WW verse Cals
LovingLillies
Posts: 9 Member
I am currently a member of ww but leaving because I dont actually think its all that healthy for anyone's mind set .... I am extremely nervous to come over to calorie counting ... Can i please hear some of your stories from coverting over and also that you actually do lose weight just counting cals
2
Replies
-
WW points are based on calories. Are you conducting the Personal Points program. It's been awhile but it's all about portion control. The calories are budgeted for you. You choose your foods and WW is like counting calories with an abacus.
We've come a long way, baby. You choose your foods, weigh items on a food scale or use measuring cups. You search the MFP database and voila. Track your data points and place them into your personal diary on the daily. If you want the bar code scanner, go premium.
I was a card carrying member of the WW. Suffice it to say, I felt like a cow walking down the cattle chute every time they made you stand on the scale. Some leaders are better than others. Mine talked about food in such childish terms. Were you a good girl this week? Here's your badge or some tiddlywink. It was mainly a social event and the ladies went out to eat after the big weigh-in. No one really lost all that much. They dieted all week and celebrated after the meeting.
One day, I decided to leave all of that hippy dippy happy horsesheet behind me and I never went back. There's not a thing to be fearful of. You might really enjoy those meetings, but I didn't. It will take awhile, but you will find your balance if you stick with it. It's been 7 years now and I'm still standing in maintenance. Dream weight intact. We all have one, don't we?18 -
I agree with many. I have been a life member of WW. There is always a new plan coming up. With plenty of zero point foods lol. What I have learned from my fitness pal is that those 0 point foods have calories. It is easy to eat a pound of grapes there a zero point food yeah right. They are also 800 calories. Now I eat a cup for 62 calories. And wow I have food for the whole
Week.9 -
^^ Agreed. There's no such thing as a free lunch or free foods. That's another bunch of hooey.5
-
I tried WW for a bit, and couldn't stand it. I hated the zero point food system, and hate that I felt penalized for eating things that weren't zero points. I only had, I think, 19 points a day, and my daily kombucha drink, which has 13 calories, was 2 points! Far too restrictive as far as points go if you prefer more flexibility, and not enough actual guidance as far as "zero point" foods go. I think I lasted 3 days before I rage quit. Calorie counting (well, more macro counting for myself) works so much better for me. I can fit in all the things I want, and am 100% accountable. If I want chocolate cake, for example, I know I can make room for it without then committing to eating only dry chicken breast and broccoli for the rest of the day.6
-
No matter how weight is lost, calorie counting is involved. Either you are keeping track, or someone has determined calories and tells you what and how much to eat. Water is the only thing that doesn’t have calories. A lot of veggies are very low calorie, but not calorie free.
To lose weight you have to eat less calories than your body burns. That’s it.10 -
I'm glad you brought this up. I still have my WW membership card that shows me at a weight of 245. Today I weigh 138, mostly by using the Keto lifestyle and MFP. The two things I find invaluable in MFP are the support of my MFP friends and the food logging tool. They made ALL the difference in the world. Having the freedom to employ any weight loss lifestyle gives me a program I can live with forever. I will never be fat again. It's just so easy to lose weight and keep it off. I've changed my goal to 125, but honestly am quite comfortable at any weight under 140. MFP allows me to pick my own nutritional goals. And, again, the MFP friends are so supportive. When I struggle with ANY issue, I always think of them. They offer me the care we all need in friends. We share a kindred spirit, and they are always there when I need them, with weight loss issues and with life in general. Naturally, there are many online weight loss tools available these days, but I would never leave the MFP friendships I've made. What a gift!9
-
I switched from WW to MFP because I was stuck about 10 lbs above my goal weight. The zero point foods really do add up. When I was able to calculate what I was eating in calories instead of points it really helped me see where I needed to make some changes and I was able to lose the weight. Make sure you weigh or measure everything you eat and drink, when I don’t do that I start gaining weight but as long as I’m diligent, I lose. I think WW is great for teaching portion sizes and how to eat healthy, but MFP works no matter what you eat, as long as you’re within your calorie goal.4
-
I was a ww member before lockdown kicked in then I cancelled my dd and dint go back - grapes are my downfall and altho they classed em as a 0 point "free food" they are like eating sugar cubes and my diabetic nurse said to stay clear or have a portion which is around 6 grapes, I can't stop at 6 as I would end up eating the whole punnet 😂 so I don't buy em now7
-
I did WW in the 90s. At the time, it was great for bringing awareness to how much I was eating (and drinking.)
I'm very happy with the free version of MFP and wouldn't go back to WW even if it were free. "Zero point" foods, LMAO.3 -
I think WW is best if you have a lot of weight to lose and need to learn to pivot towards "healthier" foods. But the points formulas are not geared towards accurately reflecting calories, because they artificially inflate carbs and sugar and they artificially deflate fruits, veggies, and lean proteins. This is great if you have a lot to lose and don't know how to eat "healthy" and want to learn to make better choices with your food. I learned to eat lean proteins and lots of veggies thanks to years of WW.
But for me, I hated that foods I knew were not terribly high in calories were costing me a ton of points. For example, I like to eat one piece of dry toast with brunch, but that one piece of toast would be like 5 points, which at the time would be like 20% or 25% of my calories for the day. Or a sweet or a piece of chocolate would be a huge number of points, even though I knew the calories were not high.
I felt in the end like there was a secret behind the points and I just wanted to understand the data and make choices myself, which is why I LOVE MFP or calorie counting generally. It's all very transparent. I know my maintenance calories (I'm in maintenance), I am aware of how much protein and fiber and saturated fat I want to eat, and I get to make those decisions with the full knowledge of what the food contains instead of relying on WW to tell me how many magical "points' they contain. I know points are roughly based on calories and still try to create a calorie deficit, but it's still weighted to guide your behavior.
Relying on points also made it very hard to ad-lib. I can read a package and weigh my food and know the calories, but generally trying to figure out the points something has is harder than trying to figure out the amount of calories something has. Especially considering WW changes up their formulas every few years to keep things interesting.
The other thing that finally occurred to me was that as a business model, WW wants to teach people to lose, but not maintain. Their requirement that you need to maintain in a 2 pound range is crazy. I have an 8 pound maintenance range since hitting my goal several years ago. If everyone could lose and then successfully maintain, WW wouldn't have a business, because so many of us go back to it to lose "successfully" and then once we get to a certain point we gain back the weight, and sign up for their (pay) service again. I only learned to lose AND maintain after switching to calorie counting and listening to podcasts like "Half Size Me" and "We Only Look Thin" that focus on habit changes and maintaining your weight loss.
I relied on WW for many years and had a lot of success losing weight with them. But what I have learned as I have gotten older is that successful weight loss means keeping the weight off, and being able maintain my goal range. Counting calories (and MFP) has done that for me, and I have never been happier,4 -
All weight loss is because of a calorie deficit- that is it - its not complicated.
Anyone that tells you different is trying to sell you something.
WW, Slimming world etc don't want you to lose weight because you won't be paying them.
Calorie counting becomes easy and natural after a while - losing weight isn't easy though otherwise we'd all be slim right 😂
1 -
ChickenKillerPuppy wrote: »I think WW is best if you have a lot of weight to lose and need to learn to pivot towards "healthier" foods. But the points formulas are not geared towards accurately reflecting calories, because they artificially inflate carbs and sugar and they artificially deflate fruits, veggies, and lean proteins. This is great if you have a lot to lose and don't know how to eat "healthy" and want to learn to make better choices with your food. I learned to eat lean proteins and lots of veggies thanks to years of WW.
But for me, I hated that foods I knew were not terribly high in calories were costing me a ton of points. For example, I like to eat one piece of dry toast with brunch, but that one piece of toast would be like 5 points, which at the time would be like 20% or 25% of my calories for the day. Or a sweet or a piece of chocolate would be a huge number of points, even though I knew the calories were not high.
I felt in the end like there was a secret behind the points and I just wanted to understand the data and make choices myself, which is why I LOVE MFP or calorie counting generally. It's all very transparent. I know my maintenance calories (I'm in maintenance), I am aware of how much protein and fiber and saturated fat I want to eat, and I get to make those decisions with the full knowledge of what the food contains instead of relying on WW to tell me how many magical "points' they contain. I know points are roughly based on calories and still try to create a calorie deficit, but it's still weighted to guide your behavior.
Relying on points also made it very hard to ad-lib. I can read a package and weigh my food and know the calories, but generally trying to figure out the points something has is harder than trying to figure out the amount of calories something has. Especially considering WW changes up their formulas every few years to keep things interesting.
The other thing that finally occurred to me was that as a business model, WW wants to teach people to lose, but not maintain. Their requirement that you need to maintain in a 2 pound range is crazy. I have an 8 pound maintenance range since hitting my goal several years ago. If everyone could lose and then successfully maintain, WW wouldn't have a business, because so many of us go back to it to lose "successfully" and then once we get to a certain point we gain back the weight, and sign up for their (pay) service again. I only learned to lose AND maintain after switching to calorie counting and listening to podcasts like "Half Size Me" and "We Only Look Thin" that focus on habit changes and maintaining your weight loss.
I relied on WW for many years and had a lot of success losing weight with them. But what I have learned as I have gotten older is that successful weight loss means keeping the weight off, and being able maintain my goal range. Counting calories (and MFP) has done that for me, and I have never been happier,
Withouth trying calories, (this is my day day committed - I finally got rid of the ww app I agree with the big amount of weight and thats were it helps. I lost 32kilos and now i have around 10ish i want to lose BUT i want to lose it by eating everyday foods i will eat forever2 -
Hiawassee88 wrote: »WW points are based on calories. Are you conducting the Personal Points program. It's been awhile but it's all about portion control. The calories are budgeted for you. You choose your foods and WW is like counting calories with an abacus.
We've come a long way, baby. You choose your foods, weigh items on a food scale or use measuring cups. You search the MFP database and voila. Track your data points and place them into your personal diary on the daily. If you want the bar code scanner, go premium.
I was a card carrying member of the WW. Suffice it to say, I felt like a cow walking down the cattle chute every time they made you stand on the scale. Some leaders are better than others. Mine talked about food in such childish terms. Were you a good girl this week? Here's your badge or some tiddlywink. It was mainly a social event and the ladies went out to eat after the big weigh-in. No one really lost all that much. They dieted all week and celebrated after the meeting.
One day, I decided to leave all of that hippy dippy happy horsesheet behind me and I never went back. There's not a thing to be fearful of. You might really enjoy those meetings, but I didn't. It will take awhile, but you will find your balance if you stick with it. It's been 7 years now and I'm still standing in maintenance. Dream weight intact. We all have one, don't we?
Thankyou for replying. I finally got rid of the app so Im on day 1 of calories which i have commited too. I think what freaks me out is where so used to having foods low in numbers where calories are so much differently numbered if that makes sense. I just need to get used to all the new numbers lol1 -
Walkywalkerson wrote: »All weight loss is because of a calorie deficit- that is it - its not complicated.
Anyone that tells you different is trying to sell you something.
WW, Slimming world etc don't want you to lose weight because you won't be paying them.
Calorie counting becomes easy and natural after a while - losing weight isn't easy though otherwise we'd all be slim right 😂
exactly, its all about the money made2 -
I have been an on and off member for more years than I care to admit. I first found MFP when I'd been off WW for a long time and didn't want to pay for it, plus I was frustrated with the meetings. When I first started MFP I was SO resentful of counting veggies (at the time only veg and fruit were 0 points). But once I got used to it, I felt so much more in control. I still do guesstimate the amounts of veg I eat.
After going back a couple years ago I had middling success due to the changes, then finally left WW because of the crazy move to multiple 0 point foods. Under the newest program I could have chicken, all the veg, avocado, and legumes (plus more, I don't recall) as 0 point foods and then they STILL wanted me to eat 26-odd points a day. I kind of get what they're doing but Points stopped being based solely on nutrition long ago and are now very heavily weighted with subjective judgements on various foods - "bad" food gets allocated punishment points, and "good" foods will be low or even 0 points despite being calorie dense. It was messing with my head.
With MFP I generally keep my carbs lower (30% of my intake) and make sure to get plenty of whole foods, I find room for treats and I'm much happier. It's also MUCH easier to eat out and to assess foods for how they will fit my day without having to constantly check an app.
4
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