Guest guest Posted March 20, 2006 Report Share Posted March 20, 2006 , don't weigh yourself after free day, or any day where you've eaten a lot of sodium or processed food. I usually weigh myself every 2 weeks because I find it affects my psyche, mood and motivation. The scale is the biggest demotivator in the world and doesnt tell the true story! Focus on tape measure changes, bodyfat changes, how you look in the mirror and how your clothes fit. I also wouldnt be surprised if you gain more than 2 lbs after a free day, I think my worst was 5 lbs!! And yes, to your first question. BFL is working because you don't find junk food tasty anymore. This means that you are on your way to making healthy eating a lifestyle rather than a diet you give up on once 12 weeks is over. CONGRATULATIONS!! > i was just really surprised that all the stuff i was " looking forward to " really didn't taste that good. is this what happens? > > but i did gain 2 lbs overnight from the free day. water retention, i'm sure. but am i gonna gain 2 lbs every free day? it's like i take 4 steps forward all week, only to take 2 steps back on sunday. it kind of took away my motivation. i mean, i'm gonna stick with it, but i was a little depressed. i was hoping my weight would just stay where it was. but 2 lbs! wow. > > maybe i shouldn't weigh myself the morning after my free day. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after 4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but it's hard. - -- In , " " <sandrawith2kids@...> wrote: > > And yes, to your first question. BFL is working because you don't > find junk food tasty anymore. This means that you are on your way > to making healthy eating a lifestyle rather than a diet you give up > on once 12 weeks is over. CONGRATULATIONS!! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 Of course it doesn't mean the program isn't working for you if you still have cravings after 4.5 weeks of BFL. 4.5 weeks is a drop in the bucket! For some people it may take 2 weeks For some people it may take 2 years it is probable that you will need to do some emotional work too - read books about emotional overeating. To find out why you reach for foods for comfort rather than finding alternatives Most of us have had food issues for YEARS. Those issues do not disappear quickly. It takes months/years of hard work. n At 05:31 AM 3/21/2006, you wrote: >uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after >4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > >Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually >be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will >power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but >it's hard. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 That actually made me laugh out loud. :-) I still have major cravings and pig out after SIX YEARS. I've had great success. Achieved all my goals. No guilt. No regrets. I've never understood the people who lose their taste for junk food, or say that something is too rich or too sweet (?!). I respect them, but I don't understand them. :-) I'm still a happy consumer of fast food cheeseburgers, glazed donuts, and cookie dough ice cream. If I can enjoy my treats and still be lean and fit, I'm all for it. Here's an article that might give you some perspective: Free Day - to pig or not to pig http://www.skwigg.com/id70.html On 3/21/06, snoopie212 <snoopie212@...> wrote: > > uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after > 4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > > Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually > be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will > power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but > it's hard. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 You're totally fine. It took me a whole year to lose my fast food cravings. But I grew up on it so I didn't expect it to occur that fast! It's progress, not perfection. Enjoy your free day and give yourself little goals for that day. Drink your water, get in a nice enjoyable walk or other easy activity. Don't make it all about the food. Plan a new recipe to try. Some people never lose certain cravings (chocolate) and that's totally fine, no biggie. You're doing great on BFL so keep it going! Slowly you'll layer in more knowledge and information and certain foods will no longer appeal to you. Jami > > uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after > 4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > > Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually > be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will > power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but > it's hard. > > > - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 I will never lose my taste for cookie dough ice cream, or rum raisin ice cream. I have lost my taste for fast food burgers, with the major exception of In and Out. I would prefer a hand made burger at a pub or bar and grill on a great roll with hand cutfries. As a matter of fact, that was my foolishness of choice two weeks ago. I think my taste has matured a little. It reminds me of an article I read years ago where they were interviewing Travolta. He was at the Biltmore in Santa Barbara having a molten chocolate cake with a chantilly cream. He told the writer that it was like a rich man's Hostess cupcake. I get that. My stomach can't handle major pig outs and I've learned to temper them. So now I head to a small plate place and have bbq duck & polenta, and mac n cheese (the latest shee shee thing around here) and a nice dessert and I'm really, really happy. Nothin' BFL that day, but not a pig out either, if that makes sense. On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 09:48:38 -0600 Skwigg <skwigg@...> wrote: > That actually made me laugh out loud. :-) I still have major cravings > and pig out after SIX YEARS. I've had great success. Achieved all my > goals. No guilt. No regrets. > > I've never understood the people who lose their taste for junk food, > or say that something is too rich or too sweet (?!). I respect them, > but I don't understand them. :-) I'm still a happy consumer of fast > food cheeseburgers, glazed donuts, and cookie dough ice cream. If I > can enjoy my treats and still be lean and fit, I'm all for it. > > Here's an article that might give you some perspective: > > Free Day - to pig or not to pig > http://www.skwigg.com/id70.html > > > > > On 3/21/06, snoopie212 <snoopie212@...> wrote: > > > > uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after > > 4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > > > > > Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually > > be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will > > power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but > > it's hard. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 n, I SO needed to hear this today! Thank you for your words even as they were not intended for me...they really were! My mom is in from out of town so she is staying with us...IN OUR HOUSE! Okay, it's not that bad but the way she eats is and the old emotions start to lift their ugly heads...GASP! It makes me turn into that twelve year old food eating adolecent! LOL Ah, I know it will take time.... Kari > >uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after > >4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > > > > >Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually > >be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will > >power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but > >it's hard. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 - do you still have only 1 free day a week or a free meal or what? I find that I'm ok as long as I don't eat ANY of a particular trigger food. I admire people that can eat just one cookie or chip or a tiny piece of cake. I, however, am not one of those people. I have lost a lot of weight, but if I have, say a cracker, I still have the urge to eat the entire box. Or if I'm baking cookies and even taste the batter, I wan to eat more and more. I don't know when or if these urges will go away, but I have finally figured out that I can't just depend of my willpower to stop myself. I keep trigger foods out of the house and I try to not put myself in situations where I know I might binge. Skwigg <skwigg@...> wrote: That actually made me laugh out loud. :-) I still have major cravings and pig out after SIX YEARS. I've had great success. Achieved all my goals. No guilt. No regrets. I've never understood the people who lose their taste for junk food, or say that something is too rich or too sweet (?!). I respect them, but I don't understand them. :-) I'm still a happy consumer of fast food cheeseburgers, glazed donuts, and cookie dough ice cream. If I can enjoy my treats and still be lean and fit, I'm all for it. Here's an article that might give you some perspective: Free Day - to pig or not to pig http://www.skwigg.com/id70.html On 3/21/06, snoopie212 <snoopie212@...> wrote: > > uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after > 4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > > Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually > be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will > power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but > it's hard. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2006 Report Share Posted March 21, 2006 Nah, I take entire free weekends now. :-) They're not quite as crazy as my single free days used to be because it's not such a " now's my chance " proposition. You know, like I no longer need to finish the entire box of Lucky Charms before bed because I know I can have some more when I wake up tomorrow. I no longer need to eat several huge meals in one day because I've got the whole weekend to decide what I want and when I'll have it. Plenty of my meals and snacks are still clean on my weekends because I still train hard both days. I wouldn't want to go to the gym with a stomach full of Lucky Charms and Mountain Dew Livewire. Although, that would certainly be colorful if I accidentally hit the vomit threshold on my HIIT. LOL Each of my free days is usually in the 2500-3000 calorie range now, and my normal days are around 2,300. It sounds like a truckload of food but apparently I'm active enough to support it. My weight hasn't varied by more than 5 pounds in the last three years. Here's a link to the blog entry where I finally caught a glimpse of my true activity level. Early in my journey I thought I was just lucky or had a fast metabolism or something, but when I took the time to break down the numbers, my jaw dropped. I'm really *moving it* most days. http://skwigg.tripod.com/blog/index.blog?entry_id=1381939 Find whatever works best for you and don't be afraid to eat. If you're active and your goal is to maintain or gain, you need enough calories to support it. On 3/21/06, Tara Winnett <twinnett001@...> wrote: > - do you still have only 1 free day a week or a free meal or what? I find that I'm ok as long as I don't eat ANY of a particular trigger food. I admire people that can eat just one cookie or chip or a tiny piece of cake. I, however, am not one of those people. I have lost a lot of weight, but if I have, say a cracker, I still have the urge to eat the entire box. Or if I'm baking cookies and even taste the batter, I wan to eat more and more. I don't know when or if these urges will go away, but I have finally figured out that I can't just depend of my willpower to stop myself. I keep trigger foods out of the house and I try to not put myself in situations where I know I might binge. > > Skwigg <skwigg@...> wrote: That actually made me laugh out loud. :-) I still have major cravings > and pig out after SIX YEARS. I've had great success. Achieved all my > goals. No guilt. No regrets. > > I've never understood the people who lose their taste for junk food, > or say that something is too rich or too sweet (?!). I respect them, > but I don't understand them. :-) I'm still a happy consumer of fast > food cheeseburgers, glazed donuts, and cookie dough ice cream. If I > can enjoy my treats and still be lean and fit, I'm all for it. > > Here's an article that might give you some perspective: > > Free Day - to pig or not to pig > http://www.skwigg.com/id70.html > > > > > On 3/21/06, snoopie212 <snoopie212@...> wrote: > > > > uh oh - I still have MAJOR cravings (and pig out) on my free day after > > 4.5 weeks - does this mean it's not working for me?? > > > > > > Will I eventually stop craving things so much? And I will eventually > > be able to say no! to temptations? I feel like I have no will > > power/self control. I am hoping to learn that thru this program, but > > it's hard. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2006 Report Share Posted March 22, 2006 Wow, that would be my dream, to accept the fact that I don't have to eat the whole box of Lucky Charms cause I can have some tomorrow if I want. sigh. I was just going to post to the group, asking, has anyone found anything that helps reduce cravings? I've started journaling when I'm having a craving and I have noticed it is worse when I am pms. So can't I like pop a pill or something to take care of that? LOL , you mentioned Flax oil may help cravings? Do you mean like the " I have to have a Twix bar right now " kind of craving? Diane At 04:36 PM 3/21/2006, you wrote: >Nah, I take entire free weekends now. :-) They're not quite as crazy >as my single free days used to be because it's not such a " now's my >chance " proposition. You know, like I no longer need to finish the >entire box of Lucky Charms before bed because I know I can have some >more when I wake up tomorrow. I no longer need to eat several huge >meals in one day because I've got the whole weekend to decide what I >want and when I'll have it. Plenty of my meals and snacks are still >clean on my weekends because I still train hard both days. I wouldn't >want to go to the gym with a stomach full of Lucky Charms and Mountain >Dew Livewire. Although, that would certainly be colorful if I >accidentally hit the vomit threshold on my HIIT. LOL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2006 Report Share Posted March 22, 2006 Yes, that's exactly the kind of craving. I guarantee that if you take a big gulp of oil, you won't want the Twix bar anymore! :-) Flax oil does help with carb cravings, not just from the ick factor but because the healthy fat does happy things to your blood sugar and brain chemistry. It's hard to explain, but it gives you less of a frazzled, crashy, anxious, munchy feeling and more of a full, satisfied, couldn't-eat-another-bite feeling. On 3/21/06, Diane M. <dmiller91@...> wrote: > > , you mentioned Flax oil may help cravings? Do you mean like > the " I have to have a Twix bar right now " kind of craving? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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