Cheat Days

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Sherrykay99
Sherrykay99 Posts: 1 Member
edited September 2021 in Getting Started
Just wondering if you have cheat days and how do you build that into a weekly plan? Do you limit yourself with a calories on that day?

Replies

  • callsitlikeiseeit
    callsitlikeiseeit Posts: 8,627 Member
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    I've never really had cheat days. I make what I want fit. if i go over occasionally, its not a big deal. holidays, birthdays and vacations happen. random high days dont undo anything, as long as they are random and dont become HABIT.

    i had chinese (sesame chicken) for dinner last night. scale will be up today, probably tomorrow too because of the sodium, but its just water weight and not real weight. some people hold on to it a bit longer, you learn your body in time. i was only 31 calories over my daily limit. not a big deal.

    the problem with weekly cheat days, is depending on your deficit, and depending on your definition of 'cheat', and how accurate your logging, it is easy to undo an entire weeks deficit in one day.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
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    Depends on how you define it.

    If you mean the types of food, every day is a cheat day because I don't particularly limit the types of food I eat. I do manage them, I mean I won't be eating something that is very high in calories if I'm having a hungry day. I would rather have more volume on such days. I also think if the item is worth the calories today, and sometimes it's not.

    If you mean eating over target calories, I do it when I have special events, have saved enough calories for a very high calorie meal I've been planning for, food I didn't account for (like a family member bringing home a food I really like that tastes better fresh/hot), or if I'm having a very hungry day.

    I always count calories almost every single day regardless of what or how much I eat. Rather than "cheating", I call days that are a bit different from how I usually eat "being flexible".
  • EyeOTS
    EyeOTS Posts: 362 Member
    edited September 2021
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    I prefer to think of them as 'zag' days as in 'zig-zag diet'. I still count, I just eat at or closer to the calories I would need to maintain weight. Sometimes they are planned, like I will for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Sometimes they happen because I was just really really hungry that day. (Real hunger, not just bordom or any other weak reason).

    It's basically the same thing except it's less catchy and more specific than 'cheat day'.
  • goldenxbeauty
    goldenxbeauty Posts: 154 Member
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    I dont do cheat days. I just eat what I want as long as it fits in my calorie allotment for the day. If it doesnt, I either dont eat it or I add in extra exercise.
  • Walkywalkerson
    Walkywalkerson Posts: 453 Member
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    I go off plan at the weekend.
    I still count calories - but those calories usually include wine and meals out etc .. and probably aren't exact and are often way over my daily allowance - but life happens.
    I try to stay on the low side of my calories Sunday - Thursday and I do intermittent fasting.
    It's far from an exact science but it's worked so far - I'm 42lbs down ☺
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 32,432 Member
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    I think of cheat days pretty much as I do Santa Claus, as an adult: Pleasant myth, or maybe a metaphor. Not terribly useful, in practical terms.

    Sometimes I eat below goal calories, sometimes I eat at goal calories, sometimes I eat above goal calories . . . occasionally way above. Mostly I log them, sometimes I don't. If I want to manage my weight, my eating needs to balance out with my activity level, on average over time, in accordance with my goals: Eating less than activity to lose, eating at activity to maintain, eating above activity to gain. Repeating: On average, over time. Also, those eating/activity relationships apply whether logging calories or not: Logging just makes it more explicit.

    I logged everything while I was losing weight, every day, even when I had to estimate. I pretty much did likewise for the first months in weight maintenance. I wanted to understand my actual calorie needs, and the way to understand that is to compare eating with body weight trends under varied conditions. Now, in year 5+ of maintaining a healthy weight, I'm likely to skip logging some days, especially ones where I'd be estimating pretty wildly if I did log. I can log most of the time, watch the scale, maintain fine.

    During weight loss, there can be advantages to taking "maintenance breaks" now and then, either psychological benefits or positive effects on hunger/satiation/stress hormones. Potentially, there can be benefits from taking a few days off logging, too. The majority of our days determine the majority of our progress. If a few rare exception days make the whole process work better for that majority of the time, it can be useful. Those decisions are pretty individual, IMO.

    As a general strategy, I eat under my needed maintenance calories most days (by a little, like maybe 100-150 calories), in order to eat more indulgently occasionally. It's not a weekday/weekend thing, because as a retiree I don't really have weekdays/weekends anymore, just days. I watch the scale, cut back if it creeps up too much. I focus on getting good nutrition most of the time, but otherwise don't bother classifying foods as to how "cheat-y" they are: I think that's an unhelpful tangent.

    Different strategies work for different people. "Cheat days" or "cheat meals" work for some, with varied definitions of cheating, from ignoring calorie goals, to skipping logging, to eating foods that the person somehow things are "bad". That doesn't work for me - unnecessary. But personalizing the process is key to success, IMO. I know that "figure out what works for you" is kinda unhelpful advice, but I think it's correct, unfortunately.

    Best wishes, sincerely!
  • SomeMFPuser
    SomeMFPuser Posts: 53 Member
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    Not a believer in cheat days either. Find what you enjoy and try eating it within your desired calorie range.

    We are human so there will be days we go over for celebrations and just simply to enjoy a meal. These alone, will not derail long term results assuming they are for celebrations and an occasional meal to enjoy.

    People can get into trouble by eliminating foods from their diet only to reintroduce them once they hit their target weight. By doing that, the learning opportunity was missed in how to manage those types of events and meals.
  • kenziestabes
    kenziestabes Posts: 338 Member
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    Kinda sorta not really. Like, I have a pretty good idea what my maintenance calorie intake is. Since I am trying to lose weight, my calorie budget is set for lower than that, but there are days where I end up much closer to my maintenance calorie intake. Even then, it's the difference between trying to stay under 1900 and trying to stay under 2100. For me, that's mainly on Sundays, since it's my "day of rest" and where most of my social interaction happens. I'm planning on aiming for 2100 on holidays to allow me more room, but I may try to stay under 1800 on the days preceding and after, that way my average caloric intake over the 3 day period is 1900.
  • talltrees500
    talltrees500 Posts: 25 Member
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    Historically I’ve had 1-2 cheat meals weekly. For the last 3-4 months it’s been daily and I need to get back on track. Good luck!
  • corinasue1143
    corinasue1143 Posts: 7,467 Member
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    Yes, a “cheat” meal. Like they say, depends on your definition. My cheat meal is usually either something I can’t track and won’t try(something I don’t eat usually, so can’t guess a good “close enough” entry). Or maybe a meal of all carbs and fat, no protein— think cake and ice cream.