Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you’re eating enough on top of working out so your body is holding onto weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The multiple meals a day and snacks needs to stop today. Stop grazing. You're not a cow.
Three meals a day. Bigger meals of real food you've made. Nothing packaged. If you can skip breakfast and just have a 8nhr window great. But don't eat all afternoon and also if you 16 8 and only so 2 meals they will have to be a little bigger. Herbal tea at night no exceptions. Popcorn should be your only Friday night snack. Once a week say. That's it. Also make sure it is popcorn yoi made yourself on stove with real butter melted. None of that fake microwave stuff. Snacks should be inconvenient a little. Meal plan and meal prep. Yes 15 lbs is doable. But most people just talk about it while mindlessly nibbling multiple times a day. Stop spiking insulin multiple times a day. You can do this if you put your mind to it. Also no white flour or white bread. Ezekiel only. Avocado with Ezekiel and a tiny bit of olive oil and hardboiled egg is great lunch or dinner. Est yogurt but plain whole only. Read labels.
This is just so grossly inaccurate I don’t even know where to begin.
CALORIE IN, CALORIE OUT. It doesn’t matter WHEN or HOW MUCH. Can we please stop spreading this misinformation.
If OP consumes her caloric deficit amount of daily calories by consuming only white bread, one slice at a time every hour, she will lose weight.
Anonymous wrote:Your stats and habits are similar to mine , OP. I find it is MUCH easier to curb the afternoon and evening snacking if I eat more during the day. You eat very few calories all day long- a yogurt, a shake, some cottage cheese and chicken and then finally dinner? When I eat like that I’m always very proud of myself and then by 5pm or so I’m finding myself eating a giant bowl of animal crackers because I’m famished and craving carbs.
For me, if I add on a serving of high fiber whole grains with lunch , some fruit or vegetable, and then have a snack of maybe some cheese and buckwheat crackers right before dinner , I find myself feeling actually full/ satiated after dinner and it’s much easier to go to bed that evening without snacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you’re eating enough on top of working out so your body is holding onto weight.
I track calories and I eat around 1600 (the amount MyFitnessPal recommends I consume to lose 2lb a week) before my ridiculous snacking.
How do you get to 1600 with a yogurt (100), some cottage cheese (100), some grilled chicken (250), and a protein shake (200)? You have a 1000 calorie dinner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you actually hungry when you snack? If the issue is emotional eating, the answer is to
1. Stop buying the snacks you would eat
2. Occupy your hands with something else until you break the habit.
OP here.
I am absolutely NOT hungry.
The problem is that I will eat the kids snacks, or even just semi-decent food that I just don’t need, like a peanut butter sandwich. A PBJ, for example, is an easy extra 350-400 calories!
I’d stop tracking calories and just make better choices. Consider all fresh veggies, fresh fruit, eggs, and fresh unprocessed meats a free for all. Instead of making the PB & J then eat a roasted chicken leg quarter or a few hard boiled eggs or half a bag of grapes instead. This takes some prep work so you have things that are easy to grab but not counting calories is worth it. If it doesn’t fall into one of these categories then don’t ever eat it for a snack and really think before you eat it as part of a meal. Ditch the protein shakes and anything else that’s processed or has added sugar of any kind. If you need sweetener on your fruit use local honey in moderation.
Honestly, this is horrible advice.
A half bag of grapes? Do you even realize how many calories that is?
The fact of the matter is, calories matter, even if they are from grapes, or chicken, or eggs, and you need to be in a deficit to lose weight.
And protein shakes are easy, dense protein that are low in calorie. They are actually the perfect food on a macro level, by design.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks so much, everyone.
Any other tips? Do you think it’s even possible to drop 15lb in three months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you’re eating enough on top of working out so your body is holding onto weight.
I track calories and I eat around 1600 (the amount MyFitnessPal recommends I consume to lose 2lb a week) before my ridiculous snacking.