Anonymous wrote:I do because I’m trying to lose weight and lower my cholesterol. So yeah, i need to plan what im eating most days to ensure i stay on target.
I’m also a mom and have to plan what everyone else in my house is eating for the rest of day. I call it executive functioning.
I think it’s disordered eating if you are obsessive about food to the point that it’s unhealthy, or if you are restrictive to a point that you’re malnourished.
Anonymous wrote:I am kind of like this. I just enjoy food so it's one of the things about my day I most look forward to. Also to me it makes sense to plan meals while I'm eating a meal because it's a related activity. If I'm eating breakfast, it's easy for me to think "okay I'm doing something pretty light and fruit/veggie focused for breakfast, so I'm going to do something heavier and more protein heavy at lunch." Also if the next meal requires any prep, it makes sense to think about that while I'm already in the kitchen. It's very easy to quickly prep some veggies for a dinner stir fry after washing my lunch dishes, for instance. It is inefficient to wait until later to figure that out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a luxury to not have to think about the next meal. The food doesn’t magically appear on the table and reservations don’t make themselves. The people without a care in the world are the ones who get annoyed by this.
It's funny when people hop on their high horse to scold others while not realizing their entire post reeks of luxury and privilege.
Uber Eats isn’t how everyone gets their meals, fyi. Cooking from scratch takes time, but you wouldn’t know.
Again you show your elitism while trying to shame. Try to be less of a. Idiot
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My retired mother does this and it’s definitely not to get a head start on prep work - she eats out for every meal.
Exactly. I think people are purposely being obtuse claiming it's about meals planning. At least from my interpretation of the op. Even if you are meal planning you don't have to discuss it at the table in that moment. In my experience the people who do this are greedy, suffering from food addiction or maybe in the past were food insecure. Not meal prepping.
Wow judgmental.
Even if it's not for meal prepping, why can't it just be because they enjoy food and like knowing what they have to look forward to? Unless someone has a weight problem or an eating disorder, this seems fine.
I love playing tennis and often when I'm finishing up a hitting session with one of my tennis partners, I'll bring up when we will play next and try to lock it down so that I have it to look forward to. Because it brings me joy. I have a friend who loves travel and he's always planning his next vacation during his current vacation, collecting ideas and even starting to look at flights or hotels on his plane ride home. The food thing seems no different. It's a way to expand the pleasure you get from food, by planning good meals in advance so you can look forward to them when you are in between.
This is not "greedy" or a sign of an addiction. I think it's mentally healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a luxury to not have to think about the next meal. The food doesn’t magically appear on the table and reservations don’t make themselves. The people without a care in the world are the ones who get annoyed by this.
It's funny when people hop on their high horse to scold others while not realizing their entire post reeks of luxury and privilege.
Uber Eats isn’t how everyone gets their meals, fyi. Cooking from scratch takes time, but you wouldn’t know.