Is it Okay to have a cheat day?
Replies
-
I agree that some of us could be just by nature more sensitive to connotations of words than others. For me, it's when somebody says, "I was good today" or "I was bad today" in reference to the diet or exercise choice that they made. Value judgments are just plain not helpful to me. So if the phrase "cheat day" conjures up all kinds of negative images for you, including your self-assessment, by all means, call it something else or plan for it in some systematic way as many have suggested above. Note that I'm only responding to the general tenor of the last dozen messages or so from my own gut feelings and not directly addressing any single poster here.5
-
I don't use the word "cheat" because no food is really off limits for me. Basically use the 80/20 approach where I eat healthier foods 80% of the time. Even when I choose less than healthy foods there are nothing like what I used to eat and sometimes I just eat more than my calorie range for that day. Looking at it over the course of the week my goal is stay at or under my recommended range. That works for me.2
-
ok, so theres no such thing as a cheat food or bad foods. there is only food and calories. if you want a glass of wine or a chocolate bar or whatever you view as naughty then you go ahead and have it. just remember that it has a caloric value and what ever your goal it must be tracked. treat your calories as a weekly total not daily. if you eat more on one day, deduct that from the next day or next 6 days. up to you. just dont go over your weekly goal. everything else around dieting is noise. nothing is gonna speed or ruin anything if you follow that basic principle. enjoy your cake.5
-
I don't do cheat days because you can't outrun your fork. I do allow myself to eat junk food within my allowance as a reward once a month though. So bunless double cheese burger with cake feels rewarding but I'm also still on track if that makes sense. I found I was eating upwards of like 4,000 calories when I tried to have cheat days it was not a great realization but it explained my lack of weightloss or gain for over 6 months.0
-
lukejoycePT wrote: »ok, so theres no such thing as a cheat food or bad foods. there is only food and calories. if you want a glass of wine or a chocolate bar or whatever you view as naughty then you go ahead and have it. just remember that it has a caloric value and what ever your goal it must be tracked. treat your calories as a weekly total not daily. if you eat more on one day, deduct that from the next day or next 6 days. up to you. just dont go over your weekly goal. everything else around dieting is noise. nothing is gonna speed or ruin anything if you follow that basic principle. enjoy your cake.
This.
And if seeing the red number isn't your thing (it upsets me. I have no idea why but it does), honestly, just pre-log it spread across the week/ten days/whatever.
This is how I handle most of my 'treat' foods. I currently have an entire bag of chips logged across 4 days. I've yet to even open the darned thing. And since all the calories in the whole bag are logged in advance I can actually eat it a serving at a time over days, decide to sit down and eat the whole thing one day, or something between. In truth, been a LONG time since I was even tempted to eat that many chips, but that's not the point right now. The point is that my accounting has been done.8 -
Just call it food and either work it in or skip it. Don't label a food a "cheat."3
-
Cheating implies breaking rules. But there are no rules in calorie consumption for weight loss/gain/maintenance. You can lose weight eating fast food only as long as you're in a deficit. Not the greatest for micronutritent content, but it can be and has been done.
IMO, there are no "cheat days". You just have to be ACCOUNTABLE for calories consumed.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
4 -
I let myself have a cheat because I have heard that cheat days can speed up your metabolism. When you hit a platue. But are there certain rules about cheat days. like how many calories you can go over. And what you can eat?
I let myself have one yeasutrday but I think I ate to much.
Cheat days do not speed up your metabolism. What they can do is help your diet be more sustainable since there is not an all or nothing approach. You have to be careful that the cheat does not become the norm so tread lightly...0 -
I let myself have a cheat because I have heard that cheat days can speed up your metabolism. When you hit a platue. But are there certain rules about cheat days. like how many calories you can go over. And what you can eat?
I let myself have one yeasutrday but I think I ate to much.
Cheat days do not speed up your metabolism. What they can do is help your diet be more sustainable since there is not an all or nothing approach. You have to be careful that the cheat does not become the norm so tread lightly...
Welllll . . . I agree that "speed up your metabolism" may be hyperbole . . . mostly. But there's some evidence that a body can get a bit of a rev of some type, with observed effects, potentially including RMR, subconscious NEAT, body temp, workout performance, and that sort of thing, from a day of eating *well over* maintenance. But for sure, the idea that people get some kind of extra-supercharged speedy overall weight loss process by overeating once a week? Nah.
This may be interesting, follow up lab testing after a 10,000 calorie eating challenge:
https://youtu.be/j6cIbIvEGJM
The first RMR test is just before the 6 minute mark. I'd encourage anyone pre-diabetic (let alone diabetic!) to think about those blood glucose numbers (elsewhere in the vid), when thinking about whether cheat days may have benefits or not. There may be downsides, and not just fat (re-)gain.
Her YouTube channel has some other high-calorie challenges, with follow-up of a more home-based nature, and some good science-based explanation of the factors that affect fat gain from an overeating episode. (The one titled "Cheat Day Results (What Happened)" after an 8,000 calorie day has some estimating formulas, even - geeky stuff.)
What kind of changes from "more than usual calories, less than maintenance" or "some more realistic amount of calories above maintenance", but less than the absurd 10,000 calories? 🤷♀️3 -
There aren't really any rules...you can do whatever you want. The only rule that's really there is the one that says you need to be in a calorie deficit over time to lose weight.0
-
Would the treat day on Keto just eating Fat Bombs for your whole days calories?1
-
Mahhafooznit wrote: »Would the treat day on Keto just eating Fat Bombs for your whole days calories?
It would be whatever you want it to be - that's the whole thing about cheat/ treat days - do them however works for you.
From a weight loss point of view, if you eat too many calories over time, you will not lose weight though.2 -
Yes, I think one day of indulgence is good. Sometimes I mitigate the calories by tracking them over the course of several days.0
-
Let us say your maintenance calories are 2000 a day. Let us say you had a cheat day and ate 3200 calories, you are not going to gain fat/weight by overeating 1200 calories on one day. No worries. I have found over the years if I do have a so called cheat day, which isn't a day, more like one meal I generally feel like crap after I eat it, therefore I don't do it much. Went out for Mexican last week, ate lots of chips and salsa and a big fat Chimi- heart burn city and bloated from what I can estimate to be around 200 carbs in one meal!
Actually if you are eating at maintenance and overeat by 1200 once a week, you will gain 19 lbs in a year. It’s math.4 -
rheddmobile wrote: »Let us say your maintenance calories are 2000 a day. Let us say you had a cheat day and ate 3200 calories, you are not going to gain fat/weight by overeating 1200 calories on one day. No worries. I have found over the years if I do have a so called cheat day, which isn't a day, more like one meal I generally feel like crap after I eat it, therefore I don't do it much. Went out for Mexican last week, ate lots of chips and salsa and a big fat Chimi- heart burn city and bloated from what I can estimate to be around 200 carbs in one meal!
Actually if you are eating at maintenance and overeat by 1200 once a week, you will gain 19 lbs in a year. It’s math.
Once a week is not once. Once a week for a year is FIFTY TWO times. It is a recurring pattern of behavior.. The post you replied to /quoted said once. Not once a week. For a year.
Also holy stereotypically 'well actually-ing' someone about something they never said, batman.1 -
rheddmobile wrote: »Let us say your maintenance calories are 2000 a day. Let us say you had a cheat day and ate 3200 calories, you are not going to gain fat/weight by overeating 1200 calories on one day. No worries. I have found over the years if I do have a so called cheat day, which isn't a day, more like one meal I generally feel like crap after I eat it, therefore I don't do it much. Went out for Mexican last week, ate lots of chips and salsa and a big fat Chimi- heart burn city and bloated from what I can estimate to be around 200 carbs in one meal!
Actually if you are eating at maintenance and overeat by 1200 once a week, you will gain 19 lbs in a year. It’s math.
Very true and not something many think about when discussing this topic. It is true that you focus on what you measure, whether it is blood pressure, calories, HRV, power/pace, nutrients or bank balance. Just make sure to measure and log everyday, that is the key to long term success (so if you over-eat you have the data to support your choices).
Personally I hate the term cheat day or meal, make informed choices based on personal goals, and log what you eat. Who are you cheating eating a 2000 cal Dominos pizza???0 -
wunderkindking wrote: »rheddmobile wrote: »Let us say your maintenance calories are 2000 a day. Let us say you had a cheat day and ate 3200 calories, you are not going to gain fat/weight by overeating 1200 calories on one day. No worries. I have found over the years if I do have a so called cheat day, which isn't a day, more like one meal I generally feel like crap after I eat it, therefore I don't do it much. Went out for Mexican last week, ate lots of chips and salsa and a big fat Chimi- heart burn city and bloated from what I can estimate to be around 200 carbs in one meal!
Actually if you are eating at maintenance and overeat by 1200 once a week, you will gain 19 lbs in a year. It’s math.
Once a week is not once. Once a week for a year is FIFTY TWO times. It is a recurring pattern of behavior.. The post you replied to /quoted said once. Not once a week. For a year.
Also holy stereotypically 'well actually-ing' someone about something they never said, batman.
Most people asking on the forums about a cheat day use that terms to mean once a week. A one time occurrence such as a holiday or a birthday isn’t what’s being discussed here.2 -
rheddmobile wrote: »wunderkindking wrote: »rheddmobile wrote: »Let us say your maintenance calories are 2000 a day. Let us say you had a cheat day and ate 3200 calories, you are not going to gain fat/weight by overeating 1200 calories on one day. No worries. I have found over the years if I do have a so called cheat day, which isn't a day, more like one meal I generally feel like crap after I eat it, therefore I don't do it much. Went out for Mexican last week, ate lots of chips and salsa and a big fat Chimi- heart burn city and bloated from what I can estimate to be around 200 carbs in one meal!
Actually if you are eating at maintenance and overeat by 1200 once a week, you will gain 19 lbs in a year. It’s math.
Once a week is not once. Once a week for a year is FIFTY TWO times. It is a recurring pattern of behavior.. The post you replied to /quoted said once. Not once a week. For a year.
Also holy stereotypically 'well actually-ing' someone about something they never said, batman.
Most people asking on the forums about a cheat day are intending to do it once a week. A one time occurrence such as a holiday or a birthday isn’t what’s being discussed here.
^^^ many posts refer to cheat weekends as well, and often state that the person tries “to be good” Monday to Friday. Two steps forward and three steps backwards.
0 -
CaydensMommy wrote: »What about a "treat" day while doing keto?0
-
coming back to this but I think it may be a good idea to sometimes have a really big 'don't worry about it' day and then to see how the scale responds. lots of people afraid to move to maintaining or super upset about going over by a bit.
Alternatively - watch some of those big 'cheat day' videos that include before, immediately after, and a few days after weights. it's.. enlightening.0 -
Have a meal that you terribly want is a good choice for mental health. We didnt attend any competition in bodybuilding. So I personally have a cheat day once a week. That is okay as long as you can stay back on track the day right after. Cheers!1
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions