The Aftermath

Options
panda4153
panda4153 Posts: 417 Member
edited December 2020 in Health and Weight Loss
Hello, it’s the morning of December 26 where I am, and I have definitely got the overindulge hangover haha. Now I put absolutely no restrictions on certain days of the year. I allow myself to have any or all of the treats I want. Let me tell you, I can eat!! I have never been and will never be one of the people posting questions about how to add calories to their day. I eat every last calorie I can. Christmas Eve and Christmas Day are two of those all in days. Today I feel it, but I regret NOTHING!! It was so so good! I’m posting this because I know someone out there is worried about what theirs Christmas Treats did to their progress. They are questioning if they can get back on the wagon. The answer is yes you can. I allow the Holodays themselves but not the whole week of them. Today I am back to my normal healthy habbits. I will eat under maintenance and get back on track. Sure my couple of days probably slowed my progress by about a pound or so this month, and I fully expect the water weight retention to be high for a few days, but it was two days out of my month, and I enjoyed every bite. I’m here to say this is part of life, and our outcomes we see are from the choices we make. I chose to eat like I did and I had a ton of fun with it. Today I am choosing to eat under maintenance because I know for long term health I still have some weight to lose. I can and do choose both in my life, and I know that you can find that too. Good luck everyone!!

Replies

  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 32,178 Member
    Options
    Having been doing this for a few years, I don't worry about it, either. NBD.

    Especially this year (first solo holiday), I went full-on indulgent, cooking/eating whatever I wanted, eating as much of it as I wanted, for both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day (plus there had been some lead-up indulgence). I didn't log, but I'm fully capable of consuming 2-3x maintenance TDEE, and I'm pretty sure I did. In theory, that ought to be at least a pound of fat, maybe more. Last workout was 12/23, been averaging < 4k steps since. Back on my usual maintenance calories (which include a routine calorie bank of about 150 calories) starting 12/26.

    Weight on 12/26, up around 3 pounds from recent days, highest AM weigh-in since mid-September. Today, down 3 pounds from there, lowest AM weigh-in since mid-November.

    Maybe all the dust (fat?) hasn't settled yet, but meh, it'll be fine, no self-recrimination, no drama. 🤷‍♀️
  • Anabirgite
    Anabirgite Posts: 502 Member
    Options
    What I have learned, it is the bloat that plays with my mind. I know tomorrow night, my husband and I will be having one of our favorite dinners, I will probably be fine the next morning then bloat up for 3- 4 days after that( 3-4 pounds). I wish I could say it does not stress me out like you do, but it will provide me incentive to eat at my goal the next few days after this indulgent delicious dinner I am looking so forward to having NYE.
  • 4ajguthrie
    4ajguthrie Posts: 43 Member
    Options
    I'm at 50 something days of using MFP and the Christmas 'binge' has brought me 3 + extra pounds and highlighted the fact that I'm questioning the MFP programs accuracy to be quite honest, here is why :-

    Brief background.

    My BMR is 1493 calories/day. In August this year I was at 85-86kg (189lb) and having to deal with lower back pain and fluid retention every day. Skipping the details of why, I made the decision to change what I was eating, and to do strength exercise for my back.

    I live and work on a rural block that requires a lot of maintenance so I'm pretty active. I found to my shock and horror that my actual strength and fitness was woeful, so I set about correcting that.

    How its rolling day on day so far:-

    As said I am at 50 something days now and without much effort hit 73.8kg (163lb) on 19th Nov. its December 31 today and I weighed in at 76.4kg (168lb)
    Setting aside December 25th-27th each and every day I faithfully log my calories in and out, EVERY day including 25th-27th I have run calorie deficit !! EVERY day MFP tells me that in 5 weeks I will have lost weight, in fact it predicts that I will be below my Goal weight of 73kg (160lb)

    Well 5 weeks is 35 days and 15 or so 35days have come and gone and today I am 76.4kg (168lb)....

    On 24th Dec I weighed 75kg (165lb) and so my gain due to a change of content, not calories is 1.4kg.. that is a fraction over 3lb whilst maintaining at least a 900 calorie 'buffer' deficit !!

    Again this morning I log in and the program tells me, that BEFORE I input anything at all my calorie goal is 1970 calories!!!!! When I exercise it will add 'bonus'' calories that I know will lead me into putting on more and more weight??
    If I go above 1600 calories a day regardless of how much exercise I do, my weight will rise. At 1600 calories I maintain the weight I am at on the day, and below I lose slowly.

    Its quite obvious to me that the program avoids setting controls that respond to results and evidence.

    How is this so? Surely if the program is designed to support wellness, fitness and health it should be able to at least prompt some feedback by way of calorie reduction.

    Sure I have worked out what I need to do, but for me it makes the effort of inputting to MFP a bit less meaningful as a guide.

    Every person is different, but are universally the same, in that their numbers will tell how the program is working, and where it does not respond to the input data.

    So for me post Christmas is back to a guessing game.

    So to summarise, I'm a bit disappointed that MFP does not 'learn' as each day unfolds. It is by no means a deal breaker, linked with my Garmin Instinct I will eventually reach and maintain my goal.

    As for health outcomes.... My lower back pain is gone, I am getting much stronger, and sleeping better and retaining far less fluid. My back pain came from misalignment of my spine and I believe that was due to my lack of strength. I'd become very right sided, the left was very much weaker and that it seems was driving the misalignment. My spine is straighter as are my hips, and the supporting muscles are getting stronger every day.

    Hope 2021 is a better year for all out there
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 32,178 Member
    edited December 2020
    Options
    4ajguthrie wrote: »
    I'm at 50 something days of using MFP and the Christmas 'binge' has brought me 3 + extra pounds and highlighted the fact that I'm questioning the MFP programs accuracy to be quite honest, here is why :-

    Brief background.

    My BMR is 1493 calories/day. In August this year I was at 85-86kg (189lb) and having to deal with lower back pain and fluid retention every day. Skipping the details of why, I made the decision to change what I was eating, and to do strength exercise for my back.

    I live and work on a rural block that requires a lot of maintenance so I'm pretty active. I found to my shock and horror that my actual strength and fitness was woeful, so I set about correcting that.

    How its rolling day on day so far:-

    As said I am at 50 something days now and without much effort hit 73.8kg (163lb) on 19th Nov. its December 31 today and I weighed in at 76.4kg (168lb)
    Setting aside December 25th-27th each and every day I faithfully log my calories in and out, EVERY day including 25th-27th I have run calorie deficit !! EVERY day MFP tells me that in 5 weeks I will have lost weight, in fact it predicts that I will be below my Goal weight of 73kg (160lb)

    Well 5 weeks is 35 days and 15 or so 35days have come and gone and today I am 76.4kg (168lb)....

    On 24th Dec I weighed 75kg (165lb) and so my gain due to a change of content, not calories is 1.4kg.. that is a fraction over 3lb whilst maintaining at least a 900 calorie 'buffer' deficit !!

    Again this morning I log in and the program tells me, that BEFORE I input anything at all my calorie goal is 1970 calories!!!!! When I exercise it will add 'bonus'' calories that I know will lead me into putting on more and more weight??
    If I go above 1600 calories a day regardless of how much exercise I do, my weight will rise. At 1600 calories I maintain the weight I am at on the day, and below I lose slowly.

    Its quite obvious to me that the program avoids setting controls that respond to results and evidence.

    How is this so? Surely if the program is designed to support wellness, fitness and health it should be able to at least prompt some feedback by way of calorie reduction.

    Sure I have worked out what I need to do, but for me it makes the effort of inputting to MFP a bit less meaningful as a guide.

    Every person is different, but are universally the same, in that their numbers will tell how the program is working, and where it does not respond to the input data.

    So for me post Christmas is back to a guessing game.

    So to summarise, I'm a bit disappointed that MFP does not 'learn' as each day unfolds. It is by no means a deal breaker, linked with my Garmin Instinct I will eventually reach and maintain my goal.

    As for health outcomes.... My lower back pain is gone, I am getting much stronger, and sleeping better and retaining far less fluid. My back pain came from misalignment of my spine and I believe that was due to my lack of strength. I'd become very right sided, the left was very much weaker and that it seems was driving the misalignment. My spine is straighter as are my hips, and the supporting muscles are getting stronger every day.

    Hope 2021 is a better year for all out there

    Not guessing, just math.

    The calculators (like MFP) just give you a starting estimate. After 4-6 weeks, adjust based on experience. IME, it works.

    Yes, it would be nice if MFP did predictive adjustment based on results. From using a weight trending app for several years now, I can assure you that that concept would have flaws, too. And that's true even if food/exercise logging is accurate, but there's a lotta quicksand over in that neighborhood, too (even with a tracker).

    IMO, it's easy enough to adjust based on results - just a fun science fair experiment. (If I believed MFP's estimates - or my good brand/model fitness tracker's - and stuck to them, by now I'd be in the hospital or dead - from undereating, in my case - rather than at a healthy weight for around 5 years now after multiple decades previously of obesity.) Someone was trying to put together an app that did what you're describing; if I remembered the link, I'd give it to you - apologies, I don't recall.

    Congratulations on the improvements on the health front: Powerful stuff!