How do YOU "cheat day"?

Curious how everyone does their cheat days, do you just eat what you want the whole day? I am just eating to my maintain weight calories.

Replies

  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    I wouldn't call what I do cheating but when I am in a typical deficit I will have two refeed higher calorie/carb days which are maintenance or higher. I don't really eat whatever I want all day but for at least one meal I do.
  • VioletRojo
    VioletRojo Posts: 597 Member
    I don't understand the thought process behind cheat days. When I was losing, some days I ate fewer calories, some days I ate more, but my weekly calories where always within my limit. Otherwise, you're just going to wipe out any calorie deficit and not lose weight. I made room in my calorie allowance for treats and social events.
  • ObviousPanda
    ObviousPanda Posts: 8 Member
    I don’t cheat. I log everything I eat everyday and try my best to eat under my allowance of calories. Some days I go over but not by much.
  • nighthawk584
    nighthawk584 Posts: 2,023 Member
    I'm pretty focused on my goals so I don't have cheat days, but the closest I will come to one is this Thanksgiving. I'm not going to totally go overboard, but I will bank some calories that week so I can enjoy the holidays and sample all the good food!
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    I'm pretty focused on my goals so I don't have cheat days, but the closest I will come to one is this Thanksgiving. I'm not going to totally go overboard, but I will bank some calories that week so I can enjoy the holidays and sample all the good food!

    Oh yeah. Pecan Pie, here I come!
  • kgirlhart
    kgirlhart Posts: 5,154 Member
    I don't do cheat days. I work things I like into my calorie goal every day. There are occasional days I go over for holidays and such, but they are the exception. Being overly restrictive never worked for me. Not allowing myself to eat certain foods just makes me want them more. Knowing I can have them if I want makes it easier to not have them when they don't fit knowing I might just wait until tomorrow. And as far as holiday foods go I am going to eat certain foods I like that I only get a few times a year and not worry about whether they fit or not. A few times a year isn't going to ruin anything.
  • Shortgirlrunning
    Shortgirlrunning Posts: 1,020 Member
    I just work things into my calorie goals. I know what days I have heavier workouts so I plan calorie heavier meals on those days. Like if I’m really craving Chipotle I make myself wait until my long run day so it fits into my calories.

    I guess my holidays/special occasions are cheat days. They are just days where I don’t count calories but still make a conscious effort not to go overboard on anything.
  • threewins
    threewins Posts: 1,455 Member
    VioletRojo wrote: »
    I don't understand the thought process behind cheat days. When I was losing, some days I ate fewer calories, some days I ate more, but my weekly calories where always within my limit. Otherwise, you're just going to wipe out any calorie deficit and not lose weight. I made room in my calorie allowance for treats and social events.

    An example of a 'cheat day' (I never call it that, I'd call it a Celebration Day) is I'm flying Singapore Airlines to see my long distance girlfriend, who I've not seen in 23 months. Singapore Airlines is well known for having lots of yummy food on their flight. I will forgo breakfast but once I'm on the plane, I'm allowing myself to eat anything offered. Is that a cheat day? Plus I won't know the energy value of most of what I am eating.
  • ElizabethKalmbach
    ElizabethKalmbach Posts: 1,415 Member
    For me, "cheat" days mostly involve skipping the supplements that make me feel sick to my stomach or ignoring my macros because I took the supplements (prescribed) that make me feel sick and just eating fast food in sufficient volume to hit a calorie target. Sometimes I just cheat and go to bed a few hundred calories short and don't get sufficient sleep because I'm reading a really good novel and sipping hot tea. I pay for all of those things eventually, but sometimes it still worth it, provided I don't do it too often.
  • VioletRojo
    VioletRojo Posts: 597 Member
    threewins wrote: »
    VioletRojo wrote: »
    I don't understand the thought process behind cheat days. When I was losing, some days I ate fewer calories, some days I ate more, but my weekly calories where always within my limit. Otherwise, you're just going to wipe out any calorie deficit and not lose weight. I made room in my calorie allowance for treats and social events.

    An example of a 'cheat day' (I never call it that, I'd call it a Celebration Day) is I'm flying Singapore Airlines to see my long distance girlfriend, who I've not seen in 23 months. Singapore Airlines is well known for having lots of yummy food on their flight. I will forgo breakfast but once I'm on the plane, I'm allowing myself to eat anything offered. Is that a cheat day? Plus I won't know the energy value of most of what I am eating.

    If it were me, I would do my best to estimate the calories in the food and log it. But that's me, and you probably have different priorities and goals than I do.
  • LyndaBSS
    LyndaBSS Posts: 6,964 Member
    edited November 2019
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I don't cheat. It is impossible. Everything I do is part of my plan. I will occasionally eat my maintenance calories or even higher but it is not cheating. Ever.

    Same. I don’t believe in cheat days, meals or snacks. I know it would derail me. I include all the foods I love in my meal plan and I log them. Period.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,166 Member
    I don't believe in cheating, in pretty much the same sense that as an adult I don't believe in Santa Claus. Bodies count everything, right? ;)

    Some days I eat under my calorie goal (usually not by much); a lot of days I eat right at my calorie goal; occasionally I eat over my calorie goal (a few times a month, probably); a few times a year I eat way, way over my calorie goal (like 2 or three times my maintenance calories). It's just food, not sin.

    I need to balance things out over time, if I want to manage my weight. Calorie counting helps; watching the scale (and my weight trending app) helps.

    Now in year 4 of maintaining a healthy weight (after just less than a year losing about 50 pounds, back in 2015), it seems to be working out reasonably well. I logged meticulously during weight loss; nowadays I skip occasionally, especially if I've eaten some really difficult-to-estimate way (like a potluck or complicated buffet meal), but still log most of the time.

    Different strategies can work for different people.
  • threewins
    threewins Posts: 1,455 Member
    Wow, 93% on plan. That's a number some of us (myself included) can only dream of.
  • neugebauer52
    neugebauer52 Posts: 1,120 Member
    edited November 2019
    It took me a long time to realize that choosing my own macros percentages makes MFP unique and gives me the best possible chance to succeed with losing over 75 kg (165 pounds). I don't need cheat days and I don't go for extensive binge eating any longer. Through MFP and all those supportive members I now understand my trigger foods and what "food stacking" means. A cheat meal (i.e. 2 large loaves of bread and whatever I can pack into it and on top of it) used to always, always lead to a cheat day, to a cheat week and a further 5 kg of fat. (570 days later, 43 kg gone and some more to go.)
  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 25,595 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I don't cheat. It is impossible. Everything I do is part of my plan. I will occasionally eat my maintenance calories or even higher but it is not cheating. Ever.

    This.
  • julanig612
    julanig612 Posts: 40 Member
    I cheat by eating at maintenance. I have to "cheat" once every few weeks as it feels like a holiday. I eat whatever I want either way so cheat days are just more of whatever I feel like. Usually stuff I can't fit into my usual allowance, like fries and high calorie snack stuff, nuts, chocolate etc.
  • Cinder333
    Cinder333 Posts: 39 Member
    It took me a long time to realize that choosing my own macros percentages makes MFP unique and gives me the best possible chance to succeed with losing over 75 kg (165 pounds). I don't need cheat days and I don't go for extensive binge eating any longer. Through MFP and all those supportive members I now understand my trigger foods and what "food stacking" means. A cheat meal (i.e. 2 large loaves of bread and whatever I can pack into it and on top of it) used to always, always lead to a cheat day, to a cheat week and a further 5 kg of fat. (570 days later, 43 kg gone and some more to go.)

    Same here. I went off plan a bit for Halloween, and really struggled the next day to go back on plan. I think it's easier for me to stay within my range.

  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    I'm pretty focused on my goals so I don't have cheat days, but the closest I will come to one is this Thanksgiving. I'm not going to totally go overboard, but I will bank some calories that week so I can enjoy the holidays and sample all the good food!

    Oh yeah. Pecan Pie, here I come!

    That's my favorite! I always request lots of pies so there is more pecan for me.
  • lgfrie
    lgfrie Posts: 1,449 Member
    edited November 2019
    Sometimes I meet my goals. Sometimes I go over. As long as I meet my goals way more often than going over them I see progress. I eat everything I want, just less of it, less often.

    I find I actually enjoy food more after taking this approach. I refuse to eat food I don't find tasty. Not worth the calories and I won't starve..no fat lady ever died of starvation. I can always choose to wait to eat something awesome later instead.

    This is spot on for me too, in fact a great overall summary of my diet - be on plan with the calories most of the time, go over a small amount of the time, and I've completely eliminated all of the following:
    • "light" or "reduced fat" anything, especially light mayo and light or no fat salad dressing
    • diet / meal replacement shakes
    • powders
    • any products that substitute X for Y in order to be lower calorie, unless I just like them better (as is the case with baked potato chips)

    I just eat what I want, in portions measured to hit my calorie target, which are sometimes a bit on the small side since I don't trade out higher calorie ingredients, but that is the price that must be paid to lose weight so I accept it.
  • Goober1142
    Goober1142 Posts: 219 Member
    I've been maintaining for years now, still watch and log my calories because I'm so used to doing it. If I eat too much one day I'll eat at a deficit for the next few days. I try to eat high fat on my cheat day and stay away from sugar. My fav is a dozen chicken wings and an entire bag of grandma utz handcooked potato chips- they're fried in lard. Every two weeks...
  • scarlett_k
    scarlett_k Posts: 812 Member
    Stop thinking about eating food as cheating is how I do it.