Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Allow yourself 1-2 free meals a week. Not an all-out cheat day, just a free meal that includes more carbs and/or fat than you have been eating your diet.
Would one free meal a day work? Or just a few times a week? How badly would the impact my dietary efforts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for your thoughtful responses. I’m not dieting per se, in order to lose weight. I am eating healthy to ensure my body gets all the nutrients it needs. I have high cholesterol so I also want to lower that through diet. Right now I am flexeterian. I drink a smoothie for breakfast, and eat stir fried veggies for lunch and dinner. After a few days of this I am craving “real food” so I indulge on a chicken sandwich for lunch. Today i ordered a chicken and cheese panini. But I feel guilty since I already had one on Monday. I don’t want the carbs and cheese to increase the omega 6 in my body and contribute to my cholesterol.
Uh, you're not eating any real food. Of course your body is craving food. You're starving yourself.
Mean this genuinely, see a therapist. You have food issues.
How are vegetables and fruits not real food? I also have generous helpings of fish with my veggies throughout the week.
Her diet sounds yummy. I love smoothies and vegetables. I put yogurt in my smoothies and sometimes add beans and tofu to my vegetables. Not everyone is disordered you know. Plus she's being strategic about cheat meals to satisfy cravings.
Your original post didn't mention adding fish. Of course vegetables and fruits are real food, but it's not a balanced diet. A person needs fat in their diet. And protein. Which is probably why OP is craving a damn burger. It's just too extreme. If it wasn't too extreme, she wouldn't be seeing dancing burgers in her head.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for your thoughtful responses. I’m not dieting per se, in order to lose weight. I am eating healthy to ensure my body gets all the nutrients it needs. I have high cholesterol so I also want to lower that through diet. Right now I am flexeterian. I drink a smoothie for breakfast, and eat stir fried veggies for lunch and dinner. After a few days of this I am craving “real food” so I indulge on a chicken sandwich for lunch. Today i ordered a chicken and cheese panini. But I feel guilty since I already had one on Monday. I don’t want the carbs and cheese to increase the omega 6 in my body and contribute to my cholesterol.
Uh, you're not eating any real food. Of course your body is craving food. You're starving yourself.
Mean this genuinely, see a therapist. You have food issues.
How are vegetables and fruits not real food? I also have generous helpings of fish with my veggies throughout the week.
Her diet sounds yummy. I love smoothies and vegetables. I put yogurt in my smoothies and sometimes add beans and tofu to my vegetables. Not everyone is disordered you know. Plus she's being strategic about cheat meals to satisfy cravings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for your thoughtful responses. I’m not dieting per se, in order to lose weight. I am eating healthy to ensure my body gets all the nutrients it needs. I have high cholesterol so I also want to lower that through diet. Right now I am flexeterian. I drink a smoothie for breakfast, and eat stir fried veggies for lunch and dinner. After a few days of this I am craving “real food” so I indulge on a chicken sandwich for lunch. Today i ordered a chicken and cheese panini. But I feel guilty since I already had one on Monday. I don’t want the carbs and cheese to increase the omega 6 in my body and contribute to my cholesterol.
Uh, you're not eating any real food. Of course your body is craving food. You're starving yourself.
Mean this genuinely, see a therapist. You have food issues.
How are vegetables and fruits not real food? I also have generous helpings of fish with my veggies throughout the week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for your thoughtful responses. I’m not dieting per se, in order to lose weight. I am eating healthy to ensure my body gets all the nutrients it needs. I have high cholesterol so I also want to lower that through diet. Right now I am flexeterian. I drink a smoothie for breakfast, and eat stir fried veggies for lunch and dinner. After a few days of this I am craving “real food” so I indulge on a chicken sandwich for lunch. Today i ordered a chicken and cheese panini. But I feel guilty since I already had one on Monday. I don’t want the carbs and cheese to increase the omega 6 in my body and contribute to my cholesterol.
Uh, you're not eating any real food. Of course your body is craving food. You're starving yourself.
Mean this genuinely, see a therapist. You have food issues.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for your thoughtful responses. I’m not dieting per se, in order to lose weight. I am eating healthy to ensure my body gets all the nutrients it needs. I have high cholesterol so I also want to lower that through diet. Right now I am flexeterian. I drink a smoothie for breakfast, and eat stir fried veggies for lunch and dinner. After a few days of this I am craving “real food” so I indulge on a chicken sandwich for lunch. Today i ordered a chicken and cheese panini. But I feel guilty since I already had one on Monday. I don’t want the carbs and cheese to increase the omega 6 in my body and contribute to my cholesterol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Allow yourself 1-2 free meals a week. Not an all-out cheat day, just a free meal that includes more carbs and/or fat than you have been eating your diet.
Would one free meal a day work? Or just a few times a week? How badly would the impact my dietary efforts?
Did you read the post? 1-2 meals a week.
It really depends on your goals, but if you are going for reasonable, long-term and sustainable weight loss, a couple free meals a week will help you stay on track.
An example of a "free meal" would be a dinner out somewhere. Eat according to your diet that day, then go out for a reasonably-portioned steak dinner with perhaps a carb that would be off-limits on your diet. Don't go all out, just enough to satisfy you, then back to your diet the next day.
Gosh I do 1-2 days a week where I eat literally whatever I want. Restricting to such a point where you can't eat a piece of beef with a slice of cheese and a whole wheat bun would do me in. I need fat and protein and sodium, I'm an athlete! I buy or make sliders more than burgers ~ the burgers have gotten so big that they are crazy, a slider gets me what I need/want but doesn't leave me ill.
Anonymous wrote:I really don't see the issue. Have a burger for lunch and have a light dinner. Get it somewhere good, not a fast food place, or make it at home. I only eat them at home but I feel like 4 oz or so of grass fed 90% lean ground beef, a whole wheat bun, tomato, onion, and mustard (which is how I like my burgers) isn't actually unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Allow yourself 1-2 free meals a week. Not an all-out cheat day, just a free meal that includes more carbs and/or fat than you have been eating your diet.
Would one free meal a day work? Or just a few times a week? How badly would the impact my dietary efforts?
Did you read the post? 1-2 meals a week.
It really depends on your goals, but if you are going for reasonable, long-term and sustainable weight loss, a couple free meals a week will help you stay on track.
An example of a "free meal" would be a dinner out somewhere. Eat according to your diet that day, then go out for a reasonably-portioned steak dinner with perhaps a carb that would be off-limits on your diet. Don't go all out, just enough to satisfy you, then back to your diet the next day.