Food guilt?!
LauraSrock18
Posts: 125 Member
I’m wondering how y’all deal with food guilt
I find myself feeling guilty (like today) for eating 1,900 calories vs 1,700 (like MFP suggests) I had a busy day at work & was starving when I got home & ate 4 pieces of pizza. I ate back exercise calories from work & have 25 exercise calories left! I know the holiday can lead to over eating
How do y’all deal with feeling guilty over FOOD?!
I find myself feeling guilty (like today) for eating 1,900 calories vs 1,700 (like MFP suggests) I had a busy day at work & was starving when I got home & ate 4 pieces of pizza. I ate back exercise calories from work & have 25 exercise calories left! I know the holiday can lead to over eating
How do y’all deal with feeling guilty over FOOD?!
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Replies
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It helps me to realize that I would have to eat 3500 calories above maintenance (not the deficit calorie number set by MFP) to gain a single pound. Try not to assign moral value to food.13
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By getting to the root of the guilt, and/or putting things in perspective. For example, your daily total is 1700, you have eaten 1900 so far. If you told MFP you wanted to lose 1lb/week that 1700 already has a 500cal deficit built in and you've eaten into 200cal of that. If you have nothing else today, you still have a 300cal deficit. That's still not terrible, you haven't ruined anything. Life happens, sometimes you just have a day and you eat a little more. As long as it doesn't start becoming habit once in awhile isn't going to ruin the long term. You may have days where you totally blow the deficit (I have, many times). The feeling can suck, but you can't wallow in it. You get back up, do better the next day and pinpoint what it is that made you fall off the wagon. It's a learning process, be patient with yourself.5
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So you're actually at 1675 net calories? That's great! You hit your goal!
I don't feel guilty about food. I have pizza about once a week, ice cream several times a week. As long as it fits into my goals, I'm good.11 -
I don't get guilty over food because I don't consider it a moral issue to eat over my goal.6
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This is too long a road to be guilty about choices. Make better decisions tomorrow. Plan so you don’t come home starving.6
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It's ok to enjoy living.
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Food is amazing! Fearing food is not good.3
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I stopped feeling guilty about food a long time ago. Going over 100 or 1000 or even 5000 calories isn't the end of the world, and not worth stressing over. I just make a note to add 15 minutes a day to my morning cardio for a week to balance everything out.1
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LauraSrock18 wrote: »I’m wondering how y’all deal with food guilt
I find myself feeling guilty (like today) for eating 1,900 calories vs 1,700 (like MFP suggests) I had a busy day at work & was starving when I got home & ate 4 pieces of pizza. I ate back exercise calories from work & have 25 exercise calories left! I know the holiday can lead to over eating
How do y’all deal with feeling guilty over FOOD?!
I don't feel guilty about food I eat.
You might want to look at your activity setting, you shouldn't be logging work as exercise2 -
LauraSrock18 wrote: »I’m wondering how y’all deal with food guilt
I find myself feeling guilty (like today) for eating 1,900 calories vs 1,700 (like MFP suggests) I had a busy day at work & was starving when I got home & ate 4 pieces of pizza. I ate back exercise calories from work & have 25 exercise calories left! I know the holiday can lead to over eating
How do y’all deal with feeling guilty over FOOD?!
Look at it more rationally. To gain 1 pound you need to eat 3500kcal above maintenance.
So you ate 200kcal more than what MFP suggested, probably still below maintenance level.
1lbs = 3500kcal
x = 200kcal
so that 0.056lbs that you might not have lost due to this
Does that sound like a lot? No. Of course your loss will slow down if you do this every day, but once in a while is not a problem at all0 -
Like others have said, you have to put it in perspective. I am working on this myself. When I feel guilty, my go-to is to then just binge because I've already "ruined it" anyway. I think I'll start over the next day, after the weekend, maybe even the next week. I truly believe that this was the cause of most of my weight gain! Going over by a couple hundred calories one day isn't really going to make a difference.1
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Take a deep breath and put it into perspective. I find that writing it down tends to help as the issue always seems less important once I've written it down (as opposed to letting it swirl around in my head and seem much more important than it is)
Remember, you did gain all that weight in one day, you're not going to lose it in one day, so why would one "bad" day ruin everything?0 -
Do you know anyone who maintains a normal weight naturally? Take a closer look at how they eat. You'll notice some days they are hungrier and eat more, other days they are less hungry and eat less. That's just how the normal human body operates. Why would you blame yourself for the tendency to feel hungrier sometimes, and the very normal tendency to want to satisfy that hunger?
Eating more sometimes is going to happen regardless of how you feel about it, so you can either accept it as a normal part of the process or keep ruminating and blaming yourself. You'll find a spontaneous increase in hunger sometimes, being tempted by food when not hungry sometimes, holidays and gatherings, really wanting a higher calorie dish vs a lower calorie one, occasional overeating driven by poor planning or feelings...etc. These are all normal events to overeat and everyone goes through them.
The only difference between those who lose weight and those who gain it is that those who lose are consistently in a deficit outside of these events. Accepting them as normal allows them to move on right away instead of the vicious cycle of overeating, feeling guilty, doubling down, feeling restricted, which leads to overeating, and repeat.
Looking at your post, you didn't even overeat since you were within your calories (exercise calories are meant to be eaten). You're feeling guilty for doing what you're supposed to be doing. Isn't that a bit harsh?2 -
Personally, I look back at the years of happiness and wellbeing that I lost when I was battling bulimia and try to move on that way. I don't want food guilt to take me down that road ever again. Don't let it take you either!3
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I think it’s really important to think about why you feel guilty. Is it because you’ve expected yourself every single day of your life to stay within a certain calorie count? If so, is that reasonable? If not, how many days per week or month are you going to allow yourself some leeway, and how much? It helps me to have a certain number of days each month when I know I’m going over. If i don’t work this out in advance, I do feel bad when I go over OR end going over frequently. But otherwise, I think, “Great, dinner out with my son is going to be one of my over days, and I’ll have two more left in July afterwards!” What I want to avoid is both never having the chance to enjoy the pleasure of foods, but also not using the pleasure of foods to derail the rest of my work.1
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