Eating whatever you want?
nickswife1196
Posts: 3 Member
Am I the only one that still eats pretty much whatever I want as long as I stay at or below my calorie goal? I mean I’m not saying I eat a full McDonald’s Big Mac meal but I still eat bread (low calorie) , I still eat pasta (just not as much). I’m just more conscious of the AMOUNT that I eat and how many calories per serving. I see some people trying to “re create” their favorite foods to a healthier version. However I still just eat what I like just maybe not as much as I used too and not as often. For example at the end of the day and I still have enough calories left to eat a cupcake, do you eat the cupcake? Cause I do Is this ok what I’m doing? Just calorie counting? I don't want to consider this a diet. I want to consider this a life style change; something sustainable. I don’t want to feel deprived or hungry.Is calorie counting enough?
10
Replies
-
Nope you're not the only one. Yes its perfectly fine.10
-
I eat everything I want....1
-
Not the only one.5
-
I eat whatever I want in portion sizes that fit my goals. :drinker:2
-
It's my impression that that is what most of the veterans in here do.9
-
That's how I do it. You're good.4
-
Certainly it's ok. I've used MFP to help me balance my nutrition a little more, too, and I have learned new recipes that make it easier to eat low cal without being deprived, but that's just me. It's a tool; use it the way that works best for you.1
-
You are not even close to being the only one. Many who are successful at losing and keeping it off are doing that.5
-
I do the same. I think my family are confused as to how I'm losing so much weight when they see me eating biscuits every night 😂9
-
lost 100+ pounds doing it that way. still losing.8
-
Realizing I could eat what I want was the "click" I needed to lose and maintain with relative ease. It was a game changer.15
-
You're on the right track. I make sure I get enough fat and protein in my diet, and I never feel hungry. For example, as one of my snacks, I've been having a toasted high-fiber English muffin with a slice of reduced fat cheese and an egg fried in a no-stick pan with Pam spray. 222 calories, 24g of fat, 8g fiber, 16g protein. I make choices to reduce calories without affecting my level or satisfaction with the taste of the food, so that I can save those calories for use elsewhere in my daily budget.
I think it's essential to recognize what got you into trouble in the first place (too many calories), and make choices accordingly. To make sure I'm getting proper nutrition, I monitor the nutrient counts in MFP and if I'm short on protein, fat, or fiber I'll make choices for the rest of the day to make up for the shortfall. I have ice cream or a candy bar or pastry occasionally, but it's not a daily thing and I'll go out for a treat rather than keeping a supply around the house. That's because I've come to understand myself and my weaknesses.6 -
I eat whatever I want. So long as I can fit it into my calories, nothing is off limits.
Doing this I've lost 185lbs and still dropping.9 -
Thank you so much everyone for your responses!! I can’t tell you how much better I feel knowing I’m not Alone with my thoughts7
-
That’s how I’ve lost 62 pounds so far. I eat whatever I want. I decided this time around that I would not make any change that I couldn’t live with for the entire rest of my life. I can live with eating less.7
-
nickswife1196 wrote: »Thank you so much everyone for your responses!! I can’t tell you how much better I feel knowing I’m not Alone with my thoughts
The dieting industry has really warped our (general) perceptions on food. Confusion keeps people scared, overwhelmed, and buying their products. Sounds like you've got things figured out.9 -
nickswife1196 wrote: »Thank you so much everyone for your responses!! I can’t tell you how much better I feel knowing I’m not Alone with my thoughts
I ate a full big mac meal at least twice a week when I was losing. I've lost 1/3 of my boy weight (50lbs) and am getting ready to do my first bulk. I still eat cake, chips, candy, fast food, buffets, donuts, and anything else I want. For me it was the only way I could lose weight without continuing a binge restrict cycle.7 -
Yesterday I had steak pie and today I've had tacos with chips, it's all about moderation 😊3
-
Dessert every single day here (REAL dessert, not “yogurt and fruit” lol). Down 25!6
-
Sure, lots of people eat the cupcake. They are moderators. Other people don't have the cupcake, as that will trigger them to overeat. They are abstainers. Either is an equally valid option.
I moderate some foods, like pizza, and abstain from others, like Oreos.
I'm struggling to moderate ice cream. I do ok with low fat or froyo or single serve items, but still have difficulty moderating pints of full fat Ben & Jerry's, so it's better for me to just not buy them.
https://gretchenrubin.com/2012/10/back-by-popular-demand-are-you-an-abstainer-or-a-moderator/
...When dealing with temptation, I often see the advice, “Be moderate. Don’t have ice cream every night, but if you try to deny yourself altogether, you’ll fall off the wagon. Allow yourself to have the occasional treat, it will help you stick to your plan.”
I’ve come to believe that this is good advice for some people: the “moderators.” They do better when they avoid absolutes and strict rules.
For a long time, I kept trying this strategy of moderation–and failing. Then I read a line from Samuel Johnson, who said, when someone offered him wine: “Abstinence is as easy to me as temperance would be difficult.”
Ah ha! Like Dr. Johnson, I’m an “abstainer.”
I find it far easier to give something up altogether than to indulge moderately. When I admitted to myself that I was eating my favorite frozen yogurt treat very often—two and even three times a day—I gave it up cold turkey. That was far easier for me to do than to eat it twice a week. If I try to be moderate, I exhaust myself debating, “Today, tomorrow?” “Does this time ‘count’?” "Don't I deserve this?" etc. If I never do something, it requires no self-control for me; if I do something sometimes, it requires enormous self-control.
There’s no right way or wrong way—it’s just a matter of knowing which strategy works better for you. If moderators try to abstain, they feel trapped and rebellious. If abstainers try to be moderate, they spend a lot of precious energy justifying why they should go ahead and indulge.14 -
I pretty much do the same thing. Like you, I consider it a lifestyle change, not a diet.1
-
My superpower is the ability to eat a large amount of kettle corn. I'm not giving up my superpower. I log it, stay in my calories, and do just fine.7
-
kshama2001 wrote: »Sure, lots of people eat the cupcake. They are moderators. Other people don't have the cupcake, as that will trigger them to overeat. They are abstainers. Either is an equally valid option.
I moderate some foods, like pizza, and abstain from others, like Oreos.
I'm struggling to moderate ice cream. I do ok with low fat or froyo or single serve items, but still have difficulty moderating pints of full fat Ben & Jerry's, so it's better for me to just not buy them.
https://gretchenrubin.com/2012/10/back-by-popular-demand-are-you-an-abstainer-or-a-moderator/
...When dealing with temptation, I often see the advice, “Be moderate. Don’t have ice cream every night, but if you try to deny yourself altogether, you’ll fall off the wagon. Allow yourself to have the occasional treat, it will help you stick to your plan.”
I’ve come to believe that this is good advice for some people: the “moderators.” They do better when they avoid absolutes and strict rules.
For a long time, I kept trying this strategy of moderation–and failing. Then I read a line from Samuel Johnson, who said, when someone offered him wine: “Abstinence is as easy to me as temperance would be difficult.”
Ah ha! Like Dr. Johnson, I’m an “abstainer.”
I find it far easier to give something up altogether than to indulge moderately. When I admitted to myself that I was eating my favorite frozen yogurt treat very often—two and even three times a day—I gave it up cold turkey. That was far easier for me to do than to eat it twice a week. If I try to be moderate, I exhaust myself debating, “Today, tomorrow?” “Does this time ‘count’?” "Don't I deserve this?" etc. If I never do something, it requires no self-control for me; if I do something sometimes, it requires enormous self-control.
There’s no right way or wrong way—it’s just a matter of knowing which strategy works better for you. If moderators try to abstain, they feel trapped and rebellious. If abstainers try to be moderate, they spend a lot of precious energy justifying why they should go ahead and indulge.
This. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️2 -
Yes. I do that. I also eat McDonald’s full meal when I want it and when I plan for it (plus a McFlurry in some cases). I'm down 109 pounds.
Speaking of McDonald’s. They launched a new McFlurry here lately (with Lotus biscuits) and I decided to try it. I've always logged McFlurry at 556 calories because that's what google told me the "smaller" size had. Today, for some reason, I paid attention to the weight listed in that google nutrition sidebar and I thought "no way this weighs more than 300 grams" I weighed it, and our only default size weighs 170 grams. Turns out I've been overcounting the calories by a lot and the actual calories by weight is 303! This made me happy because now I can fit this into my diet more often.6 -
I eat the full #1 meal at McDonald’s, and even get an ice cream cone for desert. I lost 65 lbs doing that while maintaining a calorie deficit! I’m now maintaining my weight at 175 lbs which was my goal weight, went from a 44 waist to a 34 waist. Why are we still having to explain this. Yes you can eat whatever you want and still loose or maintain your weight!2
-
amusedmonkey wrote: »Yes. I do that. I also eat McDonald’s full meal when I want it and when I plan for it (plus a McFlurry in some cases). I'm down 109 pounds.
Speaking of McDonald’s. They launched a new McFlurry here lately (with Lotus biscuits) and I decided to try it. I've always logged McFlurry at 556 calories because that's what google told me the "smaller" size had. Today, for some reason, I paid attention to the weight listed in that google nutrition sidebar and I thought "no way this weighs more than 300 grams" I weighed it, and our only default size weighs 170 grams. Turns out I've been overcounting the calories by a lot and the actual calories by weight is 303! This made me happy because now I can fit this into my diet more often.
I was so happy when I found that! I was also logging the higher amount and, yeah, they're significantly lower than 556. I like to have one every week.1 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »Yes. I do that. I also eat McDonald’s full meal when I want it and when I plan for it (plus a McFlurry in some cases). I'm down 109 pounds.
Speaking of McDonald’s. They launched a new McFlurry here lately (with Lotus biscuits) and I decided to try it. I've always logged McFlurry at 556 calories because that's what google told me the "smaller" size had. Today, for some reason, I paid attention to the weight listed in that google nutrition sidebar and I thought "no way this weighs more than 300 grams" I weighed it, and our only default size weighs 170 grams. Turns out I've been overcounting the calories by a lot and the actual calories by weight is 303! This made me happy because now I can fit this into my diet more often.
I was so happy when I found that! I was also logging the higher amount and, yeah, they're significantly lower than 556. I like to have one every week.
Yeah, and I even used an entry that lists them at 170 something per 100 g just to be safe (google says 165), so it's likely even lower than 300 calories.3 -
Bread and pasta are great foods. If wholewheat doesn't agree with you there's nothing wrong with sticking to the versions you enjoy.3
-
I eat the full #1 meal at McDonald’s, and even get an ice cream cone for desert. I lost 65 lbs doing that while maintaining a calorie deficit! I’m now maintaining my weight at 175 lbs which was my goal weight, went from a 44 waist to a 34 waist. Why are we still having to explain this. Yes you can eat whatever you want and still loose or maintain your weight!
Nobody was asking for you to explain anything. OP was looking for other people who fit 'regular' foods into their diet.3 -
There are some lower calorie things I have started eating since joining here, but I only eat things I like, and I havent given up anything. I just make it fit by decreasing portion size, exercising more, or finding space by eating under my goal for a couple of days. I've only been working on this for the summer but I've been losing at the rate I had hoped for.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K 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
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions