Stressed with Macros
Silkysausage
Posts: 502 Member
Newly vegan and worrying over macros and finding I'm thinking about food planning almost every minute of the day.
I have been making prep for a while now and there are 3 in my family but they eat differently to me.
This is all a bit much, I don't want to look like Hulk Hogan...good job as I'm female but some toned muscles would be nice. I eat well, enough protein and the like but I have anxiety with all of it.
This isn't what I signed up for
I have been making prep for a while now and there are 3 in my family but they eat differently to me.
This is all a bit much, I don't want to look like Hulk Hogan...good job as I'm female but some toned muscles would be nice. I eat well, enough protein and the like but I have anxiety with all of it.
This isn't what I signed up for
2
Replies
-
Silkysausage wrote: »Newly vegan and worrying over macros and finding I'm thinking about food planning almost every minute of the day.
I have been making prep for a while now and there are 3 in my family but they eat differently to me.
This is all a bit much, I don't want to look like Hulk Hogan...good job as I'm female but some toned muscles would be nice. I eat well, enough protein and the like but I have anxiety with all of it.
This isn't what I signed up for
At this point I'd rather look like Hulk Hogan than the kid from Diary of a Wimpy Kid, which is how I feel I look.
Anyway, what's the purpose of going vegan? Just wondering the reason because it may help provide a little more insight.3 -
If it stresses you out that much maybe being vegan isn't appropriate for you? If it's for ethical reasons you can find humane sources for eggs and dairy. If it's for health reasons this obviously isn't mentally healthy and being vegan isn't inherently healhier than being an omnivore.5
-
Oh sorry, no I mean that working out meals is driving me crazy not veganism.0
-
Silkysausage wrote: »Oh sorry, no I mean that working out meals is driving me crazy not veganism.
I was a vegetarian for 10 years, a vegan for 2 of them, so I'm not putting it down. I was just wondering the reason for the veganism. Sorry if someone thought that my question deserved a "woo."0 -
Silkysausage wrote: »Oh sorry, no I mean that working out meals is driving me crazy not veganism.
What exactly is stressing you out? Just trying to get adequate protein?0 -
Would regarding protein and fat as minimum goals rather than percentages (if that's what you are doing...) be less restrictive and cause less anxiety?
(I'm making the assumption that as a vegan carbs naturally look after themselves....)1 -
Would regarding protein and fat as minimum goals rather than percentages (if that's what you are doing...) be less restrictive and cause less anxiety?
(I'm making the assumption that as a vegan carbs naturally look after themselves....)
Yes, it is the carbs! I don't eat bread, potatoes, try and eat quinoa as it's less carby than rice and base most things on that.
Proteins include beans, lentils and soy, pea protein powder. Fat from avocado, nuts, olive oil.
So this leaves me with little room for manouvre and might become too restrictive and I'm a little overwhelmed with that thought.
0 -
As I understand it, a vegan diet is way higher in carbs, so if the level of carbs is freaking you out, you'll need to get used to it.2
-
The "Hello Healthy" stuff on your mfp news feed has a plethora of preppable vegan stuff.1
-
If you don't hit your macros, they don't come and arrest you for it. As long as you're getting more or less enough protein and a minimal amount of fat, you'll be fine.
You can change your macros to something that works better for you under settings. Or just ignore the warnings.2 -
So change your macros to fit your lifestyle. Or don't track them at all.5
-
Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.3 -
Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.
I got them from IIFYM with a reason to gain muscle, I'm 113 pounds and need all the help I can get.0 -
Silkysausage wrote: »Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.
I got them from IIFYM with a reason to gain muscle, I'm 113 pounds and need all the help I can get.
And IIFYM (the web site) works with fixed macro percentages which are restrictive and unnecessary. IIFYM the eating philosophy isn't the same thing at all - flexible dieting means exactly that, flexible not fixed, yours not someone else's macro choices. If you don't like restriction then don't make yourself be restricted.
Get your protein in, get your fat in - the rest of your allowance then becomes flexible within your calorie goal.
And do remember you don't gain muscle from eating. Good training supported by an adequate diet - nothing more complex than that (apart from patience!).5 -
Silkysausage wrote: »Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.
I got them from IIFYM with a reason to gain muscle, I'm 113 pounds and need all the help I can get.
And IIFYM (the web site) works with fixed macro percentages which are restrictive and unnecessary. IIFYM the eating philosophy isn't the same thing at all - flexible dieting means exactly that, flexible not fixed, yours not someone else's macro choices. If you don't like restriction then don't make yourself be restricted.
Get your protein in, get your fat in - the rest of your allowance then becomes flexible within your calorie goal.
And do remember you don't gain muscle from eating. Good training supported by an adequate diet - nothing more complex than that (apart from patience!).
I do weights three times a week and am progressing heavier, I'm trying to do my best with the info that is out there. I eat well, healthy but yes maybe it is why I'm in a corner now with all of this.
Forgive me if I am wrong but why would this info exist for those who want to weightlift to and add muscle/lean out and then not use it?
I've never seen the 'eat what you like as long as it falls into macro' advice before. It's usually very complicated with addition and subtraction, body fat ratio and...well, might as well but inside leg measurement
0 -
Silkysausage wrote: »Silkysausage wrote: »Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.
I got them from IIFYM with a reason to gain muscle, I'm 113 pounds and need all the help I can get.
And IIFYM (the web site) works with fixed macro percentages which are restrictive and unnecessary. IIFYM the eating philosophy isn't the same thing at all - flexible dieting means exactly that, flexible not fixed, yours not someone else's macro choices. If you don't like restriction then don't make yourself be restricted.
Get your protein in, get your fat in - the rest of your allowance then becomes flexible within your calorie goal.
And do remember you don't gain muscle from eating. Good training supported by an adequate diet - nothing more complex than that (apart from patience!).
I do weights three times a week and am progressing heavier, I'm trying to do my best with the info that is out there. I eat well, healthy but yes maybe it is why I'm in a corner now with all of this.
Forgive me if I am wrong but why would this info exist for those who want to weightlift to and add muscle/lean out and then not use it?
I've never seen the 'eat what you like as long as it falls into macro' advice before. It's usually very complicated with addition and subtraction, body fat ratio and...well, might as well but inside leg measurement
IIFYM. Com is just one opinion on what your diet should look like. You can use their guidelines if you want, just don't stress out if you don't make those numbers every day. If your primary goal is building muscle, the most important thing is getting your calories and your workout. Second would be trying go get your protein, but just try, don't worry too much about it.
I try to plan my protein for each meal/ snack first, then build everything else around that. And I do sometimes use protein shakes when I fall behind too often.2 -
You seem to be ignoring all the reasoned advise in this thread and making things purposefully difficult.
Have reasonable goals. Hit fat, hit protein and fill the rest of your calorie allowance with carbs.
There's no extra points for eating quiona over any other carb.
It's really not that difficult.4 -
Silkysausage wrote: »Silkysausage wrote: »Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.
I got them from IIFYM with a reason to gain muscle, I'm 113 pounds and need all the help I can get.
And IIFYM (the web site) works with fixed macro percentages which are restrictive and unnecessary. IIFYM the eating philosophy isn't the same thing at all - flexible dieting means exactly that, flexible not fixed, yours not someone else's macro choices. If you don't like restriction then don't make yourself be restricted.
Get your protein in, get your fat in - the rest of your allowance then becomes flexible within your calorie goal.
And do remember you don't gain muscle from eating. Good training supported by an adequate diet - nothing more complex than that (apart from patience!).
I do weights three times a week and am progressing heavier, I'm trying to do my best with the info that is out there. I eat well, healthy but yes maybe it is why I'm in a corner now with all of this.
Forgive me if I am wrong but why would this info exist for those who want to weightlift to and add muscle/lean out and then not use it?
I've never seen the 'eat what you like as long as it falls into macro' advice before. It's usually very complicated with addition and subtraction, body fat ratio and...well, might as well but inside leg measurement
"Forgive me if I am wrong but why would this info exist for those who want to weightlift to and add muscle/lean out and then not use it?"
Don't get what point you are trying to make at all - can you expand please?
The internet is full of information and opinions, some good, some OK, some awful - some just pretty much irrelevant to most people outside a small niche. IIFYM.com is just a website with one person's opinion.
You lean out by burning off your fat stores, you promote muscle growth from your training.
Diet merely supports your training/recovery and that diet can be hugely varied between individuals although certain parameters are known to be beneficial. (e.g. higher than normal protein, even that has a huge range not one set number).
Flexible dieting / IIFYM is trying to get away from silly and unnecessary restrictions such as arbitrary numbers of meals, gym bro diets of steamed chicken and broccoli - I'm not seeing how that philosophy is making you more anxious rather than less anxious. (My guess is you are trying to precisely hit certain numbers - I'm trying to show you that's not needed or helpful.)
You need to expand on the anxiety you are feeling and your thought processes because it's not clear.
Why precisely are you stressing about carbs? As long as they fit in your calorie allowance what's the problem if they are proportionally high but in context of a healthy diet?
3 -
Would setting a larger range in your macros help? Such as 200-220 carbs? I’m a longtime macro counter but I don’t worry about exacly hitting my numbers till I am trying to lose weight and cut for a competition. I would track but loosely. Planning ahead works for me and making several meals at a time same lunch for a week. If your goal is to gain weight & muscle a calorie surplus in general is still the key.1
-
You seem to be ignoring all the reasoned advise in this thread and making things purposefully difficult.
Have reasonable goals. Hit fat, hit protein and fill the rest of your calorie allowance with carbs.
There's no extra points for eating quiona over any other carb.
It's really not that difficult.
Certainly not, quite the opposite. I'm asking questions like any person should. I'm so pleased that you have it all figured out.0 -
Silkysausage wrote: »You seem to be ignoring all the reasoned advise in this thread and making things purposefully difficult.
Have reasonable goals. Hit fat, hit protein and fill the rest of your calorie allowance with carbs.
There's no extra points for eating quiona over any other carb.
It's really not that difficult.
Certainly not, quite the opposite. I'm asking questions like any person should. I'm so pleased that you have it all figured out.
@usmcmp and I asked the same question at the beginning of the thread regarding the reason for your veganism as a way to help give us insight into what the problem is, but that question was never answered either.0 -
Silkysausage wrote: »Silkysausage wrote: »Where did you get your macros from, and is there a specific reason you feel the need to hit them to the point it stresses you out?
I just try to get enough protein most days and let the rest fall where they may. If I notice my fat is low for a couple days in a row I'll make an effort to get that up. As long as I'm feeling good I don't stress about it.
I got them from IIFYM with a reason to gain muscle, I'm 113 pounds and need all the help I can get.
And IIFYM (the web site) works with fixed macro percentages which are restrictive and unnecessary. IIFYM the eating philosophy isn't the same thing at all - flexible dieting means exactly that, flexible not fixed, yours not someone else's macro choices. If you don't like restriction then don't make yourself be restricted.
Get your protein in, get your fat in - the rest of your allowance then becomes flexible within your calorie goal.
And do remember you don't gain muscle from eating. Good training supported by an adequate diet - nothing more complex than that (apart from patience!).
I do weights three times a week and am progressing heavier, I'm trying to do my best with the info that is out there. I eat well, healthy but yes maybe it is why I'm in a corner now with all of this.
Forgive me if I am wrong but why would this info exist for those who want to weightlift to and add muscle/lean out and then not use it?
I've never seen the 'eat what you like as long as it falls into macro' advice before. It's usually very complicated with addition and subtraction, body fat ratio and...well, might as well but inside leg measurement
"Forgive me if I am wrong but why would this info exist for those who want to weightlift to and add muscle/lean out and then not use it?"
Don't get what point you are trying to make at all - can you expand please?
The internet is full of information and opinions, some good, some OK, some awful - some just pretty much irrelevant to most people outside a small niche. IIFYM.com is just a website with one person's opinion.
You lean out by burning off your fat stores, you promote muscle growth from your training.
Diet merely supports your training/recovery and that diet can be hugely varied between individuals although certain parameters are known to be beneficial. (e.g. higher than normal protein, even that has a huge range not one set number).
Flexible dieting / IIFYM is trying to get away from silly and unnecessary restrictions such as arbitrary numbers of meals, gym bro diets of steamed chicken and broccoli - I'm not seeing how that philosophy is making you more anxious rather than less anxious. (My guess is you are trying to precisely hit certain numbers - I'm trying to show you that's not needed or helpful.)
You need to expand on the anxiety you are feeling and your thought processes because it's not clear.
Why precisely are you stressing about carbs? As long as they fit in your calorie allowance what's the problem if they are proportionally high but in context of a healthy diet?
It seems I've become a victim of the male driven, bland bodybuilding diet advice that is all over the internet.
Of course I can think for myself but when the overwhelming lists of similar sites all day the same thing you can become blinkered.
Thanks to the great advice on here, such as yours, I can learn to grow and change my thoughts.
I mean, look at eating clean for example. It can make so many think that's all there is and many become orthorexic as nothing else is good enough.
Off track a little now but my point is that following any eating plan has its pitfalls.
I can only thank you all for your patience and support and change the way I think about things from here on.
2
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions