How do you all do it?
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First, for the OP, hugs. It's SO hard, I know, and even harder when you get a few days and then screw up. I know exactly what that's like.
Here's a few bits of info that might help, plus what has worked in the past for me...and what I'm using right now, because I screwed up and got off my good diet and am in the same boat (for different reasons, but same boat, basically).
Okay, so first off, it's good to have some 'good' snacks around for whenever you need them. AT home, in the car, in your purse or pocket, whatever.
Then, it is REALLY helpful to notice WHEN you are eating the 'bad' foods. When you are hungry? Stressed or emotionally upset? Relaxed and happy? After work? During work?
If you notice some common themes, that's what you want to guard against with 'good' snacks for yourself. Go and proactively GET the good snacks when the themes are happening. You start to feel hungry, go right for the good snack before the cravings hit. If stress is the trigger, just go start munching when you feel stressed, and so on.
Another big, BIG help is to find food you can have and that you LIKE. This may take a little while (some nutritionists have their clients do this slowly, but you sound like that may not be possible), but basically, start trying out new dishes that meet your food requirements. Whenever you find a 'good' one, add that to your weekly meal plan until you eventually only have safe AND good tasting dishes to eat. It makes it much more likely to stay on the diet if you actually like it, you know?
I go on pinterest for this. If you haven't before, it is SO easy to browse for new recipes there and you get that visual picture right off the bat, so it's nice to browse through. Just put in recipe low sodium (or heart healthy maybe) and maybe an ingredient or two, and you'll likely come up with some good stuff (like this low sodium ranch seasoning mix - https://bakeatmidnite.com/low-sodium-ranch-seasoning-mix/).
And that brings me to another thing that can help - herbs. I would highly recommend starting an herb garden, because throwing in a handful of herbs can make a huge difference in flavor, which is such a big thing with the low sodium, yeah? And having a garden means you can use a lot of herbs without a big cost. :-)
And one last thing...a while back, there was a study on self-control/will. And basically, what was found was that people tend to have, well, kind of a finite level of will power. Everyone is different, but essentially, if you use a lot of will power for one thing, then you have LESS will power left for other things.
Like, if you use your will power in forcing yourself to exercise, you leave less that day for helping you eat right. And vice versa. It applies to anything that involves control, too. Didn't yell at a crummy boss, stayed up late studying, forced yourself to get up early, did a chore you didn't like? All of that takes will power.
So one thing that has helped me is to basically try to lower my 'will power' moments while i was trying to stick to my good diet. Not try to exercise, not try to talk to that one person who drives me nuts, and so on. It's not perfect, but it can help. And KNOWING about the will power, if it's been a day that required a lot of will power, it can help me to remember that it's going to be harder to stick to my diet that day, so I may want to take steps to help myself stay on track, you know?
wishing you good luck!
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We all have our "trigger foods" that we just shouldn't eat because we can't stop. For me, it's potato chips, so I just don't buy them anymore. I like salty stuff AND I'm on a low sodium diet too. If you shouldn't have processed lunch meats, then stop buying them. Roast a whole chicken and slice it up for sandwiches or look for low sodium lunch meats. Measuring your portions also helps to make sure you stay within your macros for sodium. If you like chips, eat chips, but buy the low salt or no salt varieties. If that's all you have in the house when the craving hits, then your snacking won't be so damaging to your blood pressure. My other trick is to allow myself one cheat meal each week which includes dessert. Knowing that I have an allowed splurge meal coming up helps me stay on track when I am tempted to eat something I know I shouldn't. The main thing, however, is if you do "mess up", don't beat yourself up about it. Simply log everything you ate and move on. Start over the next day and keep at it. The only way to "do it" is just to keep on doing it, day in and day out.0
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First of all - hurray to you for not letting a bumpy day throw you off track. We have them but can't let them defeat us. You are trying to learn from your bumpy day - so please give yourself a pat on the back for that.
I am finding that it gets easier the longer you are at it. At the beginning of this it takes a lot of thought and planning to change the way you eat and your old habits. But once you are more established in the better eating patterns instead of grabbing a few sandwiches you have more items in your repertoire to quickly pull together for a healthier option.
While I hate to grocery shop I am happy that I am the one to do the shopping and cooking because I am just keeping items I don't want to eat out of the house. It's not an option.
Keep at it. It will become more natural.0 -
Maybe this is not what you are looking for, but:
You don't know how to keep on track yet, you are still learning. It's like saying you speak French, how do you do it? Practice, accepting correction, memorization, making it fun. Same thing as any other skill. Log good days, during that day where you are out of control eitger log it or don't. (Opinions vary) Then immediately after think, ok what happened and what are concrete steps to not have it happen again? Can't eat high sodium lunchmeat and Pringles if you don't buy them and sub in healthier whole muscle meat and popped rice chips. Did you do this because you hadn't eaten breakfast? Fixable. Didn't plan meals? Totally fixable. Like any other problem, look at what went wrong and tinker your way out. It's not willpower because that's a short term not long term solution for many people. It's practice, correcting, remembering what doesn't work and repetition. In fact, what you are doing now (recognizing the problem and looking for solutions from people who might have applicable answers) is exactly the right move. Now you just need to pick what will help and try it out. You're doing just fine. Dont be so hard on yourself. It burns no calories.1 -
I went through the same thing a few days ago. Did great for about 5 days then all I could think about was pizza. And of course I didn't just order pizza I went ahead and ordered wedges and spicy wings and garlic bread. It arrived, I sat and enjoyed a slice of pizza and garlic bread and had two spicy wings. The rest as was always my habit I cooled and put in the fridge, again as I always used to. No later had I put it away that guilt hit me. The thought that I had done so well and now gone over. Suddenly the remaining food sitting in the fridge was my enemy. I grew so disheartened with myself that I threw it all out and made myself pay the equivalent amount I had spent on the food to a charity. Needless to say it was a hefty price to pay for one slip but a powerful lesson. There was no need for me to order the extras, I should have just stuck to pizza. But habit didn't even give me a chance to stop and think what I was doing when ordering, purely because this is how I had always ordered. So the next day I picked myself up, dusted myself off decided I wasn't going to beat myself up for it anymore and continued with my new way of eating. Accountable, calorie controlled and no guilt1
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For me what always worked best was "Sunday fun day is a cooking day" Preparing meals for all 5 working days on Sunday. I can't eat porridge so this includes breakfasts, different lunches, dinners and emergency snacks why I got so fat is because being so busy at work I was reaching for quick easy meals without thinking it through as I didn't have time or didn't feel like cooking. I'm back on diet and it's never been easier. Fridge and freezer full of portioned and balanced meals to pick and choose from. This works great for me. Yoghurt, a bit of granola, bananas and apples keep me distracted from cookies constantly available in the office0
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I gotta tell you, the hardest part is the beginning. If you stick with it, really stick with it for let's say a month, you'll feel the difference in your body. More energy, less gas/bloating. Then, have an unhealthy meal. In the immediate, it's great but very soon after I feel greasy and bloated and heavy and lethargic. I've really come to differentiate how I feel after a cheat meal and sometimes I'm ok and it tempts me to continue eating crappy but then I do it too soon after and that gross feeling comes back.
Does that mean I don't stress? No freaking way. I still love the bad stuff but I hate the way I feel after eating it too much now.0 -
Honestly? Because I've seen that it works. Weighing my solid foods and recording diligently is why I've lost over 100lbs over the past 2 years. It's why I'm less than 20lbs from my ultimate goal weight. It's why my 5' tall, 120lb mom and I can share clothes.
Does that mean I log meticulously every single day? Nope. In fact, about one day out of the week I may have a meal that I am incapable of logging with 100% accuracy (dining out, for example) or I have a couple of alcoholic beverages that takes me out of my daily deficit. I still lose weight. Why? According to a macros calculator, my TDEE is around 2192 calories per 24-hour period. In order to lose weight, eating at a 20% deficit would put me around 1700 calories per day. I have my calories set to 1270 and I eat back almost every calorie I estimate that I burn, which puts me in the 1300-1500 calories per day, which allows me to still come in at a 200 calorie a day deficit. That gives me a significant number of calories to fudge in a week and still not gain. That does not mean I give myself permission to totally go off the rails. I don't do cheat days, or even cheat meals. I still log to the best of my ability, but I don't stress myself over the rare occasions that I do not flawlessly keep track.2 -
I'm not sure if this is a problem for you, but I feel like what derails me most often is the all or nothing attitude. I have to miss my class at the gym so I might as well eat terribly to right? Or... I messed up and ate a piece of cake, so now my daily goal is ruined so I might as well eat a few doughnuts too... I am often guilty of that same thing with exercise. If I don't have time to get in three miles, instead of trying to do one or two I'm just gonna not exercise at all.
What I should be doing after I "mess up" is move on and go back to trying to do the best I can, or don't even think of it as messing up. You'd be miserable if you never ate any of the treat foods you love. What good is being hot if you aren't happy?
Sometimes I have a hard time fighting against that attitude but I have a lot more success when I just log it and move on, start again with a blank slate5 -
You keep jumping back in the arena after you fall off the wagon! I've been on a two week break because I've been traveling, stressed at work, lacking sleep... I refuse to live in guilt because I needed a break, I told myself as long as I'm not putting weight back on I'm alright. Friday at 5pm, I'm going for a run so I can get back on track now that other things in life have calmed down. I don't believe in fitness lifestyles that overly structured and exhaustive because to me they are unrealistic with real life. I want to live healthy and feel good but I'm not going to make my gym sessions a higher priority than my husband or family. It's all about finding balance again, again, and again!1
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I'm not sure if this is a problem for you, but I feel like what derails me most often is the all or nothing attitude. I have to miss my class at the gym so I might as well eat terribly to right? Or... I messed up and ate a piece of cake, so now my daily goal is ruined so I might as well eat a few doughnuts too... I am often guilty of that same thing with exercise. If I don't have time to get in three miles, instead of trying to do one or two I'm just gonna not exercise at all.
What I should be doing after I "mess up" is move on and go back to trying to do the best I can, or don't even think of it as messing up. You'd be miserable if you never ate any of the treat foods you love. What good is being hot if you aren't happy?
Sometimes I have a hard time fighting against that attitude but I have a lot more success when I just log it and move on, start again with a blank slate
Yes sarjenki! I use to live like that too and that's why I think I hated fitness and nutrition for so long. That extreme all or nothing attitude just left me failing constantly because I couldn't live up to my own expectations. It's all about balance! I had a a bowl of chkn/veggies and a pumpkin bar today, no regrets.1 -
As far as how I do it is very easy been maintaining for approximately one year after losing 80 lbs. Weight loss and maintenance is a mental attitude. Like anything else you have to educate yourself about the consequences and weigh those consequences against your goals.
I don't give anything up I still do the occasional Wendy's hamburger pizza and beers on the beach if I had to give those things up I could have never done what I did. And God I only wish I could do half a can of Pringles I give you credit for that much willpower.
Based on what you're saying it seems like you have some kind of issue with your blood pressure. Hopefully you're under the care of a doctor if you have issues with high blood pressure. As far as how to do it it may sound simple but you just want to do it. You're going to have good days you're going to have bad days. Learn from both and just move on. Remember this isn't a Sprint but this is a long lifetime Journey you're on.0 -
I stepped on the scale about a month ago and it surprised me so badly that I committed myself to it. Haven't looked back since0
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You're alright, friend. It takes practice, patience and persistence. Not perfection.2
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Boar's Head has a line of low sodium lunch meat. If you can't find that brand at your grocery store, look around and read the labels.1
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bigguygettingskinny wrote: »How do you all stay on track for long periods of time. I was doing good for a few days then today happened.
This may sound very cliche (I know it did for me until I wrapped my head around it), this is about the journey. Many people (often myself included) are so fixated on our end goal we put alot of pressure on ourselves. We fixate on "good" and "bad", adding more stress.
The way I have stayed on track for 55 days (and counting), is to focus only on the choices I can make today. Yesterday is done, tomorrow isn't here yet. I make the best choices I can given my surroundings and information. This is not to say I take a sloppy approach to things, or don't put some control in my day.
My fridge is full of things that I (mostly) like to eat, and that my body will accept. I whip up something from those ingredients that suits what I feel like at that meal. If we are going out for supper, then I research the menu of where we are going, and choose something that appeals to me. I log this in my day ahead of time, and then fit the rest of my day around it.
I realize people need to pack lunches for work, so when I had to do that, I simply made something that would fuel my body, and usually it was the same thing every day so I didn't have to think about it.
Good luck with your journey, and try to be gentle on yourself!
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I just keep trying despite when I have given in to cravings or indulged a bit too much. One mishap doesn't ruin everything and to begin with I was overeating at least once a week. I have just kept at it and not been afraid of slipping up, or if I feel like giving in I would up my calories so I had a smaller or no deficit instead of just throwing away my progress.0
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By being incredibly, pig-headedly stubborn!0
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If you find the right way of eating and macro mix for you, it is not really hard. Sometimes you have to look and the compulsions or emotional issues that drive binge overeating and sort that out to progress. We all have them.
That was the truth for me. I had to change what I ate, which addressed some health issues for me, and then weight loss and maintaining became easy. If I eat foods that affect my health, I start regaining fairly quickly because I eat for energy.0 -
I take diet breaks. That is, two weeks off every 10 - 12 weeks of "dieting" (being in deficit). It keeps me on track and it helps me to realise that maintenance is doable and the world will not come to an abrupt halt when the dieting days are over. The breaks are planned/logged (except for then I am on holiday, then there is no internet for me) and are not an excuse to over-indulge/gorge/eat stupid amounts of anything. I eat at maintenance or just below and up my carbs to above 150g.
This is what helps me. Also feeling great, more healthy, seeing the measurements of my body parts go down, fitting in clothes better and even buying the next size down all keep me on track too. As does the thought of the negatives that go with being overweight. Those, I recall and encourage myself to go forward from. Remembering how my self-esteem was low and how different I feel now and comparing those feelings.
Also, from an eating disordered standpoint (yes I have been there), maybe seeing a counsellor/therapist or joining group therapy sessions and talking about what triggers you and why and learning methods of coping and not using the eating (or not eating) and the food for comfort. Maybe finding a hobby you love, or doing stuff you enjoy that does not involve food?
Yeah, sorry this is all a bit fluffy and "emotion" based, but eating can be and is for a lot of us...0 -
JerSchmare wrote: »Heather4448 wrote: »As with everything in life, it becomes easier the longer you do it. That being said, I screw up frequently. " Log it and move on."
Now-- you-- need to be careful with your salt intake apparently. Buy low sodium chips and lunch meat.
Sodium doesn't cause high blood pressure. That's a really bad rumor that is deeply ingrained.
Actually it can make it worse. If your doctor tells you to eat low sodium do it. Many people have been able to reduce or eliminate their use of high blood pressure meds through reducing sodium in their diets.
To tell someone on a doctor ordered diet to ignore it is a horrible thing to do.1 -
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After my bypass surgery 2 months ago, I had to make changes to my eating habits and start exercising. I do not call it a diet, but a lifestyle change, because I have no other viable options. I am fortunate that my wife is fully committed to joining this journey to a healthier life.
We have tracked our food intake for almost a month now, and plan for instances where we don't have full control, like a work lunch out. Yesterday I attended an event that I knew from past experience would have several teams cooking bbq, tacos, and similar foods, and eggs, bacon, biscuits & sausage gravy for breakfast. I planned going in that I would look for grilled chicken as the main part of my lunch. Guess what?... No grilled chicken. So I made a choice, ate it and logged it as best as I could estimate. Had a yogurt protein shake for supper. Lot of sodium in everything at breakfast and lunch, so I knew my daily intake would be at least doubled, if not tripled, from normal (I try to stay below 1,000 mg/day). Sure enough, scales said 0.6 lb gain this morning. Back on track today.
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JerSchmare wrote: »JerSchmare wrote: »Heather4448 wrote: »As with everything in life, it becomes easier the longer you do it. That being said, I screw up frequently. " Log it and move on."
Now-- you-- need to be careful with your salt intake apparently. Buy low sodium chips and lunch meat.
Sodium doesn't cause high blood pressure. That's a really bad rumor that is deeply ingrained.
Actually it can make it worse. If your doctor tells you to eat low sodium do it. Many people have been able to reduce or eliminate their use of high blood pressure meds through reducing sodium in their diets.
To tell someone on a doctor ordered diet to ignore it is a horrible thing to do.
New research says otherwise.
Plus, doctors aren't really knowledgeable on that. They just parrot what they were taught.
I went to a doctor in the past 2 years that was explaining to me about set-point theory. Hahaha. What a dork. Couldn't get out of his office fast enough.
Look, the sodium thing is absolutely indoctrinated into us. But, that doesn't mean that's what causes hypertension.
There is no evidence that sodium causes hypertension. There is evidence that a person with hypertension can reduce it if they reduce their sodium intake.
I'm going to trust doctors with medical degrees. Multiple doctors. Over one doctor who has produced a study that nobody outside of his organization has been able to replicate and random people on the internet.1 -
For me, its come with experience. Honestly Ive done it so long, and know my body so well that I dont need to keep track of it but I do because it keeps me honest with myself. Take it in strides, go for small weekly goals. At first you are not going to see the results. You may not feel them right away either but that next week you may start to feel better, motivation to keep going. Then the week after you may see a physical change, more motivation. Keep goals small. Hopefully this make sense, Im a bit sleepy....0
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I did better once I stopped telling myself I couldn't have certain foods. There were still things I couldn't bring into the house in anything other than single servings (that would be you, ice cream), but it helped me break the cycle of feeling like a failure if I knew I could have that single serving and still be within my goals (or fairly close to it) and still make progress. Break the cycle of guilt and beating yourself up. Don't throw out the whole day if you've gone over your planned lunch, just refocus for supper.2
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bigguygettingskinny wrote: »How do you all stay on track for long periods of time. I was doing good for a few days then today happened. 2 sandwiches on white bread with processed lunch meat processed cheese and mayo. Then half a bag of crispers and half a tube of pringles. Now my bp is up and making my head screwy.
It happens every time i have a few good days and my bp comes down just a few points and i start to feel better then i do days like today.
How do you all keep on track. Please no smart remarks I know I messed up just looking for advice to not make it happen again.
I haven't read this whole thread yet, but will go back and do so as soon as I finish this entry.
Simply put, just don't have the bad stuff in your house. Mayonnaise a problem? Don't keep it around. Salami? Olive loaf? Make sure they aren't available. Etc. Make sure anything you keep for snacks is good stuff. Maybe a few almonds, mix a smoothie, etc.1 -
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