How do you recover from bad diet day?
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I remind myself that one cheeseburger (or day) isn't going to derail you any more than one salad (or day) is going to make you look like a fitness model.2
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Today is a bad diet day. I had two slices of pie and one glazed donut. I'm fine with it0
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I just ate a grass fed burger, and asked for veggies. They brought fries. Asked for veggies, they started saying blah blah. I just said eff it and ate them. Over on fat. Over on calories 100 something.... it's whatever. Tonorrow.
I do feel like I ate a bowl full of concrete now. I haven't had fries in 6 weeks or more.1 -
endlessfall16 wrote: »I've done this about one day a week for the past three weeks. Ugh. Every time, I decided to restrict even further for the next few days. I noticed it led to a binge and restrict cycle. It was easy to restrict the following day, since I still felt full from the day before. But on day two and day three, I was tired and lethargic... on day four, I tried to just resume my normal calorie goal and found it really tricky, and then on day seven/eight it all came crashing down again.
So I've decided that if this happens, I'm just going to use it to fuel a good workout the next day, maybe eat fewer calories the following day (if that's what comes naturally), and get back on the wagon.
Why did you continue to restrict on day two, three, four...? That's just too many days that it's overkill for one day of excessive eating. Not surprise that you felt tired and lethargic.
OP, I don't have a bad day or a cheat day, but what you said is the basis of my eating. On weekend I consume a whole lot of calories, then come Monday I eat much lighter. On Tuesday and Wednesday I eat a bit more depending on my activities. All in all it's still deficit or balance for me. I don't get hung up with any cravings, foods or anything.
Well, I tried to figure out how much I ate (I wasn't logging during the binge) and "spread out" the calories over the week, so I would make up for it by day five or so. Only cutting like 300-400 calories each day. But it didn't work. It was a bad plan. Live and learn.
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My attitude toward it: Life happens. I don't worry about it or try to compensate for it, just go back to my normal routine the next day. I didn't get fat in one day, I didn't lose all the weight in one day, and I'm not going to gain it all back in one day so it's no big deal. Nothing more than a very minor little bump in the road, which is completely insignificant in the long run.4
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He said it ^0
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You simply need to average your weekly calories requirement and have the deficit required.
After a bad diet day simply get back to your regular diet and create some extra deficit to balance the extra calories that you consumed earlier.
Just remember just eating clean one day won't make any change in your body, similarly a bad diet day won't have any extrem effect on your over all results. Just try to avoide as much as possible as stick to your diet.
Remember it's not one day task, it's a lifestyle.
That why at Get Set Go Fitness we always suggest to follow a sustainable diet plan.
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TavistockToad wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »
Yesterday I had 2300 calories when i supposee to have 1500/day
So you ate at maintenance for a day but felt the need to punish yourself? Why?
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I remind myself that I am in it for the long haul, I am not perfect and mistakes happen then I go to the gym and add extra weights to the rack as.1
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I've done this about one day a week for the past three weeks. Ugh. Every time, I decided to restrict even further for the next few days. I noticed it led to a binge and restrict cycle. It was easy to restrict the following day, since I still felt full from the day before. But on day two and day three, I was tired and lethargic... on day four, I tried to just resume my normal calorie goal and found it really tricky, and then on day seven/eight it all came crashing down again.
So I've decided that if this happens, I'm just going to use it to fuel a good workout the next day, maybe eat fewer calories the following day (if that's what comes naturally), and get back on the wagon.
Please be careful with this. If I remember correctly you are currently pregnant ? I know you want to keep your gain in check but I would not recommend trying to cut your calories like that especially to the point where you feel weak.0 -
Am I the only one here who has never gone over my calories in a day? If I am having a big eating day I make sure it is a big exercise day first. Maybe I need to let my hair down a bit more.0
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How to get over it? Let it go and go back to regular diet.0
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If it's maintenance level or close to, I don't do anything. If I've had a big splurge, well over maintenance, I get right back to my logging the next day, drink a little extra water, and take an extra 10-15 walk per day for the next week and don't log those exercise calories. If I know in advance I'm going to go out with friends, I try to build in the extra calories so I can have a glass of wine or a restaurant meal. Weight loss is a challenge, obviously, so I am really trying not to make it extra stressful by punishing myself or being too strict.
In the past, I've tried to to go 100% on plan until goal weight, but this time I'm going for the 80/20 rule. I'm also practicing moderate indulgences - planning for a glass of wine or slice of pizza or piece of really good chocolate without drinking the whole bottle, eating half a pizza, or a whole box of chocolates.0 -
Every day is its own day in my book, and the word "binge" is banned from my dictionary. There's nothing unnatural with wanting something extra now and then, I just have to satisfy the want and go on as usual. If I feel like eating less the next day, then I am not going to force more food of course. Nothing sets me up for failure quite like fixating on that one unhealthy meal, as I end up losing some confidence, dieting determination decreases, and my relationship with food gets damaged. I'd say stop thinking about it, leave it in the past, and do better tomorrow.0
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Any time I have a day that I went over my calorie goal (like, waaay over, not just 100 or so), I put it behind me and move on. If I'm feeling especially bad about it, I'll do a little more exercise over the next couple of days. Literally, a LITTLE more. Just as others are saying, One day of overeating is not going to make you gain weight, just as one day of under-eating is not going to make you lose weight.
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spiriteagle99 wrote: »I just look at each day as a new start. I don't worry about what I did the day before, I just focus on eating well today.
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"Wow, that was good food I enjoyed yesterday."
And then I get back on track, try to make the better choices, move more and look forward. No regrets.0 -
I try to just carry on with my normal calorie allowance and maybe step up the exercise a bit the next day but that's it really. If I deprive myself too much I start to binge ....I've learned the hard way.0
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spiriteagle99 wrote: »I just look at each day as a new start. I don't worry about what I did the day before, I just focus on eating well today.
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If planned (holidays, birthdays, etc): I will eat a little less (250 cal) 3 days before and 3 days after.
If unplanned (bad day/spontaneous party): I log it and move on.0 -
Do you restrict additional calories the day(s) after? Exercise more? Just Curious... If I go over my calories by a lot I'll only eat about 500 caps the next day
Just get back on track with the next meal. No need to restrict calories the next day. As long as you don't consistently have bad days one after another then one "bad" day as you call it won't affect your long term goal.0 -
I don't think there is anything wrong with having a 500 calorie day right after. If you are used to intermittent fasting such days are extremely easy after a heavy day. I use that strategy sometimes. HOWEVER, the mindset you have when you are doing this is EXTREMELY important. If I plan a high day, I often also plan a low day afterwards. It's just part of my overall strategy because I find this whole thing easier this way. I will never ever do a low day as punishment or for going over. If I eat over unplanned, I decide next day if I want to fast or not, if not, no big deal. I just see try to be careful not to go over again unplanned. I feel annoyed, of course, but I don't feel like I've made a big mistake that I need to punish myself for. Just a "life happens, and it can suck sometimes" kind of annoyance.
If you're doing it to attone for your sins, if you are lead to this by guilt and anxiety, if fast days are unnecessarily hard for you, if you are tempted to go too low for more than one day, if this triggers a cycle of binge and restrict for you, if this kind of strategy is not sustainable for you, and if you have any other negative results or associations with the way you are doing it, I would be very careful. You want to build sustainable habits for the future, not just do whatever it takes to lose the weight. Fasting can be sustainable, but it needs a solid mental approach because it can easily turn into something very negative.
P.S: 2300 calories is likely not that much over your maintenance. The difference it makes is barely a blip beyond the water weight gain. You can safely get over it and move on without any noticeable damage to your weight loss process if you so choose.0 -
I just get back on track.. One day doesnt affect me at all. Maybe up for a day due to extra salt and waste in the body but otherwise it shouldnt do anything to you.0
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For me, depends how hungery I am the next day. If I'm really not, then i won't eat much. If I am, then I eat like normally. I try not to hold a day of going over, over my head. It was only a day and one day won't hurt. Just can't let it turn into more.0
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I go for a good run. Then go back to normal0
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cerise_noir wrote: »It's just one day.
Did you know that mfp calories aren't maintenance calories? You potentially have anywhere from 250-1000 calories before you hit maintenance (depending on how many pounds per week you selected to lose). It's unhealthy and unnecessary to eat 500 the next day.... just eat your normal calories and move on. One day is just a drop in the ocean.
I have found that this simple fact has helped me immensely on days when I eat more than my calorie goal. It takes away the guilt and makes it so much easier to stay on track for the long term. I just wish I had this epiphany years ago.0 -
spiriteagle99 wrote: »I just look at each day as a new start. I don't worry about what I did the day before, I just focus on eating well today.
Yep. One good choice at a time. I log and move on.0
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