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Myth or not a myth?

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Replies

  • Posts: 125 Member
    edited May 2018
    kimny72 wrote: »

    Yes, OP you can eat whatever you want, as long as the portion you need to stick to in order to fit your calorie goal satisfies you. As others have said, you may have to make some hard choices if some of those foods don't work in appropriate portions. If you run into problems and need help figuring out how to make those decisions, please feel free to come back and ask more questions!

    I would also suggest you give a little thought to your weekly weight loss goal. 1.5 or 2 lbs per week is only appropriate to obese people with a lot to lose. It's possible you got such a low goal because you are looking for an aggressive rate of loss.

    As for the derail this thread has started down, I see no reason to assume someone who has found MFP and made a wise decision to play with the numbers and log food and exercise can't figure out through trial and error which foods/portion sizes will work for them and which won't. Suggesting telling someone they can eat whatever they want means they will assume they can eat unlimited amounts is really insulting to people. Once you start accurately logging, it's kind of impossible to miss if your preferred size of your favorite food takes up all your calories :neutral:

    You always say what I think.
  • Posts: 10,330 Member
    edited May 2018
    PAV8888 wrote: »

    1. Halo top or the whole slew of competitors that use various combinations of fiber and polyalcohols and higher protein content to create a pint-ish of ice cream-like in the 320 to 400 Cal range.

    2. Frozen banana + frozen lower calorie fruits such as blueberries, strawberries, or peaches and blended with various combinations of 0% or 2% yogurt/greek yogurt, milk, milk substitutes, with or without protein powder, with or without ice.

    You're welcome.

    Another option would be: save 85 calories a day (or create it with more activity, which is surprisingly easy if you introduce small NEAT stuff) and have 600 calories of Haagen Daaz once a week.
  • Posts: 5,609 Member
    Even though I stayed under my calorie goal my weight would barely budge or go down. Once I started counting my carbs and ignoring calories, i was eating more than I was before and higher calories, but my weight finally started to drop.

    If you weren't counting calories how do you know you were eating more calories than before?

    I would suggest that you may have felt you were eating more, because you were hungry less; but in reality you were creating a calorie deficit.

    CICO.
  • Posts: 5,727 Member
    amyepdx wrote: »

    My last word I promise. If you want to lose weight AND maintain a certain lower weight, you will have to change your idea of satisfying. It’s not tragic - just a simple fact. As they say, choose your hard.

    And the amazing thing is that over a year or two of discipline, it will change.

    I'm 2 years in, and down from 265. Currently around 235. I've been as low as 227. I've been chipping away at getting into maintenance in the 220 range for about the last year. I'm not in a huge hurry to get there, 3 years ago, I could have polished off a large double cheese extra meat feast pizza with no problem, and still wanted more--not hungry, just wanting more. This spring, On a change of pace day(not cheating) I had 3 slices of pep and was way past satisfied. Not only that, but the 3 slices was actually FEWER calories than my normal dinner. So I hit my calories. It blew me away.
  • Posts: 1 Member
    Nice to see a community here with so much good advice. I'm no expert or role model, but my understanding is that as you begin your process, you should focus more on calorie density in foods. That is, foods that are high in calorie density will generally satiate you less than foods that are low in calorie density. Calorie density means literally how many calories a food has per gram. The theory is that with a low calorie density food like say, an apple, you should be able to feel more "full" than with a high calorie density food, like a steak. So 100grams of apple will carry fewer calories than 100 grams of steak, but should make you feel just as "full."
  • Posts: 5,966 Member
    It’s true! But it’s hard to maintain 1200 calories when your diet is all pizza and chocolate and fries lol
  • Posts: 125 Member
    nbctech wrote: »
    Nice to see a community here with so much good advice. I'm no expert or role model, but my understanding is that as you begin your process, you should focus more on calorie density in foods. That is, foods that are high in calorie density will generally satiate you less than foods that are low in calorie density. Calorie density means literally how many calories a food has per gram. The theory is that with a low calorie density food like say, an apple, you should be able to feel more "full" than with a high calorie density food, like a steak. So 100grams of apple will carry fewer calories than 100 grams of steak, but should make you feel just as "full."

    You should find food that fits your lifestyle and that satiates you personally. It’s an individual thing. Giving advice like, you should eat this not that, is what makes people inconsistent. It takes a lifestyle change for results that last. Not swapping steak for apples, not even a little bit.
  • Posts: 267 Member
    As others have posted, you are going to have to experiment, to find what works for you.

    For me, starchy carbs just leave me wanting more, more, more. (I was tested and found out I have some food allergies and sensitivities, so there is the way my body is processing or attempting to process certain foods to consider.)

    Lean proteins and vegetables (I like and can tolerate) can leave me feeling satiated for hours. Combinations of whole grains and lean proteins can do the same "magic". But, I have had years to figure all of this out. Learning to limit my intake of high calorie(s), but tiny portions of certain foods I love is something I have learned to do and accept.

    Mostly I don't eat them, even though I love them, because I am not getting "the bang for my buck" so to speak. I do occasionally though. I just have to cut back on other things and, "Now I can't have fresh mozz, tomatoes, basil and olive oil drizzle because I already ate cheesecake! Better luck next time!" (Inner monologue.)

    Eat what you like.
  • Posts: 3,233 Member
    jjpptt2 wrote: »
    As long as 1200 cals puts you in a calorie deficit, then yes you'll lose weight.

    However, it can be hard to sustain the type of diet you mentioned (fries, chocolate, pizza) because the quantity of food will end up being pretty small/low. Also, consider overall health/nutrition...

    This. A single slice of large deluxe pizza can be as high as 480 calories. Imagine eating nothing but two slices of pizza all day and maybe a small salad. However, switching to more lean meats, lower calorie prepared versions of vegetables, and another side, and you can make a couple decent meals, and even add in some breakfast for 1200 calories. It's not that you can't eat specific foods, it's that you have to balance the calories of the food you're eating with your need for food.
  • Posts: 7,739 Member
    edited May 2018
    kimny72 wrote: »

    To the bolded, they will learn just like you did no doubt, by logging food and learning from their mistakes.

    OP asked if she can eat whatever she wants as long as she sticks to her calories. She has literally told us she understands there is a limit.

    You can repeat it as much as you want, but "You can eat whatever you want as long as you hit your calorie goal" does NOT in any way equal "You can eat whatever you want in whatever quantity you want". If someone decides to hear something we aren't actually saying, then they will no doubt figure it out the first time they log a whole thick crust pizza or multiple chocolate bars.

    To be clear. "Whatever" does not suggest quantity. It suggests choice in type. If someone attaches quantity to a choice that is not implied that is on them, not the statement.

    Words are important.


    And this is why generally like to read threads the whole way through before replying. Of course, I'm breaking that "rule" now.

    But yeah: whatever != however much

  • Posts: 1,559 Member
    Eat what you want as long as you stay within your calories; ignore the hyperbole; measure and weigh to make sure you're really in a deficit. Done.
  • Posts: 57 Member
    Wow, lots of good stuff in this thread. The entire phrase, "You can eat whatever you want if you stay below your daily calorie burn and lose weight" is a true statement. The reason to limit food high in calories and low in nutrition is that you will miss out on nutrition. Also there is a process called sugar crash that can occur if you eat sugar or other foods the body turns into sugar, like bread, white rice, and pasta. The body releases insulin to reduce the sugar levels in the blood. That leads to lower blood sugar and hunger.
    Also, according to Covert Bailey (author of Fit or Fat), losing weight by eating less make you a thin fat person. Covert Bailey is all about lean body mass or Body Fat Percentage. By increasing the muscle in the body, the body burns more calories every day. You can cut calories and make the scale show a number you want, and still feel terrible.
    By getting more fit, through resistance training (weights) and exercise you feel better. Muscle is denser than fat, so you may weigh as much as you do now, but fit into much smaller clothes. Also, by burning more calories you can eat more calories and remain the same size.
    One myth that is true is "Many people say they want to lose weight, but really they want to become more fit."
    Any change to your body will require a change in your lifestyle. Good Luck!
  • Posts: 57 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I kind of feel bad for Nooshi. I still think this forum might have been able to help her. Ah well...

    She might be a troll. Her one point was, for her, "setting out to eat one slice of pizza ends up many slices of pizza and therefore no pizza at all, and therefore she can't eat whatever she wants" She saw that as true for here and therefore must be true for every other person.

    She doesn't have much on her profile page, member since 2016. I'm not sure what her motivation is. I wish her the best though. Good Luck Nooshi if you read this.

    Arguing with a troll and trying to capture a pig in the mud are similar as after 10 minutes, you realize the pig likes it.
    Good Luck All!
  • Posts: 1 Member
    I just skimmed the responses so forgive any repeating of information:

    -Yes, you will lose weight if 1200cal/day is less than what you ingest now.
    -However, to get the full benefit of weight loss, a balanced diet is best.
    -Lots of information on the Net may be incorrect or someone's opinion. A good website to go to that has "evidence based" information is www.choosemyplate.gov. It is a website sponsored by the Federal Government and its information is easy to read and understand. It is a website that I referenced when I was a RN/Health Coach.
  • Posts: 8,940 Member

    She might be a troll. Her one point was, for her, "setting out to eat one slice of pizza ends up many slices of pizza and therefore no pizza at all, and therefore she can't eat whatever she wants" She saw that as true for here and therefore must be true for every other person.

    She doesn't have much on her profile page, member since 2016. I'm not sure what her motivation is. I wish her the best though. Good Luck Nooshi if you read this.

    Arguing with a troll and trying to capture a pig in the mud are similar as after 10 minutes, you realize the pig likes it.
    Good Luck All!

    She wasn't a troll. I have a finely honed trolldar after 25 year of posting/modding/administrating/sysoping.

  • Posts: 8,940 Member
    edited May 2018

    Agree, just a very frustrated person. and I'll see your 25 and raise you. :)

    This is a competition I don't want to be in. I am scared to think of what my lifetime post grand total might be.
  • Posts: 5,727 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »

    This is a competition I don't want to be in. I am scared to think of what my lifetime post grand total might be.

    Scary. I spent a lot of time in some very active newsgroups so half a million maybe?
  • Posts: 8,940 Member
    Scary. I spent a lot of time in some very active newsgroups so half a million maybe?

    :blush: Sure. Yeah. 500k only. :blush:
  • Posts: 7,093 Member
    Like most of the people on here, the "junk food" isn't as filling and you can't eat much if you stick to just that. However, I have been a junk food junkie for too many years to give it up 100% of the time so I have learned to incorporate it into my meals.

    I personally still eat pizza, burgers and tacos however I make them all at home now 95% of the time. I make pizza out of whole wheat tortilla or pita shells to help cut calories. I use extra lean ground beef. One thing I learned very recently though is that I severely underestimated my meat portions. When I bought a scale a couple of weeks ago I was horrified by how much I was truly eating. I now have skinny burgers LOL

    If I want an ice cream in the evening I make sure i have the calories for it first or will go for a walk so I can enjoy it guilt free. I am not a sweet eater, for the most part I prefer the salt. Give me potato chips any day over a cookie. I now eat more popcorn or baked chips instead of fried.

    I have found that my body, when I'm truly listening to it, tells me when I'm on the right track and I feel better eating the healthier foods now than when I overindulge in the junk.
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