Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although I would not be able to do this one-meal-day thing i will say that several decades ago my college boyfriend did the same thing. he was 50 pounds overweight and just decided to eat one meal a day. He could eat as much as he could stuff in, but just one meal. He lost the weight, and to this day he has kept it off (we are still in regular touch). He now eats big once a day and very light the other 2 meals. For him, big meal is at night; light breakfast and lunch.
that's different than eating only one meal per day. I eat a very light breakfast because I can't handle food in the morning. I eat a small lunch and eat a snack during the day, then eat a lightish dinner. The trick is smaller portions (some cases really small, like a 5 yr old size meal) frequently, low cal foods, and movement.
That’s the trick for YOU. Smaller frequent portions didn’t work for me. IF has and is so much easier for me to stick to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although I would not be able to do this one-meal-day thing i will say that several decades ago my college boyfriend did the same thing. he was 50 pounds overweight and just decided to eat one meal a day. He could eat as much as he could stuff in, but just one meal. He lost the weight, and to this day he has kept it off (we are still in regular touch). He now eats big once a day and very light the other 2 meals. For him, big meal is at night; light breakfast and lunch.
that's different than eating only one meal per day. I eat a very light breakfast because I can't handle food in the morning. I eat a small lunch and eat a snack during the day, then eat a lightish dinner. The trick is smaller portions (some cases really small, like a 5 yr old size meal) frequently, low cal foods, and movement.
Anonymous wrote:Although I would not be able to do this one-meal-day thing i will say that several decades ago my college boyfriend did the same thing. he was 50 pounds overweight and just decided to eat one meal a day. He could eat as much as he could stuff in, but just one meal. He lost the weight, and to this day he has kept it off (we are still in regular touch). He now eats big once a day and very light the other 2 meals. For him, big meal is at night; light breakfast and lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
It's really a thing among "fitness people"? I consider myself a "fitness person" and I couldn't imagine performing well in a hard workout if I hadn't eaten for hour and hours. This kind of diet seems incompatible with fitness.
I agree. That was my first thought. But here on DCUM the consensus is that fitness is useless lol
Lol. No, on DCUM any type of diet other than “everything in moderation” is an eating disorder. Check out all the reddit fitness subs and you’ll see OMAD all over the place, including among people that are competitive bikini/fitness/physique competitors.[/quote
Eating disorders are rampant among people who are into competitive fitness. And one meal a day is starvation.
Anonymous wrote:You probably lost fat and muscle, but mostly muscle.
Anonymous wrote:You know how I do it? and maintain? I have one meal a day. Any meal I choose. Generally eat whatever I feel like having.
I've tried a million things for years and it's like, oh. If you don't eat much, you will lose the weight. That's the secret guys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
It's really a thing among "fitness people"? I consider myself a "fitness person" and I couldn't imagine performing well in a hard workout if I hadn't eaten for hour and hours. This kind of diet seems incompatible with fitness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
It's really a thing among "fitness people"? I consider myself a "fitness person" and I couldn't imagine performing well in a hard workout if I hadn't eaten for hour and hours. This kind of diet seems incompatible with fitness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
It's really a thing among "fitness people"? I consider myself a "fitness person" and I couldn't imagine performing well in a hard workout if I hadn't eaten for hour and hours. This kind of diet seems incompatible with fitness.
I agree. That was my first thought. But here on DCUM the consensus is that fitness is useless lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
It's really a thing among "fitness people"? I consider myself a "fitness person" and I couldn't imagine performing well in a hard workout if I hadn't eaten for hour and hours. This kind of diet seems incompatible with fitness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
It's really a thing among "fitness people"? I consider myself a "fitness person" and I couldn't imagine performing well in a hard workout if I hadn't eaten for hour and hours. This kind of diet seems incompatible with fitness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know how people do this and cook for their families. I am stuck in the kitchen where I snack. I would love to be binge-watching something with a glass of iced tea and nothing else instead of cooking dinner but I have too many mouths to feed. I think about food all freaking day--what to put in the lunches, what to make for dinner, what to make for dinner the following night. I would rather not think about food at all.
Eh, most of us aren’t the house cooks. I have a full-time job, hobbies, and a personal life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^because there's no way you are getting the necessary, probably even the minimal, amounts of protein, minerals, nutrients, and fiber that you need daily. There's just no way
Weight is only small part of the picture when it comes to your overall Health and Longevity. The obsession with it to the exclusion of all else is mind boggling
Why no way? One meal a day can be nutritionally balanced. NP but I do one meal a day that’s 1500-1800 calories. When I eat three meals a day I can easily put away2500 calories or more no problem as a 5’7 female which is why I’m overweight. It’s sooo much easier for me to eat fewer calories eating one meal a day.
OP might be undereating though.
OMAD is in fashion right now among fitness people and habitual dieters (just like intermittent fasting). It's a way to get in fewer calories (duh). But most of those people track their macros to make sure they are getting in enough protein and a minimum amount of fat, in addition to supplementing with things like fish oil. Doubt OP is doing this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know how people do this and cook for their families. I am stuck in the kitchen where I snack. I would love to be binge-watching something with a glass of iced tea and nothing else instead of cooking dinner but I have too many mouths to feed. I think about food all freaking day--what to put in the lunches, what to make for dinner, what to make for dinner the following night. I would rather not think about food at all.
Eh, most of us aren’t the house cooks. I have a full-time job, hobbies, and a personal life.