Anonymous wrote:Of course giving up alcohol won't make you lose weight if you replace it with other calories. But in general, sugary drinks, including frappes, milkshakes, and alcohol, are empty calories. They offer nothing nutritionally. That being said, weight loss is a numbers game. If you need 1500 calories a day to lose 1 pound a week, then you can eat 1000 calories a day and drink 500 calories of booze.
TLDR you can drink and lose weight if you're dieting enough to still have CICO.
Anonymous wrote:Of course giving up alcohol won't make you lose weight if you replace it with other calories. But in general, sugary drinks, including frappes, milkshakes, and alcohol, are empty calories. They offer nothing nutritionally. That being said, weight loss is a numbers game. If you need 1500 calories a day to lose 1 pound a week, then you can eat 1000 calories a day and drink 500 calories of booze.
TLDR you can drink and lose weight if you're dieting enough to still have CICO.
Anonymous wrote:None. I lost no weight during Dry January.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a drinker (1/2 drinks most days) and suspect this is preventing me from losing weight. I’m tweaking a bunch of things but have decided I probably can’t drink - or can only drink 1/2 drinks a week as opposed to per day - in order to get fitter. How true was/is this for you? Is quitting alcohol a determinant in how quickly and how much weight you lose?
Anonymous wrote:"Don't drink your calories" is pretty much a weight loss axiom that includes but is not limited to alcohol. If you replace your alcoholic drinks with pumpkin spice lattes, you won't lose weight any faster.
Anonymous wrote:I lost 15 pounds in four months by cutting down from drinking 7 days a week to weekends only. Was around 3 drinks per day.