Anonymous wrote:I’m in my 40’s and counting calories no longer works for me. I think it’s because I allow myself too many (since I’m not happy at 1200) but then feel the need to eat the entire amount, even if I’m not that hungry. I like the idea of more mindful eating, so I would probably try Noom. That said, I just switched to a mostly plant-based diet and lost more over the past two weeks than I have over the past couple months counting calories. I eat until I’m full and stick to unprocessed, mostly non-meat, low-fat choices. Although I’m well versed in portion sizes based on years of counting calories, I don’t measure or weigh stuff like I used to.
Anonymous wrote:Noom has a big educational component. As someone who has worried about my weight and intermittently dieted for 30+ years, I didn't find it taught me amything or any tricks I didn't already know. It might be fantastic for someone who is concerned about their eating habits for the first time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did the trial of Noom and liked it enough to buy a subscription. Noom is more mental. It has a quick article and then you log meals. You have a coach and a group, which I found both unhelpful and a waste of time. But I did find the articles helpful at first, although after about a month the Schtick got old and I didn’t stick with it. Maybe try the free trial?
If you have the motivation to stick with counting calories that works just as well.
I disliked Noom a lot. I wanted better nutrition advice and meal planning, and it gave me neither. The coach was useless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did the trial of Noom and liked it enough to buy a subscription. Noom is more mental. It has a quick article and then you log meals. You have a coach and a group, which I found both unhelpful and a waste of time. But I did find the articles helpful at first, although after about a month the Schtick got old and I didn’t stick with it. Maybe try the free trial?
If you have the motivation to stick with counting calories that works just as well.
I disliked Noom a lot. I wanted better nutrition advice and meal planning, and it gave me neither. The coach was useless.
Anonymous wrote:I did the trial of Noom and liked it enough to buy a subscription. Noom is more mental. It has a quick article and then you log meals. You have a coach and a group, which I found both unhelpful and a waste of time. But I did find the articles helpful at first, although after about a month the Schtick got old and I didn’t stick with it. Maybe try the free trial?
If you have the motivation to stick with counting calories that works just as well.
Anonymous wrote:I've tried to lose weight for years counting calories on My Fitness Pal. I know how to eat. I know how to record. I didn't lose much weight.
I've lost almost 50 now on Noom. Is it that much better? I don't know. It's helpful with the daily reminders and accountability. But I think my biggest change is that I'm home and can plan and cook my meals each day. I didn't have the time for that before.
What I do like about noom is it only gives you half the calories extra for the day that you've burned in exericse. My Fitness Pal gives them all to you. And I do think that messed me up a bit. A long walk could have burned 600 calories, but if I ate 600 more calories, I lost nothing. On noom, I might burn 400 calories, but I'm only given an additional 200 to eat. That does make a difference for me.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter liked the color-coded food categories on Noom, but she is naturally thin and only needed to lose the COVID 15.
I need to lose 50. I’ve lost 6 this month so far on MyFitnessPal.