How to fit in "off plan" food choices without derailing?

Let me preface this with saying I'm not suggesting any specific food SHOULD be off limits. However, due to health issues I personally have to eat a fairly strict diet most of the time.

My concern is burnout. I want to be able to go off my personal plan once or twice a week for a meal or a snack or a dessert, without it becoming like the floodgates have opened and my mind--subconsciously or not--gives in to the point that the meal becomes two meals, the snacks become two snacks, the desert becomes a whole bag of cookies, and so on.

I am wondering what you all do to rein yourself in without having to be always on plan.

For what it's worth, I'll share my normal diet here:

I eat veggies, fruits, nuts, beans, tofu, eggs, seeds a lot.
I will slowly be adding back whole grains like rice, oatmeal, and the like.
I have very small amounts of dairy, but most days none at all.
I do not eat meat.
I avoid sugar and flour.

So when I say off plan, I am talking about, for example, having a cookie or having a tortilla, maybe a sandwich, now and then.

I'd like to be able to do that once or twice a week and then have no problem going right back to my norm. But in the past, anytime I'm not strict, I've either quickly or gradually gone back to overdoing the sugar and the flour and the dairy. And then I'd gain weight and feel physically horrible. Recently I was in the hospital as a result of those choices. On plan, I lose weight weight and start to feel good, but deprived at times.

What do you do to fit in the things you don't normally have without messing it all up?
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Replies

  • Adc7225
    Adc7225 Posts: 1,318 Member
    I understand what are saying and one of the things that I did was like mentioned above I would get the best cookie, preferably one that I had to go out of my to get, the same with chocolates. Budget has a limit on Godiva. I agree, become a food snob, it has a way of making things unappetizing. Going out of my way to get the best or specific things also helped me to move more, I would walk home from work 3+ miles when stopping to get a goody. Pre-logging also helps, it can make that momentary weakness of giving in not seem worth it at all.
  • 150poundsofme
    150poundsofme Posts: 523 Member
    Maybe it depends on the mood you are in. Are you feeling good with your emotions? Then maybe you can handle just one cookie. But if you just got annoyed with someone or something didn't go as you planned, and if you can, I would hold up on that treat. How has your record been in the past - have you just had "one" and you were fine or did "just one" derail your food plan?
  • whoami67
    whoami67 Posts: 297 Member
    I would plan, probably several days in advance, the "cheat" and write it down along with writing down the other things I'm going to eat that day. To me, eating my forbidden foods as often as twice a week would really move them into the category of allowed foods. I tend to eat those foods that negatively affect my health about once or twice a year or maybe if I'm feeling particularly weak and out of control, once every other month. You may be different.

    I have some health restrictions on what I can eat, some doctor mandated and others that I've learned are detrimental to my health. But sometimes I really want to eat those things I shouldn't eat. It does help me to find suitable ingredient substitutes.

    Is there a type of cookie you could eat, that could bake, that uses allowed ingredients? Is there a sandwich substitute...a type of breadlike substance you could make that would be a good alternative option? Or, for example, there was a time when I could eat fermented raw milk dairy (homemade kefir or yogurt), but not regular dairy. I could handle small amounts of properly soaked or sprouted grains, but not larger amounts, not every day, and not unprepared grains. Perhaps you could expand your food choices by changing how you prepare the foods.

  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    Thanks for all the feedback, everyone. I appreciate it. I don't have much faith in doctors due to a host of bad experiences, and it doesn't help that most don't get much training in nutrition. I feel pretty confident that I am making the right food choices for my default diet, just struggle with derailment. I'll try purposefully planning it in advance rather than allow for spur of the moment impulses.

    I just went out for lunch and was tempted to eat a cookie. I looked at my calories and saw that I could, theoretically fit it in. But since it wasn't planned and it'd really reduce what's left for dinner, I decided not to get it.

    I am going to assume you will handle yourself responsibly with whatever is suggested here with regard to your dietary restrictions.

    As I mentioned my plan allows for additional eating. In my yearly plan I have a set number of days for diet breaks, vacations, special occasions, holidays, and wildcard days. In most of these I allow myself to eat around my maintenance calories in some I allow even more. I recently went on vacation and for the first time since Feb 2018 I went kind of nuts with eating. I did it deliberately because I was experiencing a bit of diet fatigue. It helped and I am renewed in my efforts. All of my non deficit days are to help keep me from feeling burnt out or deprived. Some will cause a little setback while the rest will simply be zero loss days. Some of those wildcard days are for when I am having a really bad day and the rest are just for fun.

    This is the same yearly plan that I had from Feb 2018 - Feb 2019 and I lost a substantial amount of weight because even though I was not in a deficit 100 percent of the time I was in a deficit most of the time. More importantly my adherence was never in jeopardy. Being "good" all the time doesn't work for me. I have several decades of failures to know that for a fact.

    I am not suggesting that you should have eaten the cookie. I, too, think it is a bad idea to make spur of the moment decisions. The only time I allow myself to reverse the course of a day is when, as I mentioned, I am just having a really bad day. They don't happen often but they do happen. I am just giving you this information to perhaps help answer your original question of how to handle eating without derailing.

    I also bank calories as @lemurcat2 suggested for weekend treats.
  • corinasue1143
    corinasue1143 Posts: 7,464 Member
    My dietician suggested— pick a week. Friday morning to Thursday night, or Monday morning to
    Sunday night for instance. That is always your week. During that week, you can have one and only one treat. Think about what you really want, when you want it, how much of it you really want, then enjoy it. That’s it. Then you can start thinking about next week. If something comes up unexpectedly before you have that special something, you can change your mind and do the unexpected instead of the planned, if it comes up during your week, but after your special something, you just have to say, No thank you. Worked for me. Something to think about.
  • emmamcgarity
    emmamcgarity Posts: 1,594 Member
    In listening to an interview on a podcast with Yoni Freedhoff someone with diabetes had asked him about wanting to have an occasional piece of cake. After giving the appropriate disclaimers about monitoring blood sugar and listening to your own doctors advice specific to your situation. He also said that for some people it’s unrealistic to NEVER have the cake since too much restriction can sometimes lead to binging, etc. He indicated that there are a couple things to ask yourself about the specific food/situation before indulging. 1) Is it worth it? 2) What is the smallest amount I can eat and be satisfied.

    I think these guidelines help me distinguish between the daily “I want cake” vs. “My best friend is having a birthday and I’d like to share a piece of cake with her”. To me cake is not worth it as a daily indulgence (ice cream is). But under some circumstances (special occasions) I wouldn’t want to miss out on cake. Planning ahead let’s me decide on the portion size. Once I choose my portion size, I serve it an leave the room with it. Leaving the room is important for me to keep me away from additional portions.
  • rheddmobile
    rheddmobile Posts: 6,840 Member
    edited May 2019
    In listening to an interview on a podcast with Yoni Freedhoff someone with diabetes had asked him about wanting to have an occasional piece of cake. After giving the appropriate disclaimers about monitoring blood sugar and listening to your own doctors advice specific to your situation. He also said that for some people it’s unrealistic to NEVER have the cake since too much restriction can sometimes lead to binging, etc. He indicated that there are a couple things to ask yourself about the specific food/situation before indulging. 1) Is it worth it? 2) What is the smallest amount I can eat and be satisfied.

    I think these guidelines help me distinguish between the daily “I want cake” vs. “My best friend is having a birthday and I’d like to share a piece of cake with her”. To me cake is not worth it as a daily indulgence (ice cream is). But under some circumstances (special occasions) I wouldn’t want to miss out on cake. Planning ahead let’s me decide on the portion size. Once I choose my portion size, I serve it an leave the room with it. Leaving the room is important for me to keep me away from additional portions.

    I’m type 2. For me, most kinds of cake are not an option as a single piece will spike me into unacceptable levels - I can handle about 45g carbs as part of a mixed meal, only about 30g if it’s just cake, and most pieces of birthday cake have upwards of 60g. However, I can be social and have a couple of bites of cake while eating something else I have provided or drinking black coffee if we are at a restaurant, for example. For my own birthdays I arrange for keto cakes.

    For me at least, eating something anyway which I know will spike me is never an option. I won’t deliberately damage my health for the sake of being social, and no reasonable friend would expect me to. And no food is worth it - food goes in your mouth and then the fun’s over, while I have to live with only one body for the rest of my life.

    That doesn’t mean I have to be miserable. It does mean that I have to work out what foods I can manage within known restrictions, just as I have to figure out what I can afford due to the money I have. Do I sometimes buy frivolous things with my money? Yes, but not if it means my electricity gets cut off because I can’t pay the bill. Indulging in food treats, same thing, I enjoy what I can afford to enjoy and then stop.
  • emmamcgarity
    emmamcgarity Posts: 1,594 Member
    In listening to an interview on a podcast with Yoni Freedhoff someone with diabetes had asked him about wanting to have an occasional piece of cake. After giving the appropriate disclaimers about monitoring blood sugar and listening to your own doctors advice specific to your situation. He also said that for some people it’s unrealistic to NEVER have the cake since too much restriction can sometimes lead to binging, etc. He indicated that there are a couple things to ask yourself about the specific food/situation before indulging. 1) Is it worth it? 2) What is the smallest amount I can eat and be satisfied.

    I think these guidelines help me distinguish between the daily “I want cake” vs. “My best friend is having a birthday and I’d like to share a piece of cake with her”. To me cake is not worth it as a daily indulgence (ice cream is). But under some circumstances (special occasions) I wouldn’t want to miss out on cake. Planning ahead let’s me decide on the portion size. Once I choose my portion size, I serve it an leave the room with it. Leaving the room is important for me to keep me away from additional portions.

    I’m type 2. For me, most kinds of cake are not an option as a single piece will spike me into unacceptable levels - I can handle about 45g carbs as part of a mixed meal, only about 30g if it’s just cake, and most pieces of birthday cake have upwards of 60g. However, I can be social and have a couple of bites of cake while eating something else I have provided or drinking black coffee if we are at a restaurant, for example. For my own birthdays I arrange for keto cakes.

    For me at least, eating something anyway which I know will spike me is never an option. I won’t deliberately damage my health for the sake of being social, and no reasonable friend would expect me to. And no food is worth it - food goes in your mouth and then the fun’s over, while I have to live with only one body for the rest of my life.

    That doesn’t mean I have to be miserable. It does mean that I have to work out what foods I can manage within known restrictions, just as I have to figure out what I can afford due to the money I have. Do I sometimes buy frivolous things with my money? Yes, but not if it means my electricity gets cut off because I can’t pay the bill. Indulging in food treats, same thing, I enjoy what I can afford to enjoy and then stop.

    I really like the way you described your strategies specific to your health. It occurred me me after reading your response that I wasn’t clear about something in my post. The interview referenced a diabetic person who asked Dr Freedhoff the question. However I do not have diabetes. I just thought his response of the questions to ask yourself before indulging were helpful to me prior to making decisions about foods that are off my plan. I think knowing how your body will react (i.e. blood sugar spikes, other health consequences) definitely play into the “is it worth it” question. There are definitely some foods I won’t have simply because I don’t have the self control to stop myself at an even moderately reasonable serving size. And that’s not worth it to me.
  • journey2zen
    journey2zen Posts: 16 Member
    Thanks for all the feedback, everyone. I appreciate it. I don't have much faith in doctors due to a host of bad experiences, and it doesn't help that most don't get much training in nutrition. I feel pretty confident that I am making the right food choices for my default diet, just struggle with derailment. I'll try purposefully planning it in advance rather than allow for spur of the moment impulses.

    I just went out for lunch and was tempted to eat a cookie. I looked at my calories and saw that I could, theoretically fit it in. But since it wasn't planned and it'd really reduce what's left for dinner, I decided not to get it.

    Can you clarify what you meant in the original post about having to have a strict diet for your health, because you're getting two different types of responses depending on how people are interpreting it? Are these self-imposed food restrictions based on what you think is healthy in general, or are these specific foods you need to avoid because they are counterindicated for specific medical conditions you have?

    I have to avoid them because of medical issues. Don't really want to go into details about the medical aspect of it for privacy reasons. So basically I DO have to eat the way I do most of the time, but not necessarily 100% of the time.
  • Kimmotion5783
    Kimmotion5783 Posts: 417 Member
    Planning is the best thing you can do in this scenario. Allow yourself ONE cheat meal per week and plan for it. Go to a nice restaurant, maybe grab some friends and let yourself have whatever you want to. That's really the best way of dealing with wanting "the bad foods" is to just let yourself have it once a week and work it into your food plan. Like for example, I'm going out Friday night for pizza with a friend, so I'll eat mostly fruits and vegetables during the day, make sure I really stay hydrated and do extra cardio. If you plan accordingly, you'll be fine. Just make a plan, really think about what you want, and stick to it.
  • COGypsy
    COGypsy Posts: 1,352 Member
    I have some dietary restrictions due to a digestive condition and I usually have to decide if the indulgence is worth the consequences. Deviating too far off my routine generally leaves me bloated and nauseated, with a good amount of discomfort and indigestion-type symptoms that can last up to a week. I admit, sometimes I do want old favorites enough to accept those consequences (popcorn!). Generally though, I just try to find a “close enough” alternative.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    Thanks for all the feedback, everyone. I appreciate it. I don't have much faith in doctors due to a host of bad experiences, and it doesn't help that most don't get much training in nutrition. I feel pretty confident that I am making the right food choices for my default diet, just struggle with derailment. I'll try purposefully planning it in advance rather than allow for spur of the moment impulses.

    I just went out for lunch and was tempted to eat a cookie. I looked at my calories and saw that I could, theoretically fit it in. But since it wasn't planned and it'd really reduce what's left for dinner, I decided not to get it.

    Can you clarify what you meant in the original post about having to have a strict diet for your health, because you're getting two different types of responses depending on how people are interpreting it? Are these self-imposed food restrictions based on what you think is healthy in general, or are these specific foods you need to avoid because they are counterindicated for specific medical conditions you have?

    I have to avoid them because of medical issues. Don't really want to go into details about the medical aspect of it for privacy reasons. So basically I DO have to eat the way I do most of the time, but not necessarily 100% of the time.

    Without disclosing anything personal can you tell us what "most of the time" means? Is it a percentage of the time or is it more like a certain number of servings per week
  • journey2zen
    journey2zen Posts: 16 Member
    I’d physically be fine with a few meals a week, maybe 3, being indulgent. Spread out.