Help! How do I break my fast food addiction!!!!

It's a vicious cycle! I know some people loathe fast food, some who can take it or leave it, but I am NOT one of those people. I love fast food. McDonald's is my favorite. And last year I quit cold turkey and didn't have a single french fry or chicken nugget for 2 months. I dropped almost 10 pounds my first month and then decided I could still have my fast food fix if I only did it once a week. And that's what I did. I got a plain old hamburger and french fries every Thursday on my way into work. It seemed to be working out fine, until I stopped counting my points (was doing WW at the time). I've gained 10 of the 23 pounds I lost back and feeling even more miserable than ever. The problem is I can't seem to give up the fast food again.

Anyone out there have a terrible time giving up the foods they love on this crazy weight loss journey? And how did you finally break the cycle?? Thanks!

Replies

  • missikay1970
    missikay1970 Posts: 588 Member
    i have to admit that i loved fast food too. the gross mcd's burgers, burger K, chickFila...yum! the best way for me was to give it up entirely for a while, then introduce one of my fav meals once per month. my very fav is james coney island chili cheese dogs + chili cheese fries. or a double cheeseburger. it's easy to not eat it regularly b/c i know i'm going to get it on my "off" day once per month. i actually dont' crave it at all anymore. good luck and i hope you can lose that weight again. fast food really isn't healthy, it is so far from whole food, and i feel so much better overall when i avoid it. there was one month that my "off" meal was a salad b/c i just couldn't stomach a burger! hard to believe. LOL
  • CrazyTrackLady
    CrazyTrackLady Posts: 1,337 Member
    It's a vicious cycle! I know some people loathe fast food, some who can take it or leave it, but I am NOT one of those people. I love fast food. McDonald's is my favorite. And last year I quit cold turkey and didn't have a single french fry or chicken nugget for 2 months. I dropped almost 10 pounds my first month and then decided I could still have my fast food fix if I only did it once a week. And that's what I did. I got a plain old hamburger and french fries every Thursday on my way into work. It seemed to be working out fine, until I stopped counting my points (was doing WW at the time). I've gained 10 of the 23 pounds I lost back and feeling even more miserable than ever. The problem is I can't seem to give up the fast food again.

    Anyone out there have a terrible time giving up the foods they love on this crazy weight loss journey? And how did you finally break the cycle?? Thanks!

    It's hard to break such a strong habit, but it's possible. One quick way to do it is to actually LEARN what kind of chemicals and crap are in a McDonald's hamburger and bun. For example, the buns are treated with ammonia hydroxide to bleach them and keep them "fresh" for weeks. That's also used on farms as a fertilizer. Also research "pink slime", even tho McD's has stopped using it.

    Once you learn what you are actually eating, you might have the motivation to quit.
  • ArtGeek22
    ArtGeek22 Posts: 1,429 Member
    I had the same problem with sugar. The first thing I did was I sat down and wrote a letter to my addiction saying all the negative thing that it has brought to my life and also why I am saying goodbye. The second thing I did was not go near it for about a week by replacing it with something else (I used fruit). Then, I know it sounds stupid, but I got my hands on my favorite candy, then I just threw it away...... it felt great :happy: Hope everything goes well!

    If you would like some support you can friend me :flowerforyou:
  • focus4fitness
    focus4fitness Posts: 551 Member
    It really helped me to just start logging calories. Once you are really honest and start writing it all down, for some odd reason it gets easier to make better choices. Good luck, for now, read this I saw it on NPR today

    http://www.npr.org/2012/05/11/152508360/sizing-up-americans-in-the-weight-of-the-nation
  • SomeMorr
    SomeMorr Posts: 220 Member
    Logging calories made me realize that I am not satiated after a fast food meal but I have burned up a half day's worth of calories on it. It is totally not worth it to me anymore. After not eating fast food for many months when I had a Quarter Pounder the other day I was not impressed, the taste is not as satisfying anymore. Addictions are difficult no matter what form they come in but having people who hold you accountable for your actions is important too.
  • saraann4
    saraann4 Posts: 1,296 Member
    Girl...I am like the fast food queen or should I say I WAS! I ate fast food everyday...Burger King, McDonalds, Fazolis, Long John Silvers, Subway, Rallys, you name it! Every single day. Majority of the time it was for dinner, but occasionally I would do breakfast too. OR I'd do the worst thing, and buy take out from a restaurant.

    You want to break it? Simply, don't eat it! I'm at 250lbs right now. I was at 260lbs a month ago. I quit eating that JUNK and started eating better. Granted, I'm still learning. If I can do it, so can YOU! I've lost 10lbs so far!

    Crap, if you want, everytime you go through the drive-thru, think of me. You don't want to be as heavy as I am. You just don't. I don't want to be fat anymore. I do NOT have a craving for fast food anymore after a month. It's weird. I have the mentality that I am going to do this and I am very determined.

    My boyfriend eats fast food in front of me occasionally and I just don't give a damn....BUT let me smell it! lol That's enough. Yesterday, my dad asked if I wanted McDonalds (I'm like, really dad? really?? obviously HELL NO!) and he got 2 big macs and a milkshake. I asked if he was still watching his weight and he gave me a funny look and I said "ohhh you are watching it as it goes into your mouth!"

    All in all, if you want to break it, break it! You can do it.
  • 4rgl
    4rgl Posts: 106
    Read "Fast Food Nation" by Eric Schlosser.

    I was 15 when I read it. I can't say that I really ever had a fast food addiction though I would enjoy it occassionally. I was already kind of considering cutting out meat from my diet but wasn't really serious about it because I grew up eating meat and liked it. After reading the book, I decided not to eat fast food ever again, especially McDonald's. Not only that, learning what goes on in factory farms, especially learning what goes inside of ground meat, I stopped eating ground meat all together.
    Within a couple months I switched to organic, grass fed meat, but the amount of meat in my diet drastically reduced. After a couple months I realized I didn't even miss it and stopped eating meat all together and became a pescatarian. Currently thinking about moving on to becoming a vegetarian.

    Now don't get me wrong, I'm not telling you to become a vegetarian. My point is, reading this book, or doing some research about what goes inside what you eat can help you let go of things you never though were possible of letting go.
    Perhaps if you know just how bad McDonald's really is, what goes inside the "meat", about the accidents that go on in the nations largest factory farms that supply most of our meat (such as arms, fingers, hands, and even an entire person falling in meat grinding machines and getting ground up accidentally and these accidents not getting reported most of the times, consequently the contaminated meat being sold to consumers), the environmental consequences of factory farming, it might help you at least give up your fast food addiction if not make you give up even more like I did.

    Information is your best weapon.
  • Klamber26
    Klamber26 Posts: 212
    Once I moved out, I discovered a little something about myself-- I do NOT like to cook. As a result, I've lived off of fast food for three years. Yep, packed on some pounds.

    I quit my McDonald's dependence in a very slow progression. I started out first by losing the soft drink. I get only unsweetend tea. Then I cut out the fries. Then I switched from McFlurries to low-fat vanilla cones. Now that I'm logging all my calories of MFP, I feel to guilty to get anything too 'calorific'. So I stick with unsweet tea, diet soda, grilled chicken ceasar salad (no dressing), and the occasional pick-me-up vanilla cone.

    Oooh, also... you can order a large, iced, nonfat, sugar-free vanilla latte that only has 50 calories. True life-saver right there.
  • trishgrace
    trishgrace Posts: 279 Member
    I loved the Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese from McD's and I wanted it dressed like a big mac. Crazy. Has to be 2000 calories for that alone! I haven't had one in 6 months probably, but I still want one every time I drive past McD's. If I do stop, I behave and get a grilled chicken sandwich with a Fruit and walnut salad for the side.
  • LiddyBit
    LiddyBit Posts: 447 Member
    A friend of mine lost a lot of weight by simply ordering off the kid's menu when she went to fast food restaurants (she was a total fast food junkie).
  • jfan175
    jfan175 Posts: 812 Member
    No fast food tastes as good as losing fat.
  • momtokgo
    momtokgo Posts: 446 Member
    I rarely want Fast Food now, but for the last 2 years I ate way to much of it. Honeslty the main reason I don't want it now is that it does terrible things to my stomach. I have no gall bladder, and even a few french fries have me running for the bathroom. For the last few years I dealt with it or took meds to combat the issue....not worth it. So I just stopped cold turkey and I really don't want anything now except for the occasional carving for a spicy chicken burger from Wendys.

    I also remind myself when I am temped to take the kids through the drive thru so I don't have to cook (even if I'm not eating it) that its not worth the money. To take 3 kids and my husband to Wendys, its costs us well over $30. We could do so much more with the money.

    Maybe take the money you would be spending on fast food and put it into a "new wardrobe" fund for when you lose the weight?
  • ekicinsk
    ekicinsk Posts: 92 Member
    Here's what helped me break the habit about 4 years ago. (I still have fast food sometimes, sometimes you just need something fast, but its always planned and budgeted for)

    1) I told myself I could have fast food as much as I wanted - But only if I walked there. I was in minnesota at the time and, while I lived less than a mile from every fast food I could want, ITS COLD!

    2) I planned my meals for the week (usually 2 weeks) ahead, did the grocery shopping and any prep work. That way, I always knew what I was eating and if I craved fast food I could always say "no, self, you already have food for *meal* and if you dont eat it, you'll waste food and money." Sure, it takes time, but once you get in the habit, its easy peasy!
  • esselltee1156
    esselltee1156 Posts: 29 Member
    like an addiction to cigarettes or drugs or alcohol...you can NEVER have it again! one relapse will start the cravings all over again. when i quit smoking, i kept an old pack with a couple of cigarettes. i told myself if i really wanted one after a week, i could smoke those. well after a week in the car, i knew those would taste so bad, i never-even at my worst craving-wanted them badly enough to smoke those icky ones. and every day that went by made it easier and easier. i think food is the hardest addiction, because you just can't walk away from food and never have it again. but you can turn your back on bad food. i guess you could buy a happy meal and leave it in your car for a week-and if you really cant live without it...have at it! lol
    my best practice is to substitute good food for bad. you can have half a roasted chicken for the calories in a qp value meal or 4 cups of freash pineapple (bet you cant eat that much) for the calories in a medium vanilla shake!
    sadly, it's all easier said (or written) than done. i know, because ive been on and off the food wagon most of my life. MFP is the first thing ive found that's actually worked for me-i feel very different doing this than the million other "diets" ive been on. use the support here...everyone is amazing and the accountability is very helpful. just thinking someone might see my food diary (usually) keeps me on the straight and narrow path to health. and i love the statement "...and was under her calorie goal" not as well as i like "if every day were like today, you would weigh ___ in 5 weeks"!
  • niss63
    niss63 Posts: 82 Member
    I feel your pain. I love fast food and have found it hard to give up. At this point, I can't do fast food, except subway, or I'll blow my goals outta the water. Every time I try, it back fires, so I just can't do it.

    So it's going cold turkey for me.
  • esselltee1156
    esselltee1156 Posts: 29 Member
    freash
    *fresh* lol
  • litatura
    litatura Posts: 569 Member
    A friend of mine lost a lot of weight by simply ordering off the kid's menu when she went to fast food restaurants (she was a total fast food junkie).

    That's what I do and I get it with a Diet Coke.
  • andream1976
    andream1976 Posts: 77 Member
    Thank you all for your replies and words of encouragement. It is *hard* to give up something you love. I don't know, I've never been much of a cook until recently and when I do cook and eat at home, I feel like for the most part, I'm eating pretty well. I read labels and try to cut down on all the processed foods. But I still have this thing for fast food and I know I have to kick it. I really believe it's probably the main thing keeping me from losing the weight I want and keeping it off. Ugh, sometimes life is just full of crap, kwim? LOL
  • litatura
    litatura Posts: 569 Member
    But if you love it and you completely deprive yourself of it completely, it could cause you to crave/binge on it more. It's about moderation and portion control. I'm not much of a cook either and we got into the habit of picking up take-out on the way home probably 3-4 times a week, which I think lead to my weight gain. Now, I'll have take-out maybe once every two weeks and when I do, it's usually either Subway (6 inch turkey sub) or a kids' combo.
  • RiseAndConverge
    RiseAndConverge Posts: 35 Member
    Watch Super Size Me and/or Fast Food Nation at least once a week.