Am I really committing a crime against humanity?

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Replies

  • 150poundsofme
    150poundsofme Posts: 523 Member
    When you are trying your best not to eat something because it will not help with your weight loss, having it constantly placed in front of you or being asked to eat it can be rough. It is kinda like you really do want to eat it but you are choosing and trying not to eat it. But you can be easily swayed by all the pushing.
    I have officially become abstinent with soooo many foods. Just started this on Monday (yes, had to restart on a Monday). It seems that if you do not have a certain issue, people just don't understand. Yes, just eating that one doughnut could make me start binging for a week, a month or even a year. Some very wise people wrote great posts here. I copied a lot of it to reread later. It is so much easier to not take that first bite than to resist having the second bite or second or third or fourth portion. And for me, when people talk about good or bad food, for me, I do believe there is a distinction. Bad food - the food that can cause high blood pressure, heart problems, clogged arteries, diabetes etc., foods that are unhealthy for your body - I mean, are we just here to lose weight or are we here to help get a healthy body? I wish for the OP to be firm in her "No thank you".
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Processed and ultra processed are not the same. Frozen spinach is processed. Whole grain bread is processed, rolled oats are processed, canned tomatoes are processed, cottage cheese is processed, smoked salmon is processed, boneless, skinless chicken breast is processed.

    Ironically, the link defines ultraprocessed as microwavable and ready to eat, so would not include the oh so evil homemade pie.

    But again not the topic of this thread.

    While you are correct that processed and ultra processed are not the same, everyone I know IRL, along with most new posters on MFP, say "processed" when they mean "ultra processed".

    This is the first I time I remember seeing the term ultra processed used. The subject was confusing as it was so adding this layer just makes my head hurt.

    Really? New posters generally say "processed" when they mean what many MFP regulars understand to be "ultra processed" so I often come along and point this out and drop in the link to the Brazilian definitions. Ultra Processed starts on p 39: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/publicacoes/dietary_guidelines_brazilian_population.pdf
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Re the little tangent of not throwing out food because people are starving somewhere else.

    My husband, who is over weight, has this thing about eating all the food on his plate, eating the last peice of cake etc so it doesnt get wasted because when he was a child they were hammered with this Eat it all, think of starving children in Africa/India/China/Somewhere

    Although rationally, whether he eats the above or throws it out or gives it to the dog make zero difference to anyone else in the world.

    If he wanted to do something planned, like not buy packets of biscuits or make some other cost saving change to his diet and donate that money to Savethechildren or similar, that would make sense.

    Just not eating or not eating random excess food does not.

    Yes, as a child I too was brainwashed by my mother about the "starving children in Africa." This was not so much a problem at home, where reasonable portions of balanced meals were served, but did become a problem for me once I left the house and was eating at restaurants, where the portions were quite excessive.

    It took a lot of effort on my part to reprogram my brain out of the "Clean Plate Club" mentality.

    As you and others have said, me eating excess food or throwing it out makes no actual difference to hungry people. I do try to minimize my own food waste, but more practically, do things like contribute to my churches' food drives, participate in making meals for the homeless, and donate goats https://www.oxfamgifts.com/gifts/donate-goat/ (lots of other ways to donate, but we had goats when I was a kid (pun intended) so I have a fondness for them.)
  • Lorleee
    Lorleee Posts: 369 Member
    Annie_01 wrote: »
    What I find amusing...in the real world (outside MFP) I have never run across anyone that is confused about some of the terminology that is often the center of debate here..."junk food"...processed..."good/bad food". No one seems to care how you phrase things...they all seem to know what these terms mean. I was shocked the first time that I read one of these arguments about those terms...terms that I have heard, used and understood my entire life.

    Also...I don't think that whatever terminology that you use doesn't guarantee success or failure.

    This is soooo true.
  • Lorleee
    Lorleee Posts: 369 Member
    I also used to have that all or nothing mentality before. What has helped me through these last 35 pounds I've lost so far was accepting that I'm not going to always be perfect, I'm human! Overall, one cookie won't affect my weight loss in the end, if I don't beat myself up for it. Everyday is a new day and eventually I had to rewire my brain to understand this. I used to give up if I ate "bad" food and didn't workout. I would restart every Monday when I could just pick up the next day and brush off a bad day. Since December 1st, I've had a couple of eat everything in sight days, but at the end of it all, I've had more good days than bad and have lost 35.2 pounds. You can do it too OP!

    But the OP is saying is that for her, one cookie becomes too many cookies and derails her focus on the new way she would like to eat. Having one cookie and not beating yourself up for it is ideal, certainly, but for some, that one cookie means finishing off the entire bag. Not so easy to brush off if it restarts a pattern you're trying to stop.
  • Verdenal
    Verdenal Posts: 625 Member
    edited August 2019
    You're not that unusual. Some people can stick to a varied diet, others do better by eliminating foods entirely. I'm in the second group. You need better friends, or at least a couple of people in your life who are in tune with your goals. Maybe you could meet them through a group dedicated to some kind of physical activity (even walking) or diet.

    Therapy might help in terms of support and developing responses to people who challenge you. I don't agree with the person who said you have all-or-nothing thinking. Some of us can't have just one bite. That's how we're made. Abstaining is less stressful for us. It is, however, important to remember that junk food is not a physical addiction. You may have cravings or a psychological dependency, neither of which may be easy to overcome, but they are easier to beat than an addiction to heroin.
  • Verdenal
    Verdenal Posts: 625 Member
    It is unkind of people to try to push you into any behavior once you have voiced your desire to avoid it. However, most people do not view pushing cake the same way they see pushing alcohol. Food is love, it is a representation community and social ties. The cutting of the birthday cake is the ritual sacrifice to death god for sparing the celebrant for one more year. If you don't eat the cake it like wishing some one dead.

    Food isn't love. Love is love. And I am unfamiliar with the symbolism to which you refer. In my experience, someone might be hurt by a refusal of birthday cake, but equating it with a death wish? PLEASE.

  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Lorleee wrote: »
    I also used to have that all or nothing mentality before. What has helped me through these last 35 pounds I've lost so far was accepting that I'm not going to always be perfect, I'm human! Overall, one cookie won't affect my weight loss in the end, if I don't beat myself up for it. Everyday is a new day and eventually I had to rewire my brain to understand this. I used to give up if I ate "bad" food and didn't workout. I would restart every Monday when I could just pick up the next day and brush off a bad day. Since December 1st, I've had a couple of eat everything in sight days, but at the end of it all, I've had more good days than bad and have lost 35.2 pounds. You can do it too OP!

    But the OP is saying is that for her, one cookie becomes too many cookies and derails her focus on the new way she would like to eat. Having one cookie and not beating yourself up for it is ideal, certainly, but for some, that one cookie means finishing off the entire bag. Not so easy to brush off if it restarts a pattern you're trying to stop.

    Yes, I have learned it's better for me to just not have Oreos in the house, as I am unable to moderate them.

    I make chocolate chip cookies for my OH. I eat one on the day I make them, and am able to leave the rest for him. (Despite them being "the best chocolate chip cookies in the world" lol.)

    Some people may need to not have any cookies at all around, and I respect that.
  • Annie_01
    Annie_01 Posts: 3,096 Member
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Annie_01 wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Processed and ultra processed are not the same. Frozen spinach is processed. Whole grain bread is processed, rolled oats are processed, canned tomatoes are processed, cottage cheese is processed, smoked salmon is processed, boneless, skinless chicken breast is processed.

    Ironically, the link defines ultraprocessed as microwavable and ready to eat, so would not include the oh so evil homemade pie.

    But again not the topic of this thread.

    While you are correct that processed and ultra processed are not the same, everyone I know IRL, along with most new posters on MFP, say "processed" when they mean "ultra processed".

    This is the first I time I remember seeing the term ultra processed used. The subject was confusing as it was so adding this layer just makes my head hurt.

    Really? New posters generally say "processed" when they mean what many MFP regulars understand to be "ultra processed" so I often come along and point this out and drop in the link to the Brazilian definitions. Ultra Processed starts on p 39: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/publicacoes/dietary_guidelines_brazilian_population.pdf

    What I find amusing...in the real world (outside MFP) I have never run across anyone that is confused about some of the terminology that is often the center of debate here..."junk food"...processed..."good/bad food". No one seems to care how you phrase things...they all seem to know what these terms mean. I was shocked the first time that I read one of these arguments about those terms...terms that I have heard, used and understood my entire life.

    Also...I don't think that whatever terminology that you use doesn't guarantee success or failure.

    Like I said, I use the term junk food, but I use it in a non-precise way and don't assume others share my meaning.

    For example, some use it exclusively for sweets. Some use it only for packaged things that are high cal (fast food, chips, storebought desserts) but would not use it for grandma's homemade pie. Some use it for anything highly processed (include a low cal frozen meal with reasonable macros and some veg). Some might use it for anything extra high cal for the nutrients (my homemade pulled pork), others would apply it to the same thing if purchased at a restaurant but not homemade.

    Some would call my Ethiopian food order of spinach, collards, cabbage/carrots, and lamb junk food because it's delivery and high cal. Others would say it's junk food because of the injera. Still others would point out that it's got lots of vegetables so is not junk food.

    I suspect the only reason you say everyone knows what junk food means is that you are either thinking of the most obvious examples or just assume they mean what you do.

    Like I said, I use the term, it doesn't bother me, but by no means is it clear.

    I try not to assume too much about people. I do admit to thinking of the most obvious.

    Isn't most of life ambiguous? An example: I might say my house is clean. Some could walk in and think it is spotless...someone else might think it is messy and not organized...then there is that person that thinks it is a disaster! Most of what we think is subjective to our own opinions but I also believe that there are some commonalities that are applicable to most of us.

    We all put things in categories based on our own experiences and preferences. I have mine...you have yours. I think sometimes that when people get together and discuss these types of difference we lose site of the big picture. In the case of the OP she didn't ask a question concerning what is "junk" food. She wanted to know how others handled people in their lives that weren't supportive. Whether I agree with her choices of food doesn't matter one way or the other nor how she categorizes food.

    I hesitate to post my response. I try to stay out of these debates.