MFP, as well as the breakdown targets (carbs, fats, etc.), while in WW going 14 points over my daily allowance. I ate very well yesterday. I just thought that was ridiculous.1 -
Katiebear_81 wrote: »I lost weight on points plus, then stopped caring (thanks, depression!), and then though I'd join back up because it worked last time. I hate the new program.
If I eat 100 calories of jelly beans, I should have to use 2x as many points as 100 calories of chicken breast.
It's too restrictive for me. I wish I hadn't wasted the money.
Depression is so helpful, isn't it?1 -
songbird13291 wrote: »I re-joined Weight Watchers in March 2015 and had real success with Points Plus. there's a correlation between Points Plus and calories, when I double tracked here and at WW I could see the relationship.
I was there in December 2015 when Smart Points was introduced. I liked the holistic concept, the idea of viewing the member as a whole person, not just as a person trying to lose weight. But I lasted about 3 weeks. All of my "go-to" foods were suddenly too high in points, there was no correlation between points and calories. I was literally in tears at my last meeting, and the leader had nothing useful to offer me.
I tried calorie counting, and it worked, but I got sloppy about food choices. So I downloaded iTrackBites, and I'm doing Points Plus again. A little more structured, but it helps me make better food choices. If I'm staying within my points budget, I'm also hitting the target on calories and macros.
This iTrackBites sounds interesting. Do you do both that and MFP?0 -
Muscleflex79 wrote: »Oprah said no bread, so she lost me there.
It really depends on what program you're using. There have been many threads that echo what @Ready2Rock206 said, that the new one is highly restrictive. Some people stay on the older programs because that's what they're used to (tried and true, too).
When you were not on WW were you watching your intake (ie weighing, measuring, etc) and meeting your deficit, or is that why you need the 'jumpstart'? I don't mean this in a bad way, just if using it is making it feel like you are not succeeding, it may be better from a mental standpoint to not follow it, or find the older versions.
I thought Oprah's tag line was that she DOES still eat bread - like everyday!
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Agree with all of this. I am very close to goal (3 pounds away as of today) and losing an average of .7 a week, which is a great rate for me. I am still double-tracking with MFP and I can tell you from a CICO standpoint, unless you are eating an entire banana stand every day followed by 87 baby carrots and a dozen tomatoes, you should lose if you track servings properly.sunsweet77 wrote: »Can I share my trick? I'm losing 2-3lbs a week.
1. Track every morsel.
2. Eat anything you want just stay within your calories.
3. Sleep, sleep, sleep.
4. Water, water, water.
5. I don't eat back my active calories and I don't credit myself garmin given calories.
6. Eat balanced foods.
7. Take a daily pic of yourself. I do this and send it to my sis. It's my workout sweaty pic. Holds my accountable.
About 4 weeks in I was less hungry, had a ton more energy and was so proud of myself I don't want to stop. I hadn't felt proud of myself in so long I actually had forgotten what it felt like.
A few other things I did....got contacts, bought myself so new clothes and makeup and got my hair done, downloaded every song I could possibly want (which I never do-to workout). I think my confidence is beaming and that is the key. Simply confidence.
Last thing, first month I worked out hard every single day to prove to myself I could do it. It feels so good!
Try it!
I don't believe any diet is a lifetime commitment. Set realistic expectations and work hard at them, eat normal food. No box.
You can do this!
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As someone who did the current WW program and MFP and just reached lifetime, I would say forget their tracking. Track at MFP, but follow WW guidelines for exercise and avoiding food traps. Their way of trying to convince me that all sugar is bad for me didn't really help me at all I tracked everything through MFP (and still do) and just didn't track anything in WW. I lost the weight at a slow level but I just hit lifetime in January. It is possible esp if you need WW kick in the pants for the weekly weigh in to hold you accountable. Hopefully they'll switch their point system again1
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I think they are probably trying to get people to eat more well-rounded (ie nudging them towards meeting adequate protein and fiber instead of just being below calories) while still keeping to an overly-simple system of counting only one thing - which doesn't really work too well and creates what actually winds up being some overly complex bizarre points system.0
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