Help! I've fallen off the wagon and I'm too fat to climb bac

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Replies

  • jenj1313
    jenj1313 Posts: 898 Member
    Before your cheat meal, plan what your breakfast will be the next day... then you're already on the way to getting back on track.
  • MountainMia
    MountainMia Posts: 242 Member
    I'm working really hard NOT to be the "all or nothing" girl. I've been riding on and falling off the "diet wagon" for so long that it's really tough to trade it in for driving "my lifestyle wagon." But that's why I'm here; I'm learning how to drive my proverbial lifestyle wagon.

    It's a bit rough because I get to decide where to go, how fast, what fuel, how much, when to schedule maintenance etc. For now, I just ask "is this something my healthy self would do?" Usually I choose well and all is well. Yesterday was a fight just to keep my wagon on the road. Aaand today I crashed my wagon into the ditch and it ran my *kitten* over!

    I'm okay, sick, but okay. Not sure about my wagon, because I'm still in a sugar coma. But when I come to, my plan is to take the reigns and drive that wagon all the way back to the gym to undo some cake pop damage.

    TAKE THE REIGNS! You don't have to be on the wagon to get it out of the ditch. Log everything no matter how ugly, and get moving. Good luck and thanks for posting this. I definitely needed to think this through for myself today.
  • JTick
    JTick Posts: 2,131 Member
    Thanks for the replies, guys. It helps just knowing someone cares enough to read my post!

    I do have a smartphone, and have the app installed. For the first 6 weeks, I loved it...everything was always with me. But when I "gave up", even though I still had the tools I just didn't use them.

    I'm considering going back to my counselor for a little bit. There are some seriously deep rooted issues that drive me to eat, but eventually I have to learn to deal with them on my own. I need to find another outlet for my emotions that is NOT eating. It's frustrating, because I KNOW how to lose weight. I know how nutrition works, I know which exercises build muscle and how much cardio I should be doing. I just don't apply what I know, because I'm so hung up in the emotion aspect of what drives me to eat.

    I ate a good breakfast this morning, and logged it. I logged my fruit snack this morning. So far, that the furthest I've made it in logging for the last 3 weeks. I am going to go grocery shopping today so that I don't run out for fast food when I get hungry for lunch.

    Today will be a new start.

    Also, a few of you have friend requested me. I was on my phone when I tried to accept and accidently hit deny on a few. Please re-add me if that happened to you, I need all the support I can get!
  • berkra
    berkra Posts: 78 Member
    First of all you have done a great job in loosing 35lbs, this did not come from nothing you changed your way.

    I was out of town for 2 weeks in Japan, very difficult, becaus eyou have no idea what it is in the food... excesize? the hotels do not have a gym because of space reasons... yadayadayada

    What helps me is to plan what I am going to do the next days, excersize and food
    use the new weight as my new strating point and move on

    This is not a short fix, it is a lifestile change, all the skinny people around us do this every day...
  • Since I started mfp, I stopped "cheat" meals... even for my birthday, Super Bowl, V-Day, etc... "cheat" meals made me fat (that and not going to the gym enough). I don't miss being bad. I love good, healthy food and I am happy to stick with it. If I allow myself cheat meals I will find reasons to have them and that is counterproductive.
  • minnesota_deere
    minnesota_deere Posts: 232 Member
    I need a kick in the pants!

    For 6 weeks, I ate really well. Felt great. Lost weight. Yadda yadda.

    Then, I gave in to one treat meal. Though WTH? I'll get back on it at the next meal.

    ...3 weeks later, I'm still telling myself I'll back back with it tomorrow.

    How do people manage eating a "cheat" meal, whatever you want to call it, and get right back with it? I feel like for me, it's either all or nothing. If I eat ANYTHING I shouldn't, it just ends everything else.

    I KNOW that a lot of it is psychological. I have spent a lot of time in counseling trying to deal with my emotional eating, but I slip right back into bad habits. Eating something I shouldn't makes me feel bad, which makes me eat, which makes me feel bad. Cue cycle that never ends.

    I still log into MFP every day, telling myself that as long as I'm logging in I haven't actually forgotten what I'm trying to do. But, that hasn't made me actually LOG what I'm eating.

    I want this, I really do. I want to know what healthy feels like. But it seems like such an endless journey.

    I guess I mostly just wanted to get this out. Any tips on dealing with emotional eating?

    if your diet is correct and you eat in moderation, you should be eating what you want and never need a "cheat day". never reward yourself with food!!!
  • mrmanmeat
    mrmanmeat Posts: 1,968 Member
    I need a kick in the pants!

    For 6 weeks, I ate really well. Felt great. Lost weight. Yadda yadda.

    Then, I gave in to one treat meal. Though WTH? I'll get back on it at the next meal.

    ...3 weeks later, I'm still telling myself I'll back back with it tomorrow.

    How do people manage eating a "cheat" meal, whatever you want to call it, and get right back with it? I feel like for me, it's either all or nothing. If I eat ANYTHING I shouldn't, it just ends everything else.

    I KNOW that a lot of it is psychological. I have spent a lot of time in counseling trying to deal with my emotional eating, but I slip right back into bad habits. Eating something I shouldn't makes me feel bad, which makes me eat, which makes me feel bad. Cue cycle that never ends.

    I still log into MFP every day, telling myself that as long as I'm logging in I haven't actually forgotten what I'm trying to do. But, that hasn't made me actually LOG what I'm eating.

    I want this, I really do. I want to know what healthy feels like. But it seems like such an endless journey.

    I guess I mostly just wanted to get this out. Any tips on dealing with emotional eating?

    Then don't eat cheat meals. They're stupid anyways.
  • ACEgirl1
    ACEgirl1 Posts: 133 Member
    This is my story, except I haven't seen a counselor. I guess you just need to get back up and keep going! This seems to be a never ending story for me, and I beat myself up over it regularly. I look forward to reading others' responses. Best of luck to you....
  • Amy_Lynn74
    Amy_Lynn74 Posts: 134 Member
    For me the trick is to not deprive myself of the stuff I love. I just try to eat a smaller portion or in some way alter it so that it is lower calorie. I don't have cheat meals. I may have what I call an "expensive" meal but on those days I have a lighter lunch and I do a little extra on my workout. Like tonight we are having cheeseburgers, fries and salad. I'm using 93% meat and I'm eating a low cal lunch. Last week we had pizza and I just worked out extra to be able to have it. I feel that if I deprive myself of the stuff I like I'll never be able to stick with this long term. Hope this helps.
  • pinkyslippers
    pinkyslippers Posts: 188 Member
    Just writing to say - you're not alone! In fact, I could have written this!! I agree with the others, let's take it one moment at a time and we will get there! xx
  • KelijonesRN
    KelijonesRN Posts: 9 Member
    I literally lol'd when I saw your topic line! We've all been there, girl!

    I know for me, recognizing my weaknesses was the biggest step. Like you, the emotional component is huge! I can't count the number of times I have eaten when I was not hungry or to reward myself or because I was bored or anxious. When I fall off the wagon I have to reel myself back in.

    Here's what I do:
    1. Revisit my goals and set new short term ones: this week I will work out MWF and log my foods every day. I don't look at the scale as a measure for my success (although I do track my weight loss each week). I start by seeing if I actually did what I said I would do.
    2. Simplify my diet: I actually love Smart Ones meals! I'll eat one for breakfast and lunch and then have a healthy dinner. This gets me back in the habit of eating smart and takes away the hassle of trying to figure out what 'smart' looks like.
    3. Snacks! I love snacking so I have to always have a smart snack on hand. Lots of fruit, pudding, crackers- something for those "I can't take it moments!" (The Smart Ones desserts are AMAZING!!)
    4. Those cheat meals you speak of? When I am getting back on the wagon, those go away for 2 weeks until I am back in the habit. And when I cheat...I don't CHEAT!! I still eat smart I just don't log what I eat. :-) Cheat meals negate all the hard work I spent working out. I don't like wasting that energy!

    35lbs is huge and that is something to be so proud of!! That's amazing! Don't forget to give yourself a pat on the back for all you have done but also be careful not to use this a justification to plateau. I find that after I loose a lot I get lazy and kinda get over-confident. Keep the goal in sight. Keep pushing! :-)
  • doreenwc
    doreenwc Posts: 13 Member
    Some GREAT ADVICE here! Some of which I need to learn as well. I lost 147 lbs last year in 8 months and keeping it off is much harder than taking it off.

    Anyone want friendly help, motivation, friends. Feel free to friend me. We can ALL use the support.

    Doreen
  • stubbysticks
    stubbysticks Posts: 1,275 Member
    "if you bite it you write it"
    ^^^^
    THIS. And erasing the word "cheat" from your weight loss vocabulary would help too. Some of the other posts alluded to this, but the concept of setting rules for yourself could help. Everyone who's been successful at some point with weight loss followed a certain set of rules, & they can vary greatly depending on the person. Maybe it's "I can eat whatever I want as long as I meet my calorie goal for the day" or "I can make one day a free day to eat what I want as long as I log it, & set a specific time to end it." A lot of my effort through the week happens with the mindset that "the better I do now, the more I can eat on Spike Day." True story. If it sounds like I reward myself with food, I absolutely do. If I'm willing to run a couple miles for a donut, what's the big deal? Some donuts are just worth it.

    The tendency toward emotional eating complicates things, so having free meals or free days may not work for you. Only you can decide if it's something you can handle. If you find that you can't separate emotional eating from these planned indulgences, then it's probably not for you.

    You don't just HAVE to view it as "falling off the wagon." I really hate that phrase. There's no wagon, people. You simply made choices that you now realize weren't good ones for your weight loss. Dedicate yourself to making good ones today. That's all you need to worry about right now. Don't worry about yesterday, & deal with tomorrow, tomorrow.
  • I am in this situation as well. I try and eat well, and get to the gym. But my main problem is that by the time I get home from work or school the last thing I want to do is lace up my sneakers and go to the gym. I just want to sit for a few minutes. But whats the point of not being happy with the results or lack of weight loss if I'm only putting in half the work?!?!? So, I need to make time.

    Don't stress about it. Just take some deep breaths and get back on it!!
  • ahealthy4u
    ahealthy4u Posts: 442 Member
    You have to want the goal that is at the end of the tunnel and until you are ready just like anything you won't commit or at least that is how I felt for years. No I want to feel better and things I know now I wish I would have known when I was younger.
    Get a group of friends that you can work with that can help you out in giving you that extra little push but don’t get to down on yourself. Enjoy life eat what you want with in moderation think baby steps and you will get there. Good Luck “YOU CAN DO IT I HAVE FAITH IN YOU!” If you need a friend to give you a little extra push of encouragement you can always add me.
  • IvoryParchment
    IvoryParchment Posts: 651 Member
    I don't have as much to lose as other people here, but I have definitely experienced the phenomenon where if I overeat one day, it is harder, not easier, to stay within goal the next day. It doesn't make intuitive sense (I should be better prepared for limited calories, right?) but I find that when I start restricting calories, it is harder the first few days, then my body adjusts and it feels natural.

    I would suggest that if there is a reason for you to overeat -- special occasion family meal or whatever -- you plan to gradually lower your calorie goal over the following few days, rather than beat yourself up over "cheating," and expect to go right back to the lower calorie goal. You have to find what works for your body, since you'll be doing this the rest of your life.
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