Should I stop tracking macros?

kalincombs
kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
edited November 25 in Health and Weight Loss
Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?
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Replies

  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,260 Member
    What sources of protein have you tried? You did say vegetarian not vegan. Is yogurt an option?
  • yirara
    yirara Posts: 9,944 Member
    Lentil, beans and the likes have quite some protein. Quite honestly though, MFP gives me about half your protein and I hardly ever hit that as an omnivore. Why? Because I feel most satiated when I eat certain carbs. Plus too much protein causes reflux for me. But I don't have a specific muscle aim but just want to lose the last bit of vanity weight.
  • 1houndgal
    1houndgal Posts: 558 Member
    The way mfp is set up you can customize your macro goals . You still want to get adequate protein and fat.

    So if you see a dietician consult that person for a smaller protein goal and that still meets your body's needs. Or ask your dr if your dr is up on nutrition.

    Do some research on the net to find out what is a safe but more than adequate macro goal(s) for a vegetarian/vegan. And combining proteins is a good thing. For instance combining brown rice and beans.

    It makes sense that not everyone's bodies are going to need the exact same macros. But you still need enough macros to stay healthy, the trick will be to find the levels that work for you. Just a suggestion would be to go slowly when you make such changes.

    Google around for info and suggestions on protein needs for vegans/vegetarians. Keep a log on your changes and how you feel physically and mentally.
  • raymax4
    raymax4 Posts: 6,070 Member
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    So what kind f vegetarian are you? (vegan, Ovo-Lacto, Ovo, Lacto)
    How long have you been a vegetarian?
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,323 Member
    P.S. I found the thread below very helpful. It links to a spreadsheet that lists many, many foods in order by protein efficiency - most protein for fewest calories. Scroll past the mostly meaty fishy things near the top, and you'll find plant foods. It's a good way to identify ones you like that have a bit more protein.

    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10247171/carbs-and-fats-are-cheap-heres-a-guide-to-getting-your-proteins-worth-fiber-also
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    kalincombs wrote: »
    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    Tracking macros can be useful (or not) in finding a sustainable, healthy diet. But one part of it is picking the macros that are right for you -- it's not one-size-fits-all, and definitely not what some website says (specifically the IIFYM website, which just applies some percentages that are often higher protein than necessary).

    Some things to think about is how you like to eat and what you consider healthy.

    Protein is usually the most important when losing weight -- losing weight makes muscle loss a risk, so to maintain as much muscle as possible you will want to do some kind of strength exercise and also eat around .65-.85 g of protein (or more) per lb of a healthy goal weight (or current weight if you are already in the healthy range). For me this is like 80-100 g, but I'm only 5'3.

    Beyond that, fat and carbs are really personally preference -- what feels good, what tends to help you make healthy choices and have a balanced meal? Are you someone who on your own would just eat all fruit and starches (which can be healthful choices, but require some balance from fat or protein)? Or are you someone who has been trained to be suspicious of carbs (even fruit, legumes) -- assuming this is not you, it's an example. In these cases, macros can provide structure.

    Different macros also might help if you have specific training goals, but that's more a matter of adjustment and the specific training needs.

    I would not make yourself miserable trying to hit IIFYM macros (the website, it's not official or anything), and I'd focus on using macros as a tool to help with making healthy choices if it's useful for you.

    I've found that a LOT of the people who benefit from macros are in one of two groups:

    (1) Brand new to thinking about their diet and structure and have no clue where to start. This isn't you, it seems.

    (2) Tends to the high-stress when it comes to diet and worrying about food choice (is it okay to have some chocolate?). Here, macros help people realize that there's not actually much meaningful difference between a potato or sweet potato, chicken or pork chop, so on, and that you can fit in more indulgent foods in an overall healthy diet. This might be you (or not, we have no idea), but it should be used to decrease stress, not increase it.

    Hope that helps some.
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    PAV8888 wrote: »
    What sources of protein have you tried? You did say vegetarian not vegan. Is yogurt an option?

    Yes, I have a yogurt about every day. And I eat eggs as well. Eating beans, lentils, yogurt, peanut butter, walnuts, protein powder/bars, and tons of eggs is how i usually hit my protein goal.
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    raymax4 wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    So what kind f vegetarian are you? (vegan, Ovo-Lacto, Ovo, Lacto)
    How long have you been a vegetarian?

    I've been veggie for a little over a year. I am technically a pure vegetarian, but often an accidental vegan. I just prefer real fruits, veggies, and nuts to dairy and such. Though lately I have been eating tons of eggs and yogurt to meet my protein goals.
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    Tracking macros can be useful (or not) in finding a sustainable, healthy diet. But one part of it is picking the macros that are right for you -- it's not one-size-fits-all, and definitely not what some website says (specifically the IIFYM website, which just applies some percentages that are often higher protein than necessary).

    Some things to think about is how you like to eat and what you consider healthy.

    Protein is usually the most important when losing weight -- losing weight makes muscle loss a risk, so to maintain as much muscle as possible you will want to do some kind of strength exercise and also eat around .65-.85 g of protein (or more) per lb of a healthy goal weight (or current weight if you are already in the healthy range). For me this is like 80-100 g, but I'm only 5'3.

    Beyond that, fat and carbs are really personally preference -- what feels good, what tends to help you make healthy choices and have a balanced meal? Are you someone who on your own would just eat all fruit and starches (which can be healthful choices, but require some balance from fat or protein)? Or are you someone who has been trained to be suspicious of carbs (even fruit, legumes) -- assuming this is not you, it's an example. In these cases, macros can provide structure.

    Different macros also might help if you have specific training goals, but that's more a matter of adjustment and the specific training needs.

    I would not make yourself miserable trying to hit IIFYM macros (the website, it's not official or anything), and I'd focus on using macros as a tool to help with making healthy choices if it's useful for you.

    I've found that a LOT of the people who benefit from macros are in one of two groups:

    (1) Brand new to thinking about their diet and structure and have no clue where to start. This isn't you, it seems.

    (2) Tends to the high-stress when it comes to diet and worrying about food choice (is it okay to have some chocolate?). Here, macros help people realize that there's not actually much meaningful difference between a potato or sweet potato, chicken or pork chop, so on, and that you can fit in more indulgent foods in an overall healthy diet. This might be you (or not, we have no idea), but it should be used to decrease stress, not increase it.

    Hope that helps some.

    Very very helpful. Thanks!
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Nutrition is important, and macros are a good place to start. Macro requirements are the same for vegans/vegetarians as they are for anyone else.

    As a 5'5" vegetarian, goal weight 120, I strive for 100g protein and around 55g fat, using the common guidelines of 0.6-0.8g protein/0.35-0.45g fat per pound of healthy goal weight, letting carbs fall where they may. I also shoot for at least 5, preferably 10+, servings of varied, colorful fruit/veg for well-rounded micros.

    I can get to that protein level without protein powder, bars, or fake meat (nothing wrong with those IMO, I just don't find them tasty). However, I'm currently on a bit higher calorie level than you are (1850), so did get a bit less protein while in a deeper deficit. Because I'm ovo-lacto, I do use a good bit of dairy (not that many eggs), but I think I could do it with all plants using more soy foods, etc.

    The best advice I have is two things:

    1. Take a hard look at your food diary day by day. Are there foods contributing a lot of calories, but very little protein? If so, try to reduce or eliminate those, replacing them with other foods you enjoy that have more protein. Consider chickpea or lentil pasta vs. regular; prefer quinoa over rice: That sort of thing.

    2. Try to choose foods in every category that have a little protein over those that have none. These small amounts through the day add up. There are vegetables with protein (broccoli, spinach, mushrooms, etc.) and even fruit (guavas). For snacks, have dry-roasted soybeans or crispy chickpeas.

    If you eat dairy, Greek yogurt and cottage cheese are useful. If not, legumes, soy foods (tofu, tempeh, miso, etc.) , seitan can be helpful.

    Best wishes!

    Thank you, very helpful! Its comforting and motivating to find another vegetarian on here with a similar goals as me who makes it work!
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    P.S. I found the thread below very helpful. It links to a spreadsheet that lists many, many foods in order by protein efficiency - most protein for fewest calories. Scroll past the mostly meaty fishy things near the top, and you'll find plant foods. It's a good way to identify ones you like that have a bit more protein.

    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10247171/carbs-and-fats-are-cheap-heres-a-guide-to-getting-your-proteins-worth-fiber-also

    Awesome link! Thanks so much!

  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Orphia wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    Firstly, how tall are you and how much do you weigh? If you're only 5 lbs away from a mid-low BMI, 5 lbs in a month is going to be very hard and AFAIK not fuel any exercise you do and leave you starving.

    If that's you, read the thread, "relatively light people trying to get leaner":
    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/113609/relatively-light-people-trying-to-get-leaner

    Secondly, and I'm not saying the following is you, have you heard of Orthorexia?

    It's an unhealthy obsession with clean eating / "healthy eating". Not saying this is you, but here's some info.

    https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/other/orthorexia

    WARNING SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF ORTHOREXIA
    • Compulsive checking of ingredient lists and nutritional labels
    • An increase in concern about the health of ingredients
    • Cutting out an increasing number of food groups (all sugar, all carbs, all dairy, all meat, all animal products)
    • An inability to eat anything but a narrow group of foods that are deemed ‘healthy’ or ‘pure’
    • Unusual interest in the health of what others are eating
    • Spending hours per day thinking about what food might be served at upcoming events
    • Showing high levels of distress when ‘safe’ or ‘healthy’ foods aren’t available
    • Obsessive following of food and ‘healthy lifestyle’ blogs on Twitter and Instagram
    • Body image concerns may or may not be present

    Just posting this in case you have other traits listed that might mean your food choices impact negatively on your life.

    I'm not trying to diagnose you. Only you can know the answer.




    I certainly don't think Orthorexia sounds like me, I have always had a pretty healthy relationship with food.

    I am 5'7" with GW: approx 123, CW: 132. I know I can't make that happen in a month, but I am trying to make as much progress as I can before then. I have a normal BMI so, yes, progress has been slow. And yes, I've read that article, but thank you for the recommendation!

    What are your goals? I just ask because sometimes more weight loss, especially so close to the lower end may not be what will really get you there. If you want more definition and a leaner appearance and you are not close to that right now you may want to consider eating at maintenance and recomping to build some muscle. If you still want to lose a few lbs that is fine, but if you start to get close to your goal and still not happy, the issue will likely be lack of muscle base and no amount of weight loss will help that.

    My end goal and biggest motivator is to have my best body ever by spring break. I'm just looking to lose what's left of my love handles, some lower belly, and some thigh fat. I also want to have a bigger, more rounded butt and tone my stomach/legs a bit if possible. That's why 123 is flexible. I've been in the 120s before and that's when I was most confident about my body. That was about 2 years ago, and since then I gained about 18 pounds (I've lost 6 already) and may have grown about an inch so I'm not sure where that leaves me if I'm looking to feel as good as I used to. I'm doing this more for how I look in the mirror than what the scale says, but tracking weight has been a great way to confirm my progress.
  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    kalincombs wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Orphia wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    Firstly, how tall are you and how much do you weigh? If you're only 5 lbs away from a mid-low BMI, 5 lbs in a month is going to be very hard and AFAIK not fuel any exercise you do and leave you starving.

    If that's you, read the thread, "relatively light people trying to get leaner":
    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/113609/relatively-light-people-trying-to-get-leaner

    Secondly, and I'm not saying the following is you, have you heard of Orthorexia?

    It's an unhealthy obsession with clean eating / "healthy eating". Not saying this is you, but here's some info.

    https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/other/orthorexia

    WARNING SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF ORTHOREXIA
    • Compulsive checking of ingredient lists and nutritional labels
    • An increase in concern about the health of ingredients
    • Cutting out an increasing number of food groups (all sugar, all carbs, all dairy, all meat, all animal products)
    • An inability to eat anything but a narrow group of foods that are deemed ‘healthy’ or ‘pure’
    • Unusual interest in the health of what others are eating
    • Spending hours per day thinking about what food might be served at upcoming events
    • Showing high levels of distress when ‘safe’ or ‘healthy’ foods aren’t available
    • Obsessive following of food and ‘healthy lifestyle’ blogs on Twitter and Instagram
    • Body image concerns may or may not be present

    Just posting this in case you have other traits listed that might mean your food choices impact negatively on your life.

    I'm not trying to diagnose you. Only you can know the answer.




    I certainly don't think Orthorexia sounds like me, I have always had a pretty healthy relationship with food.

    I am 5'7" with GW: approx 123, CW: 132. I know I can't make that happen in a month, but I am trying to make as much progress as I can before then. I have a normal BMI so, yes, progress has been slow. And yes, I've read that article, but thank you for the recommendation!

    What are your goals? I just ask because sometimes more weight loss, especially so close to the lower end may not be what will really get you there. If you want more definition and a leaner appearance and you are not close to that right now you may want to consider eating at maintenance and recomping to build some muscle. If you still want to lose a few lbs that is fine, but if you start to get close to your goal and still not happy, the issue will likely be lack of muscle base and no amount of weight loss will help that.

    My end goal and biggest motivator is to have my best body ever by spring break. I'm just looking to lose what's left of my love handles, some lower belly, and some thigh fat. I also want to have a bigger, more rounded butt and tone my stomach/legs a bit if possible. That's why 123 is flexible. I've been in the 120s before and that's when I was most confident about my body. That was about 2 years ago, and since then I gained about 18 pounds (I've lost 6 already) and may have grown about an inch so I'm not sure where that leaves me if I'm looking to feel as good as I used to. I'm doing this more for how I look in the mirror than what the scale says, but tracking weight has been a great way to confirm my progress.

    Are you following a lifting program?

    I would say take the weight loss very slow right now.. and re-evaluate after 5lbs.
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Orphia wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    Firstly, how tall are you and how much do you weigh? If you're only 5 lbs away from a mid-low BMI, 5 lbs in a month is going to be very hard and AFAIK not fuel any exercise you do and leave you starving.

    If that's you, read the thread, "relatively light people trying to get leaner":
    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/113609/relatively-light-people-trying-to-get-leaner

    Secondly, and I'm not saying the following is you, have you heard of Orthorexia?

    It's an unhealthy obsession with clean eating / "healthy eating". Not saying this is you, but here's some info.

    https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/other/orthorexia

    WARNING SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF ORTHOREXIA
    • Compulsive checking of ingredient lists and nutritional labels
    • An increase in concern about the health of ingredients
    • Cutting out an increasing number of food groups (all sugar, all carbs, all dairy, all meat, all animal products)
    • An inability to eat anything but a narrow group of foods that are deemed ‘healthy’ or ‘pure’
    • Unusual interest in the health of what others are eating
    • Spending hours per day thinking about what food might be served at upcoming events
    • Showing high levels of distress when ‘safe’ or ‘healthy’ foods aren’t available
    • Obsessive following of food and ‘healthy lifestyle’ blogs on Twitter and Instagram
    • Body image concerns may or may not be present

    Just posting this in case you have other traits listed that might mean your food choices impact negatively on your life.

    I'm not trying to diagnose you. Only you can know the answer.




    I certainly don't think Orthorexia sounds like me, I have always had a pretty healthy relationship with food.

    I am 5'7" with GW: approx 123, CW: 132. I know I can't make that happen in a month, but I am trying to make as much progress as I can before then. I have a normal BMI so, yes, progress has been slow. And yes, I've read that article, but thank you for the recommendation!

    What are your goals? I just ask because sometimes more weight loss, especially so close to the lower end may not be what will really get you there. If you want more definition and a leaner appearance and you are not close to that right now you may want to consider eating at maintenance and recomping to build some muscle. If you still want to lose a few lbs that is fine, but if you start to get close to your goal and still not happy, the issue will likely be lack of muscle base and no amount of weight loss will help that.

    My end goal and biggest motivator is to have my best body ever by spring break. I'm just looking to lose what's left of my love handles, some lower belly, and some thigh fat. I also want to have a bigger, more rounded butt and tone my stomach/legs a bit if possible. That's why 123 is flexible. I've been in the 120s before and that's when I was most confident about my body. That was about 2 years ago, and since then I gained about 18 pounds (I've lost 6 already) and may have grown about an inch so I'm not sure where that leaves me if I'm looking to feel as good as I used to. I'm doing this more for how I look in the mirror than what the scale says, but tracking weight has been a great way to confirm my progress.

    Are you following a lifting program?

    I would say take the weight loss very slow right now.. and re-evaluate after 5lbs.

    I'm not following any program, just testing the waters right now with about 15-30 minutes of bodyweight exercises about 5 times a week.
  • kalincombs
    kalincombs Posts: 23 Member
    kalincombs wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Orphia wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    Firstly, how tall are you and how much do you weigh? If you're only 5 lbs away from a mid-low BMI, 5 lbs in a month is going to be very hard and AFAIK not fuel any exercise you do and leave you starving.

    If that's you, read the thread, "relatively light people trying to get leaner":
    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/113609/relatively-light-people-trying-to-get-leaner

    Secondly, and I'm not saying the following is you, have you heard of Orthorexia?

    It's an unhealthy obsession with clean eating / "healthy eating". Not saying this is you, but here's some info.

    https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/other/orthorexia

    WARNING SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF ORTHOREXIA
    • Compulsive checking of ingredient lists and nutritional labels
    • An increase in concern about the health of ingredients
    • Cutting out an increasing number of food groups (all sugar, all carbs, all dairy, all meat, all animal products)
    • An inability to eat anything but a narrow group of foods that are deemed ‘healthy’ or ‘pure’
    • Unusual interest in the health of what others are eating
    • Spending hours per day thinking about what food might be served at upcoming events
    • Showing high levels of distress when ‘safe’ or ‘healthy’ foods aren’t available
    • Obsessive following of food and ‘healthy lifestyle’ blogs on Twitter and Instagram
    • Body image concerns may or may not be present

    Just posting this in case you have other traits listed that might mean your food choices impact negatively on your life.

    I'm not trying to diagnose you. Only you can know the answer.




    I certainly don't think Orthorexia sounds like me, I have always had a pretty healthy relationship with food.

    I am 5'7" with GW: approx 123, CW: 132. I know I can't make that happen in a month, but I am trying to make as much progress as I can before then. I have a normal BMI so, yes, progress has been slow. And yes, I've read that article, but thank you for the recommendation!

    What are your goals? I just ask because sometimes more weight loss, especially so close to the lower end may not be what will really get you there. If you want more definition and a leaner appearance and you are not close to that right now you may want to consider eating at maintenance and recomping to build some muscle. If you still want to lose a few lbs that is fine, but if you start to get close to your goal and still not happy, the issue will likely be lack of muscle base and no amount of weight loss will help that.

    My end goal and biggest motivator is to have my best body ever by spring break. I'm just looking to lose what's left of my love handles, some lower belly, and some thigh fat. I also want to have a bigger, more rounded butt and tone my stomach/legs a bit if possible. That's why 123 is flexible. I've been in the 120s before and that's when I was most confident about my body. That was about 2 years ago, and since then I gained about 18 pounds (I've lost 6 already) and may have grown about an inch so I'm not sure where that leaves me if I'm looking to feel as good as I used to. I'm doing this more for how I look in the mirror than what the scale says, but tracking weight has been a great way to confirm my progress.

    Are you following a lifting program?

    I would say take the weight loss very slow right now.. and re-evaluate after 5lbs.

    I'm not following any program, just testing the waters right now with about 15-30 minutes of bodyweight exercises about 5 times a week.

    That is, in addition to about 45 minutes of cardio.
  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    kalincombs wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Orphia wrote: »
    kalincombs wrote: »
    Hey guys, I need some advice! So for about 3 weeks now, I have been using MFP to track my macros, but lately I'm starting to consider other methods of healthy eating.

    It seems like everyone in the health and nutrition world tracks macros these days, so when I jumped back into healthy eating recently, I figured I'd give it a try. I calculated my numbers on IIFYM and got 111 protein, 56 fat, and 137 carbs. These numbers have proven very difficult to stick to. As a vegetarian, I very rarely can manage to hit my protein goal for the day. When I do, its because I'm forcing myself to incorporate excessive amounts of protein powder and protein bars, which is expensive, unnatural, and just not fun. I often go over on my fat macros as well, because many vegetarian things that are high protein are also high fat, such as avocados and nuts. Day by day, falling short of my goals leaves me frustrated and disappointed. The high amounts of protein also leave my stomach feeling bloated and gross.

    As someone who has been very interested in health and fitness my whole life, I have always cared about the foods that I put into my body. I know the choices I am making are healthy, and yet when I plug them into MFP I fall short of my goals and am disappointed nearly every day. So, I ask your advice--should I stop tracking macros (but still count calories) and just continue eating a diet whole, natural, unprocessed foods? I want to lose about 5 more pounds before April and get a bit toned on my legs, butt, and stomach. So is it better for me to just tough it out and continue doing something that always leaves me feeling bad or should I just stop worrying?

    Firstly, how tall are you and how much do you weigh? If you're only 5 lbs away from a mid-low BMI, 5 lbs in a month is going to be very hard and AFAIK not fuel any exercise you do and leave you starving.

    If that's you, read the thread, "relatively light people trying to get leaner":
    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/113609/relatively-light-people-trying-to-get-leaner

    Secondly, and I'm not saying the following is you, have you heard of Orthorexia?

    It's an unhealthy obsession with clean eating / "healthy eating". Not saying this is you, but here's some info.

    https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/other/orthorexia

    WARNING SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF ORTHOREXIA
    • Compulsive checking of ingredient lists and nutritional labels
    • An increase in concern about the health of ingredients
    • Cutting out an increasing number of food groups (all sugar, all carbs, all dairy, all meat, all animal products)
    • An inability to eat anything but a narrow group of foods that are deemed ‘healthy’ or ‘pure’
    • Unusual interest in the health of what others are eating
    • Spending hours per day thinking about what food might be served at upcoming events
    • Showing high levels of distress when ‘safe’ or ‘healthy’ foods aren’t available
    • Obsessive following of food and ‘healthy lifestyle’ blogs on Twitter and Instagram
    • Body image concerns may or may not be present

    Just posting this in case you have other traits listed that might mean your food choices impact negatively on your life.

    I'm not trying to diagnose you. Only you can know the answer.




    I certainly don't think Orthorexia sounds like me, I have always had a pretty healthy relationship with food.

    I am 5'7" with GW: approx 123, CW: 132. I know I can't make that happen in a month, but I am trying to make as much progress as I can before then. I have a normal BMI so, yes, progress has been slow. And yes, I've read that article, but thank you for the recommendation!

    What are your goals? I just ask because sometimes more weight loss, especially so close to the lower end may not be what will really get you there. If you want more definition and a leaner appearance and you are not close to that right now you may want to consider eating at maintenance and recomping to build some muscle. If you still want to lose a few lbs that is fine, but if you start to get close to your goal and still not happy, the issue will likely be lack of muscle base and no amount of weight loss will help that.

    My end goal and biggest motivator is to have my best body ever by spring break. I'm just looking to lose what's left of my love handles, some lower belly, and some thigh fat. I also want to have a bigger, more rounded butt and tone my stomach/legs a bit if possible. That's why 123 is flexible. I've been in the 120s before and that's when I was most confident about my body. That was about 2 years ago, and since then I gained about 18 pounds (I've lost 6 already) and may have grown about an inch so I'm not sure where that leaves me if I'm looking to feel as good as I used to. I'm doing this more for how I look in the mirror than what the scale says, but tracking weight has been a great way to confirm my progress.

    Are you following a lifting program?

    I would say take the weight loss very slow right now.. and re-evaluate after 5lbs.

    I'm not following any program, just testing the waters right now with about 15-30 minutes of bodyweight exercises about 5 times a week.

    Ok well based on your goals that you indicated you may want to look into an established program, something like Strong Curves has a focus on the lower body and glutes. Also if you want larger glutes, losing more weight typically will not get you there, but you can shape and define what you already have. I am the same height as you and got down to 121 and still wasn't happy.. I lost all my glutes because I didn't have enough muscle to begin with and I wasn't following proper programming to maintain what little I had. Just something to think about!
  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,260 Member
    kalincombs wrote: »
    PAV8888 wrote: »
    What sources of protein have you tried? You did say vegetarian not vegan. Is yogurt an option?

    Yes, I have a yogurt about every day. And I eat eggs as well. Eating beans, lentils, yogurt, peanut butter, walnuts, protein powder/bars, and tons of eggs is how i usually hit my protein goal.

    a) Listen to @sardelsa :smile:

    b) If you can eat yogurt and eggs...

    Hello Brunch example!

    200 Cal, 36g P, 350g 0% Greek Yogurt (Liberté or Oikos)
    70 Cal , 8g P, 100g 0% Yoplait or other flavoured sucralose sweetened yogurt
    2 Cal, 0g P, 1g Hershey's Unsweetened Cocoa mixed in to balance the sweetness, and 'cause: chocolate.
    56 Cal, 5g P, 15g Kellogg's Special K Protein Cereal sprinkled on top of your yogurt

    6 Cal, 1g P, 24oz Brewed Filtered Coffee
    35 Cal, 2g P, 70g 2% Milk

    50 Cal, 4g protein for 170g Broccoli Slaw
    23 Cal, 0.5g protein for 55g onions
    78 Cal, 17g protein for 162g egg whites
    72 Cal, 6g protein for 50g egg

    Leaves you almost a full 1g of fat in the form of spray (8 Cal) to hit 600 Cal with 78+g of protein including rounding.
This discussion has been closed.