How to not sabotage results with a cheat day

Raegold
Raegold Posts: 191 Member
How often do y'all do a cheat day, and is it a cheat meal or whole day? I don't have a ton of wiggle room with my deficit since I'm only trying to lose 5-10 lbs. BUT I won't be able to continue the deficit if I don't have ice cream to look forward to sometimes!!! Curious how you successfully fit these kinds of things in.
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Replies

  • Raegold
    Raegold Posts: 191 Member
    For reference, I'm doing 1350 per day, and I'd like to do one higher day per week. 1350 with one day at 1800ish puts me at 1 lb per week loss
  • sarahbetherck
    sarahbetherck Posts: 270 Member
    Eat the ice cream :)
  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    I eat a treat everyday. But I also eat a bit less during the week and bank calories for the weekend to enjoy more treats and larger portions. I also do a small deficit at 0.5lb per week so I get more calories.
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,439 Member
    In lieu of ice cream, a serving of fat free Greek yogurt whipped with a serving of sugar free pudding mix, then refrigerated or thrown in the freezer for a while is about 100 calories and is soooooo good. And you could have that every night........
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    Raegold wrote: »
    I might need to up my calories a bit or eat back my exercise calories to fit in ice cream. I'm trying to maximize the food I can eat on 1350/1400 calories and it can be tough because it just not that much food to have wiggle room for ice cream. Also, just to be completely honest, I don't want to have a super tiny scoop of ice cream. If I'm going to have some, I'd like to have a nice portion!

    Is 600 or less calories a "nice" portion for you? Are you happy with eating it one day a week? If so, you could just bank 100 calories per day for 6 days and enjoy it as a treat instead of as a cheat.
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 6,002 Member
    Raegold wrote: »
    For reference, I'm doing 1350 per day, and I'd like to do one higher day per week. 1350 with one day at 1800ish puts me at 1 lb per week loss

    How did you get to 1350 cals per day?

    With 5 - 10 lbs to lose I would go for .5lbs per week loss instead of 1lbs per week.
  • WandaVaughn
    WandaVaughn Posts: 420 Member
    In lieu of ice cream, a serving of fat free Greek yogurt whipped with a serving of sugar free pudding mix, then refrigerated or thrown in the freezer for a while is about 100 calories and is soooooo good. And you could have that every night........

    @springlering62 I'm going to have to try that!
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    Raegold wrote: »
    I might need to up my calories a bit or eat back my exercise calories to fit in ice cream. I'm trying to maximize the food I can eat on 1350/1400 calories and it can be tough because it just not that much food to have wiggle room for ice cream. Also, just to be completely honest, I don't want to have a super tiny scoop of ice cream. If I'm going to have some, I'd like to have a nice portion!

    Your body counts those calories and when you get to goal weight accounting for that perfectly normal energy requirement is a skill you will need to learn.

    More exercise / more ice cream? :smiley:
    (PS - not a bad nutrient profile as a recovery food!)
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    edited August 2020
    Rid yourself of the Cheat Meal mentality. How you speak to yourself matters. I'm not married to my food so I don't need to cheat on it. Cheat Meals can easily become just another permission slip for a glorified binge mentality.

    Eat the foods you like and moderate your portions every single day. Cheat meals after the deficit/weight loss cycle can go sideways and result in eating it all back. If it were not so there would be no such thing as rebound weight gain with friends

    Cheat meals that start out with only one meal or one full day sliding into a weekend food lollapalooza can undo progress. So it depends on how much progress you're willing to give up. There's eating at the maintenance level which can include more of those favorite foods you enjoy.

    Simply eat at your maintenance level and you won't have to cheat on yourself or your food or anyone. You can eat at your maintenance level whenever you want to and it will not affect your progress one iota.


  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    I agree with @ninerbuff. We just word things differently.

    Learning how to eat at the maintenance level is the best practice for what's coming for you for the rest of your life. It's the main tool. Use it whenever you need to.
    Practice maintenance instead of falling right back into those old eating behaviors. Think of it as Maintenance.
    Maintenance is where the rubber really meets the road for long term weight stability.
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,439 Member
    @WandaVaughn sugarfree lemon pudding is the best. The white choc late is pretty good, too. Hubs loves the cheesecake pudding/yogurt with frozen blueberries on top.

    For an extra oomph of luxury, Rediwhip makes a 5 calorie/serving fat free whipped cream that’s pretty darn tasty, and a coconut whipped cream that’s delicious and super low cal, but crazy hard to find. Their almond milk whipped cream is so-so, imho.
  • missysippy930
    missysippy930 Posts: 2,577 Member
    No cheat days.
    Fit whatever foods I want into my calories for the day. Nothing is off limits.
  • WandaVaughn
    WandaVaughn Posts: 420 Member
    @WandaVaughn sugarfree lemon pudding is the best. The white choc late is pretty good, too. Hubs loves the cheesecake pudding/yogurt with frozen blueberries on top.

    For an extra oomph of luxury, Rediwhip makes a 5 calorie/serving fat free whipped cream that’s pretty darn tasty, and a coconut whipped cream that’s delicious and super low cal, but crazy hard to find. Their almond milk whipped cream is so-so, imho.

    I really enjoy the Lite Dannon Greek yogurt . Wonder how it would mix in with the pudding? I'm totally going to try this! They make a lemon meringue yogurt that I really enjoy.
  • AshHeartsJesus
    AshHeartsJesus Posts: 460 Member
    I just bank for my meal or ice cream by eating a smidge lighter for breakfast and lunch and very low cal healthy real food snacks. Do NOT skip meals if it will cause you to binge or feel really bad from lack of nutrients. I learned that the hard way 💩
  • Raegold
    Raegold Posts: 191 Member
    I think maybe I need to think more about how I have been wording things and "cheat meals/days". I definitely appreciate what everyone said, because I can see how that isn't really a mentally healthy attitude. I DEFINITELY struggle with binge eating- not like pathologic or insane amounts of food, but for example, I want to eat the entire pint of ice cream. Like I don't want just a 1/2 cup serving, I want the whole thing. Which I don't think is that uncommon but also it's probably more than is necessary and ends up being 900-1000 calories in one sitting. So I guess the question really is, can I have one serving of ice cream, which I could fit into my calories, or will that be extremely difficult to do mentally.
  • Raegold
    Raegold Posts: 191 Member
    Diatonic12 wrote: »
    I agree with @ninerbuff. We just word things differently.

    Learning how to eat at the maintenance level is the best practice for what's coming for you for the rest of your life. It's the main tool. Use it whenever you need to.
    Practice maintenance instead of falling right back into those old eating behaviors. Think of it as Maintenance.
    Maintenance is where the rubber really meets the road for long term weight stability.

    I think this is very wise and has been very true, in my experience. Over the past 3 years I was able to maintain my weight consistently by preparing with a very slow weight loss prior to that, and then basically eating the same but slightly more and having occasional meals out that I didn't track. Things went sideways after the pandemic..... So now I'm back to weight loss mode, which I really didn't want to be back in this place, but here we are
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    edited September 2020
    Raegold wrote: »
    I think maybe I need to think more about how I have been wording things and "cheat meals/days". I definitely appreciate what everyone said, because I can see how that isn't really a mentally healthy attitude. I DEFINITELY struggle with binge eating- not like pathologic or insane amounts of food, but for example, I want to eat the entire pint of ice cream. Like I don't want just a 1/2 cup serving, I want the whole thing. Which I don't think is that uncommon but also it's probably more than is necessary and ends up being 900-1000 calories in one sitting. So I guess the question really is, can I have one serving of ice cream, which I could fit into my calories, or will that be extremely difficult to do mentally.

    Part of the path we are all on is learning to compromise and balance our wants with our needs. This is why the cheat mentality is so dangerous. It leaves a part of you anchored in your old habits and mindset. When you are absolutely forced to stay in a calorie budget it makes you reevaluate what you REALLY want. I would never want to eat 1k of ice cream under normal conditions because it is not that much food and it is not, for me, satiating. It is a black hole of calories that I have to cover by cutting out a lot of other food and potentially being left hungry. 300ish maybe, 1k is not worth it.

    Consider practicing mindful eating. This is an exercise that forces you to slow down and thoroughly appreciate each bite of food. I suck at it but it works for some people.

    Awareness works better for me so you can try it too. I am aware that the pleasure and satisfaction of food is fleeting. Each bite is similar to the bite before it and about the time it is swallowed the enjoyment is already gone. I am also aware that the pleasure I get from all the new activities I can do because I have lost weight has a higher degree and much longer lasting satisfaction. The fleeting food pleasure that I am sacrificing is a small price to pay for what I am gaining. It is almost ludicrous to call it a sacrifice.


    ETA: The above is where I live and work. When it is a special occasion, holiday, or vacation I have my permission to play. I still eat with some rules but I do allow myself to indulge far more than I do otherwise. This is part of my compromise.
  • 1poundatax
    1poundatax Posts: 231 Member
    I agree with the philosophy of no cheat days- if I really want something I eat it. To make this lifestyle change I need to know that I can eat the foods I want (in moderation.) I just acknowledge that it may affect my weight loss for the week and accept it. When I deny myself certain foods is when I end up on an eating binge.
  • cgvet37
    cgvet37 Posts: 1,189 Member
    Diatonic12 wrote: »
    Rid yourself of the Cheat Meal mentality. How you speak to yourself matters. I'm not married to my food so I don't need to cheat on it. Cheat Meals can easily become just another permission slip for a glorified binge mentality.

    Eat the foods you like and moderate your portions every single day. Cheat meals after the deficit/weight loss cycle can go sideways and result in eating it all back. If it were not so there would be no such thing as rebound weight gain with friends

    Cheat meals that start out with only one meal or one full day sliding into a weekend food lollapalooza can undo progress. So it depends on how much progress you're willing to give up. There's eating at the maintenance level which can include more of those favorite foods you enjoy.

    Simply eat at your maintenance level and you won't have to cheat on yourself or your food or anyone. You can eat at your maintenance level whenever you want to and it will not affect your progress one iota.


    It depends on what you are doing. I train 6 days a week, 3 strength and 3 conditioning. I eat what I want on the weekends within reason. It does not affect my weight loss at all. It's not cheating, but re-feeding.
  • LMBelladonna
    LMBelladonna Posts: 71 Member
    I usually make it a “cheat meal.” I have a lot of weight to lose so I build the occasional treat into my meal plan. MFP diary keeps me in check to make sure I am meeting my caloric goals for the week!
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    @cgvet37 Understood and appreciated....the re-feed for athletes and pros. As for me, I was a wash, rinse, repeat rebounder. Rebound weight gain with friends.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    cgvet37 wrote: »
    Diatonic12 wrote: »
    Rid yourself of the Cheat Meal mentality. How you speak to yourself matters. I'm not married to my food so I don't need to cheat on it. Cheat Meals can easily become just another permission slip for a glorified binge mentality.

    Eat the foods you like and moderate your portions every single day. Cheat meals after the deficit/weight loss cycle can go sideways and result in eating it all back. If it were not so there would be no such thing as rebound weight gain with friends

    Cheat meals that start out with only one meal or one full day sliding into a weekend food lollapalooza can undo progress. So it depends on how much progress you're willing to give up. There's eating at the maintenance level which can include more of those favorite foods you enjoy.

    Simply eat at your maintenance level and you won't have to cheat on yourself or your food or anyone. You can eat at your maintenance level whenever you want to and it will not affect your progress one iota.


    It depends on what you are doing. I train 6 days a week, 3 strength and 3 conditioning. I eat what I want on the weekends within reason. It does not affect my weight loss at all. It's not cheating, but re-feeding.

    This is why context is important. I have had to engage in some refeeds myself but it all has limits and it works inside a bigger overall plan.
  • dewd2
    dewd2 Posts: 2,445 Member
    I eat a lot of ice cream. A lot :D

    When I get it at the store I assume I'll eat it all by the end of the week. I take the total calories in the box and divide by the number of days and add it to each day (even if I don't eat any that day)*. To keep the amount in check, I put it in a bowl and put the rest back in the freezer. When the bowl is empty I'm done.

    *When I count calories which isn't too often any more. Previously counting has taught me how to eat without thinking about it.

    Good luck.
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    Raegold wrote: »
    but for example, I want to eat the entire pint of ice cream. Like I don't want just a 1/2 cup serving, I want the whole thing. Which I don't think is that uncommon but also it's probably more than is necessary and ends up being 900-1000 calories in one sitting. So I guess the question really is, can I have one serving of ice cream, which I could fit into my calories, or will that be extremely difficult to do mentally.

    Yes. We can learn to moderate our portions. You're going to have to gut this out in the beginning. Measure your portion and enjoy. Throw your hands in the air because you've just stuck the landing. Then it's time to walk away and remove yourself from the scene.

    Defy your brain. It's going to shake and shiver and shimmy. Your brain won't like it. The brain is a driver and it will drive, drive, drive you to go back to the scene. The brain remembers every eating excursion you've ever been on. Just like a squirrel that can remember where every nut is stored, the brain remembers everything.

    This is why the All or Nothing Approach to food doesn't work. I must eat everything today and then I'm never going to have this ever again. Shock and Awe. It doesn't last.

    Rebound weight gain with friends. After all of the deficit/weigh loss cycles are over the brain is just waiting and ready to pounce. When that Ol' Kid is back in biz it's showtime. Let the thrill eating begin. It's these constant cycles that you want to break.

    True change begins with moderating your portions and consistency, consistency, consistency. The brain will fight against you and that can last anywhere from 2-5 years after the weight loss cycle is over. If it were not so, there would be no such thing as rebound weight gain with friends or the need for constantly starting over.

    Don't start none. Won't be none.

    Track your data points. Measure your portions. Let the brain pout and you may have to tell it to shut UP many times before it begins to settle down and get with your new program. You're in charge. In your innermost being you are always in charge. Don't let the brain bully you. You can eat one portion of ice cream and let the brain deal with moderation.

    Somesayers say you will always be an All or Nothing person but that's only because they believe it or someone wrote a book that identifies them in a such way that makes sense only to author. I've never let anyone peg me as something that needs to fit into their narrative or convenient groupings. There are so many authors of confusion and that's why I threw all of my dieting books away.

    We can choose to change on a dime. Sticking the landing every day will take focus. practice. consistency.
    It's not bragging if it's true. The day I came to MFP is the day I threw all of that old dieting dogma and dieting mind warp out with the bathwater. It's been a wild and wooly ride getting to know you all.

  • cgvet37
    cgvet37 Posts: 1,189 Member
    Diatonic12 wrote: »
    @cgvet37 Understood and appreciated....the re-feed for athletes and pros. As for me, I was a wash, rinse, repeat rebounder. Rebound weight gain with friends.

    I'm far from being a pro or athlete. I just don't believe in food shaming or depriving yourself. If I eat strict 7 days a week, I'll go insane. Plus, it helps refuel my body for the coming week. Last Saturday I had Korean barbecue and pizza for dinner. Sunday we had Cheesecake factory. I ate within reason though. I didn't gourge. Even with that type of eating, I still lose 2+ pounds a week. If I wasn't doing any conditioning, I wouldn't eat like that, as my calorie burn would be much lower. It's all about context and what you need to be successful. Would I tell everyone to eat like that, no, as everyone had different needs.