Can you eat ANYTHING?

I was wondering has anyone been able to eat anything (junk food included) stay within the suggested calories and still lose weight?
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Replies

  • Lizzy622
    Lizzy622 Posts: 3,705 Member
    simple answer : YES I don't deny myself an occasional cookie or brownie or slice of pizza. It helps me stay on track the rest of the time. You need to be flexible.
  • oolou
    oolou Posts: 765 Member
    Yes. If I do go over the suggested calories for the day I'll do extra cardio to make the deficit or eat lighter on another day. You can eat anything and lose weight if you make the calorie deficit.
  • moonstroller
    moonstroller Posts: 210 Member
    When I was 30 I weighed 178 with less than 7% body fat and I could literally eat anything I wanted, but I was also working out an insane amount of time, two to three hours per day with a mix of cardio and lifting. As long as you're burning the calories you're consuming you shouldn't gain weight, the problem is when you start getting a calorie surplus.
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    annacole94 wrote: »
    u3jbwpdtizju.jpg

    I LOVE this!!!!

    OP as others have said - what matters for weight loss is that you create a calorie deficit. You can do that eating any foods that you choose. I typically recommend the following approach:

    1. Enter accurate stats, activity level, and goal weight in MFP
    2. Select an appropriate rate of loss (if less than 50 lbs to lose - no more than 1 lb/week. If less than 25, no more than 0.5 lb/week)
    3. MFP will calculate a calorie target for you.
    4. Eat a variety of foods up to that calorie target, focusing on those that provide nutrition (macro and micro nutrients), satiety (fills you up), and enjoyment (helps keep you on track to include the foods you love in moderation)
    5. Log everything you eat as honestly and accurately as possible, ideally using a food scale
    6. If you exercise, log and eat back at least a portion of those calories
    7. Be patient. Monitor and adjust after 6-8 weeks.

    I lost the weight I set out to lose and never gave up eating things like pizza and ice cream with my family, wine in the evenings, etc. I did focus on eating a balanced diet and incorporating more protein, more vegetables, more exercise, more sleep. By focusing on things I was adding within my calorie target, and not cutting things out, I found I naturally prioritized the things that were good for me and filled me up, while still leaving room for the things that I loved in moderation.
  • Silentpadna
    Silentpadna Posts: 1,306 Member
    Chocolate chip cookies (3-4) almost every day. And my vice (Coca Cola), when I have the room in my budget. (I used to drink 5-6 cans per day - had no budget at all).

    If I have the budget I eat what I want.

    So......

    Yes.
  • rrgoswick
    rrgoswick Posts: 4 Member
    ON occasion I will have a treat or two when I am really craving it. If I don't then I am more likely to gorge on sweets at a later time. I have learned that I have to be flexible. IF I go over by a small amount one day then I just know I have to try harder from that point on. Usually when I completely restrict myself is usually when I fail.
  • janjunie
    janjunie Posts: 1,200 Member
    Absolutely! Cutting sugar, restricting "fun foods", eating very little fat...etc is a recipe for failure. I lost all my baby weight (3 x's) from eating what I like in moderation.
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    I regularly ate foods that are considered "junk" (I don't find the term very useful myself) when I was losing weight. As long as I hit my calorie goals consistently, I made progress. The trick is measuring your portions accurately (before I was losing weight, my idea of a "serving" of tortilla chips was nothing like what the bag considers a serving for calorie purposes) and knowing foods that you might find harder to moderate. There's no way I personally want to order a plate of french fries and just eat a handful, so I only ordered fries when I knew that I had the calories to eat them. Other people have no problem moderating fries, so it wouldn't be an issue for them.

    All you need is a calorie deficit. Some days, especially early on, I would have a food and realize that it wasn't really worth it for the number of calories. Those foods, I usually didn't have again. Some things, like a scoop of freshly made chocolate non-dairy chocolate ice cream or a gin and tonic on a summer night, almost always felt worth it and I had them more frequently.

  • cs2thecox
    cs2thecox Posts: 533 Member
    As others have said, as long as you're in calorie deficit, you'll lose.

    But then it's about how those foods make you feel, or how long they make you feel full for.
    It's quite easy to make 3 decent size meals and two snacks out of, say, 1600 calories if you're using lots of veggies and lean proteins. Sensible carbs and some healthy fats along with the protein will help you feel full for a long time.
    But if you want to eat the 1600 calories in pizza, beer and chocolate, it will look much smaller on the plate, and might leave you either high on sugar or in a post-junk energy slump.

    If you're exercising too, it's likely that you'll have more energy if you eat more healthy foods as you'll be better fuelled for your workouts.

    Calories are like money I guess. You can spend it wisely on durable, useful goods, or you can spend the same amount of money on something you really really want but doesn't last so long. Or maybe the choice between paying your bills and buying groceries, or blowing your paycheck on amazing new shoes that make you happy for five minutes but leave you feeling regretful for the rest of the month ;)
  • TeacupsAndDeadlifts
    TeacupsAndDeadlifts Posts: 7 Member
    edited May 2017
    I was wondering has anyone been able to eat anything (junk food included) stay within the suggested calories and still lose weight?

    I've lost 11% of my bodyweight by eating whatever I want, just staying within my calorie goals.
  • happyauntie2015
    happyauntie2015 Posts: 282 Member
    I've been loosing weight while eating a little of everything. I don't deny myself I simply make sure it fits within my calories for the day.
  • lorrpb
    lorrpb Posts: 11,463 Member
    From a nutritional standpoint, there certainly is junk food! It is very difficult to eat much junk food and stay within your calorie goals, let alone get decent nutrition.
  • zachsus
    zachsus Posts: 6 Member
    Physically, you can. What it's gonna do to your body is another thing. First of all, vitamin and macro-nutrient deficiencies may start appearing and messing up your health. The mental aspect is another thing, if you are on a diet and your calories are low, blowing it all on a a bit of pizza or something and then not being able to eat for the rest of the day will demotivate you really quickly and you'd rather eat 1lb of vegies to feel full than having a chocolate bar and starving until the next morning.
  • OhMsDiva
    OhMsDiva Posts: 1,073 Member
    My answer is yes and no. I can eat anything, but I truly find that I am more successful with my weight loss when I don't eat anything and eat more healthy foods. Maybe the junk food does not fill me, which prompts me to eat more but I have tried CICO and it really does not work for me.
  • joemac1988
    joemac1988 Posts: 1,021 Member
    I was wondering has anyone been able to eat anything (junk food included) stay within the suggested calories and still lose weight?

    Yes ma'am. I routinely eat poptarts, pizza, bagels, burgers etc.

    The trick is that it would be impossible to hit your macros on just that kind of food so it forces you to eat clean food 80% of the time. For example, I ate 3 doughnuts yesterday at 5AM while deadlifting for simple carbs. But, that put a dent in my fat and carb allotment for the day so my lunch was just grilled chicken and my dinner was grilled chicken and grilled zuccini.
  • kgirlhart
    kgirlhart Posts: 5,145 Member
    I lost 70 pounds eating whatever I wanted and staying at my calorie goal. I did find that some foods did not keep me full as well as others so what I want to eat has changed a bit. But I still eat out, both fast food and sit down restaurants, and I still eat processed foods and sweets. I just eat them in moderation and have portion sizes that are appropriate for me.
  • allisonl6
    allisonl6 Posts: 37 Member
    Look at my diary. I've lost over 90 lbs eating what many here would consider junk. But I eat a lot less of it than I did and am better at getting fruit and vegetables than I was.

    Even going to hit the pub tonight to watch hockey. Will have wings (which isn't "junk" but some would call them that).

    I'm learning what it is to eat healthier as I go. I'm learning what healthy foods I like and make sure my diet isn't totally rabbit food. But I'm also looking long term and know that the habits I make now will have to be the same habits when I hit my goal weight.

    I really appreciated looking through your diary. To know that you've lost so much while still enjoying yourself gave me a big boost of confidence that I am doing alright. So thanks :)
  • SusanMFindlay
    SusanMFindlay Posts: 1,804 Member
    Yes and no. I regularly eat many foods that get labeled "junk food". A single serving of chips or pretzels. A single serving of ice cream. A homemade cookie or two. Yummy stuff like that.

    I have found, for me, that there are a couple of foods that are not a good idea for me to eat because I have too much trouble with portion control. So, I don't eat snack crackers. Not because there's anything inherently worse about them than chips or cookies or ice cream. But because I will eat half the box.

    I also regularly eat many foods that the "clean eaters" would scoff at - though I don't consider them junk at all. Thin crust pizza with a salad or with edamame is a perfectly fine dinner, in my opinion. And sausage is perfectly fine as my protein on occasion. Steak? Yep. Bacon? Yep. Cheese? Yep. Pasta? Yep. All perfectly decent foods that can be eaten in appropriate portions as part of a balanced meal.