Special occasions make this feel impossible

cefleischman
cefleischman Posts: 46 Member
edited November 21 in Health and Weight Loss
I'm struggling. When I'm at home during the week and have 100% control over my meals and portions, I do okay. On the weekend when it's someone's birthday, a housewarming party, wedding, basically any celebration with food... I fall off the wagon and hate myself. If I have a piece of cake then I feel like I ruined my diet for the day (which it kind of does because it takes up so many of my daily calories). If I don't have a piece of cake then I think about it for hours. Unfortunately, I'm not even kidding. I actually think about how bad I wanted *insert unhealthy food here.* I feel like I'm missing out by turning down drinks, dessert, etc... Any advice for someone new at losing weight/struggling?
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Replies

  • fiddletime
    fiddletime Posts: 1,868 Member
    When I eat a piece of cake I try to stick with just one. I log it. I've pre-logged the rest of the day and it'll push me into the red, which I hate. If I'm set to lose a pound a week 500 cal over one day won't make a big deal out of the 3500 cal/pound lost (or gained).
  • potatoyeti
    potatoyeti Posts: 38 Member
    Their is no need to feel guilty. The reality is the harder you try to just eat clean the more likely you are to fail and regain weight in the long run. Basically it's okay to endulge every now and then your only human after all.
  • DebLaBounty
    DebLaBounty Posts: 1,169 Member
    I pre-log what I want to consume before I go. Then I go for a run or a bike ride. So I eat a light lunch, log the cake and glass of wine, and see what's left over. And I don't chide myself if I go over my calorie budget for the day. Please don't beat yourself up, it really saps the joy out of life for no good reason.
  • Rincewind_1965
    Rincewind_1965 Posts: 639 Member
    Where is the problem?
    You (usually) know in advance that such an occasion is going to happen.

    The easiest way to solve your problem: Raise your calorie budget by sports.
    The way to go is not to avoid "unhealthy food" (for whatever that is) but to reach the point when you ask yourself "Is it worth it?"

    Example: A piece of cake X has (assumed) 800 kcal this would mean ~ 80 minutes of medium to high intensity workout ... Is it worth it? If the answer is "Yes", then by all means get the cake and have a decent run afterwards, or walk the long way home, or, or, or,
    Saying that you "Fell off the wagon" in fact is the easiest and worst possible way out.
    Granted, one ruined day will not ruin the whole project, but exactly knowing when this is going to happen and doing nothing about it is a lack of consistency, not more, not less.
  • ladyhusker39
    ladyhusker39 Posts: 1,406 Member
    F it
    It won't kill you
    Don't worry about what you ate last
    Think about what you're gonna eat next

    I love this comment so much! Whether you succeed or fail totally depends on what you do next.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    Raise your calorie goal. If your calorie goal is so low you can't live a normal life that is not very sustainable. Choose to lose at a slower rate or start exercising more.
    Look at your weekly calorie goal instead of just daily. You can eat lighter a couple of days or exercise a bit more to have more calories for events that week.
    Have a maintenance calorie day once a week. If you have a deficit the rest of the days you can still lose. The more maintenance days the slower the loss will be though.
    Prioritize and make choices. Don't try to have it all in one day. If you want the cake then maybe you want to choose low calorie or no calorie drinks. If you want beer or wine that day you might need to eat lower calorie foods and/or only have one drink. Maybe you want to skip breakfast so you can have dessert later. Maybe you decide you don't have to go to every event you are invited to if it is every week and stressing you out. Maybe look for ways to be active at events like dancing, playing games, helping clean up, taking pictures.
    Don't sit or stand by the food table.
    If it is appropriate for the occasion bring a dish to share that you feel comfortable eating.
    Eat slowly and really savor whatever you are indulging in.
    Eat reasonable portions and then pop some mint gum in your mouth.
    Don't bring home party leftovers.
  • melissaulmen
    melissaulmen Posts: 123 Member
    The weekends are always tough. You need to figure out a balance so you can still enjoy the weekend festivities.

    Come up with a plan that works for you, if it is not working, try again. This is a learning experience and you need to figure out what works for you. Eat healthy on the weekdays, but allow yourself some wiggle room on the weekends.

    You have to allow yourself to enjoy those extra moments or else it will be hard to stick with anything for long term.
  • veganbaum
    veganbaum Posts: 1,865 Member
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Something I had to learn to keep from blowing my deficit every weekend: occasions that occur every week are not special occasions. Also, some occasions that are special for someone else (friend's birthday) aren't necessarily special for me.

    This is a good frame of mind to have, OP, along with the advice to just eat a small portion, or take a bite to see if it's really worth it.

    If you have a "special occasion" every weekend, how special can it really be? I wouldn't see a housewarming party as particularly special. Get together with your friends and celebrate their purchase of a new home? Okay, but is that really an occasion for cake?

    Just like budgeting your calories for every other day of the week, you could just take smaller portions of the things you'd like to try. Or, you could bank calories for the weekend and have larger portions of those things. I typically bank 1,000 calories for the weekend, plus have a longer walk on Saturday and Sunday so that my calories both those days are higher than M-F. So, I can eat quite a bit on the weekends and still maintain my deficit.

    There are ways to work around the "special occasions" that are not painful or guilt-ridden.
  • abicuffyxx
    abicuffyxx Posts: 6 Member
    Don't punish yourself! Try to limit the damage done (less cake, just drink water) and then balance it out with some exercise.
  • cefleischman
    cefleischman Posts: 46 Member
    Thank you all for the helpful suggestions!!
This discussion has been closed.