Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They say don't snack and only eat until you feel 80% full and stop.
They are naturally skinny people because I don’t know any fat people who “feel 80% full” ever and definitely not after the right amount of food.
I have a good friend who is quite fit and slimmed down over the past few years. She recently told me that she eats to 80% fullness and stops. Also: that she is always, ALWAYS hungry. But she keeps it up... Never satisfied and always slightly uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They say don't snack and only eat until you feel 80% full and stop.
They are naturally skinny people because I don’t know any fat people who “feel 80% full” ever and definitely not after the right amount of food.
Anonymous wrote:Listen to Weight Loss for Busy Physicians podcast
Anonymous wrote:They say don't snack and only eat until you feel 80% full and stop.
Anonymous wrote:The only way I tamed my emotional eating was tracking and following the weight watchers plan. But then they changed the plan and the new one didn’t work for me (too carb restrictive). I am trying to recreate the plan that worked for me with a calorie tracking app but haven’t been able to stick with it the same way. I think tackling the underlying emotions would be the right move but that sounds way too daunting. Good luck, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the opposite, doing much better at work, where I don't want anyone to see me eating anything not healthy. But when I am in the house alone? I chow down! And there's not even anything that bad in the house, but those dried mangos (no sugar added) are fantastic, and the cereal my tweens eat is really good with added almonds for crunch, and there's always an apple with peanut butter for that sweet and salty flavor. All snacks which wouldn't be so bad, but when I eat all of that inbetween lunch and dinner, just because I can, it's not pretty
Oh, I have a twin! I also don't know how to stop the constant snacking on healthy foods when WFH. So easy to not eat at the office.
Anonymous wrote:I am the opposite, doing much better at work, where I don't want anyone to see me eating anything not healthy. But when I am in the house alone? I chow down! And there's not even anything that bad in the house, but those dried mangos (no sugar added) are fantastic, and the cereal my tweens eat is really good with added almonds for crunch, and there's always an apple with peanut butter for that sweet and salty flavor. All snacks which wouldn't be so bad, but when I eat all of that inbetween lunch and dinner, just because I can, it's not pretty
Anonymous wrote:I’m having a difficult time lowering my calorie count and making healthy food choices. I know what to what to eat, how much of it to eat, and when to eat it. I plan out daily meals. I just never follow them. The day gets busy or I feel stressed, and I’m eating whatever looks good. Today was cookies. Yesterday was donuts. I’m trying to figure out a way to just stick with my daily plan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the opposite, doing much better at work, where I don't want anyone to see me eating anything not healthy. But when I am in the house alone? I chow down! And there's not even anything that bad in the house, but those dried mangos (no sugar added) are fantastic, and the cereal my tweens eat is really good with added almonds for crunch, and there's always an apple with peanut butter for that sweet and salty flavor. All snacks which wouldn't be so bad, but when I eat all of that inbetween lunch and dinner, just because I can, it's not pretty
Oh, I have a twin! I also don't know how to stop the constant snacking on healthy foods when WFH. So easy to not eat at the office.
Oh, I have a twin! I also don't know how to stop the constant snacking on healthy foods when WFH. So easy to not eat at the office.