Is myfitnesspal healthy longterm?

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Replies

  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    This is nothing more than a version of cognitive restraint..... research shows people who use some form of restraint or tracking have far better long term success... I'll take my odds with this tool.

    Can you link me to one of these studies? Now I'm curious. :o

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4777230/
  • Phirrgus
    Phirrgus Posts: 1,894 Member
    zeejane03 wrote: »
    I've been on and off MFP for years now (I periodically take a break from it because I spend waaay too much time on the forums :p ). I'm several years into maintenance and it's nice to have a place to 'hang out,' where there's others who have similar diet/nutrition interests and goals etc. I don't have that with anyone in my real life and it can be a bit isolating at times.

    Yes it certainly can. Almost everyone in my family circle is at least a little overweight, some by a lot with the exception of one coworker.

    It would be awesome to have one or two....my youngest daughter used to be my workout partner, then she had to go get married and have kids lol. :)
  • RovP6
    RovP6 Posts: 108 Member
    Once you've been tracking for a long period of time, ie anything up to a year, you've already formed the good habits that will probably stand you in good stead for the rest of your life. That said, there's nothing wrong with going back to tracking after a break if you need to correct either body composition or weight. We've never had it so good these days with so much good nutritional information and tools to help us track and affect our body composition our metabolism and our overall weight. If it feels good then do it, if you get fed doing it then stop, if you stop and it feels like it's all going wrong again you can always start tracking again. I'm 114 days into my second period of tracking, but this time I'm tracking macros rather than pure calories.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    I’m currently still in the process of losing weight(I have 11 more pounds to go), but I’m curious what other members do after they reach their weight goal. Is it (mentally)healthy to continue to use myfitnesspal on a day-to-day basis? I’m sure using myfitnesspal would be easy and pretty accurate but I’m wondering if that’s too restrictive. On the flip side, I’m also worried if I ditch myfitnesspal that I will revert to gaining weight due to not being able to see my calories.

    What do you all recommend?

    I used MFP as a learning tool and to help me to develop healthier habits. When I went to maintenance I stopped logging. I maintain the healthy habits I learned while losing weight...I eat the same, just a little bit more and I continue to exercise regularly. I know what an appropriate portion of most foods are...I am mindful of that and mentally mindful of the calories I'm taking in even if I don't know an exact number. I monitor my weight weekly and it's easy enough to cut out a couple of snacks or something if things are trending up. I've maintained going on 6 years save for my annual winter weight which is around 8 Lbs every year. It comes off in the spring when my activity level goes back up.
  • foreverblissful
    foreverblissful Posts: 50 Member
    I think of it a little bit like being a recovering addict. I may never be able to be like "most" people who can naturally eat and drink in a controlled manner, so I have to always be "working the steps" if I want to stay in recovery. The trade off, though, is that I don't have heart disease, diabetes, lack of mobility, etc, that comes with living with obesity. It's just that I have to take those extra steps to be mindful.
    While it's certainly possible to cross over into the territory of being obsessive, tracking what you eat, even for your whole life, isn't obsessive in and of itself.

    THIS! I was really getting at that people make it seem like health and keeping a stable weight should be "automatically wired in our habits", and if it isn't "automatically wired in our habits" that using tools seems like overkill AFTER the weight is lost. This is what was fed to me growing up, so I felt self-conscious that I do want to continue with MFP it helps me so much with portion control, especially since I grew up eating big portions, which meant I was relatively chubby for most of my life, so it's easy for me to slip in an extra serving and shrug a shoulder because "the food tastes good why not eat more even though I'm full." It gives me a sense of accountability seeing that if I add an extra serving that I do not need(given I am not hungry) that it will set me off track maybe I shouldn't or that I can but I will have to "make up for it later." Most people in my life don't think like that and so I guess I was also worried about how that would look, especially since most people give me a look when I say "im logging my foods right now," but shrug only because they think I'm going to stop once I hit my goal. That was what really made me question "is this even normal?"
  • estherdragonbat
    estherdragonbat Posts: 5,283 Member
    Maybe a quarter of a lime at a shot, rounded down? (I was curious enough to Google if any fruits had zero sugar. Not overly surprised to find out the answer was "no", but I got a list of low-sugar fruits: https://www.verywellfit.com/low-carb-fruit-list-2242528)
  • egaba
    egaba Posts: 5 MFP Moderator
    I’m currently still in the process of losing weight(I have 11 more pounds to go), but I’m curious what other members do after they reach their weight goal. Is it (mentally)healthy to continue to use myfitnesspal on a day-to-day basis? I’m sure using myfitnesspal would be easy and pretty accurate but I’m wondering if that’s too restrictive. On the flip side, I’m also worried if I ditch myfitnesspal that I will revert to gaining weight due to not being able to see my calories.

    What do you all recommend?

    Learning healthy habits can take a lifetime. Once you reach your goal, find a new way to improve yourself in one way or another.
    • Improve strength; incorporate strength training into your routine
    • Improve flexibility; strike a yoga pose
    • Improve endurance; increase speed / distance in your walk/run
    • Learn a new recipe; check out our blog for inspiration
    • ... the list goes on

    Learning is not a product of schooling but the lifelong attempt to acquire it - Albert Einstein