Living With People That Buy Lots of Tempting Snack Foods
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Between my kids and my husband my house is full of snacks And treats. My husband often eats breakfast from take out and eats it while I work out right in front of him. I don't really care. I guess my wants to look and feel better out way my want to eat that stuff.1
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sunfastrose wrote: »amberellen12 wrote: »Just think ahead in the future and your roommates having to go to multiple doctors visits and taking pills for their ailments from eating junk food.
Then there’s you in stellar health, physically strong living your life not dictated by doctor visits or poor health.
Hi! I've been maintaining a 50 pound weight loss for over 15 years, live alone, and have a counter full of candy that is almost disturbing in its volume. I maintain a healthy weight and always have excellent reports at annual physical; this includes excellent blood test results and borderline too low blood pressure.
Eyes on your own paper and let them be them.
How old are you? When you head into your fifties and sixties then it comes home to roast.5 -
I'd ask them to keep it out of sight -- if it's meant to be shared (and it often is, in a roommate situation where people pool their money and do a weekly shop, or see sharing food as part of a generous roomie culture) then ask them to hide it in a particular cupboard. Buy a cookie jar or non-transparent bin and ask them to put it in there. If you don't see it, it won't be so difficult; if they don't see it, they might not eat so much of it anyway.
And yes! A candy bar can fit nicely in your calories for the day without trouble, but that's only if you want to eat it: constantly having food that you DON'T want in your face is massively annoying even for normal-weight people -- the co-worker who brings in cookies or doughnuts every day or every other day, the boss who insists on keeping bowls of candy on your desk, the morning meetings that are 'catered' with danishes and not much else, roomies who buy things to 'share'. Really, really irritating. If we all had an iron will around food, none of us would be here3 -
Hubby has a special cupboard where he keeps his breakfast cereals and his snack foods like gingersnaps or corn tortilla chips. I have a totally separate snack food cupboard where I keep the things I like that are on plan for me like seaweed snax, pork rinds, HardBite parsnip chips. (I know, my stuff sounds weird, but they are actually yummy savoury snacks that I enjoy - just not trigger foods for me, though)
Keep separate cupboards, or separate shelves in the fridge. Don't touch any of the roomies' stuff. That was always the rule in offices or dorm rooms where I've been....1 -
Most of the time I can easily feed my child delicious macaroni and cheese, give her M&M's for a potty reward and watch my co-workers eat Chinese and cupcakes with the mindset of "It isn't worth it to derail your progress" but sometimes, all I want to do is pour the entire family sized pack of M&M's into my mouth and chase it with the biggest glass of whole milk. I think it's all about mindset, determination and knowing what you can and can't handle. Some people can have a handful of chocolate or a piece of pizza during while dieting with little to no setback, and some (like me) can't be tempted because we know that one piece turns in to three.
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amberellen12 wrote: »sunfastrose wrote: »amberellen12 wrote: »Just think ahead in the future and your roommates having to go to multiple doctors visits and taking pills for their ailments from eating junk food.
Then there’s you in stellar health, physically strong living your life not dictated by doctor visits or poor health.
Hi! I've been maintaining a 50 pound weight loss for over 15 years, live alone, and have a counter full of candy that is almost disturbing in its volume. I maintain a healthy weight and always have excellent reports at annual physical; this includes excellent blood test results and borderline too low blood pressure.
Eyes on your own paper and let them be them.
How old are you? When you head into your fifties and sixties then it comes home to roast.
What are you basing this on? There's little evidence that "junk food" will cause problems in the context of a diet where one is maintaining a healthy body weight and meeting nutritional needs.2 -
The hardest thing for me is when a roomie/family makes and offers me food I didn't allot for in my plan for the day. They cared, made delicious food, and I feel like I can only say no 9 out of 10 times, but that's enough to take me way off course. I have a friend with strict food limitations for health reasons, and it hurts me when I carefully make something that fits her criteria and she still says no. I don't want to be that person, and I don't want to miss out on all the fun. But I also want to honor the plan I set for myself. It's tough. The best advice I can offer is practice, practice, and every temptation is a new opportunity to honor yourself.0
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My dude eats differently than me. Yes he'll eat healthy meals I cook or that wee cook together, but I ain't gonna lie that some of his delivery food like pasta, sandwiches, Korean bowls, etc., and snack foods like fruit snacks, cereal, etc., aren't tempting at times.
That being said, I know how far I've come in my own eating and remembering what my goals are health wise. I've learned what healthy, delicious treats I can eat that make me feel good and even at times, he has enjoyed too. Everyone eats the way they eat for a reason. While I wish he made better food choices and exercised, he be how he be. Maybe my habits and my progress will rub off on him one day or god forbid the doctor tells him something. We're all gonna get old one day and I hope the choices I make today will help me live a long, healthy life with minimal health problems. But that's just me.0 -
Can you clear out a cabinet just for your roommate/s where they can store stuff you'd rather not see and know about? That way you're not dictating what they can and can't buy, and separating yourself from it at the same time.0
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