I want a smoked salmon sandwich --with nice rusty bread or on a sourdough baguette.
Mimi, it's great that Don's appetite is slowly recovering.
Printable View
I want a smoked salmon sandwich --with nice rusty bread or on a sourdough baguette.
Mimi, it's great that Don's appetite is slowly recovering.
I do the calorie like a money in the bank, but I "feel" the pinch of money harder than when I go over my calories!
When I travel for work and I'm surrounded by a lot of crazy food, I also have a hard time saying no. I find that the more that I say no, the easier it is to continue to say no. The problem is when I'm saying no to some things but yes to other things. I'm more successful when it's no all the time! :p
That's how I gave up donuts. The first few were hard. but after a few years, it was no big deal.
Yes, it really is helpful to work with a good trainer. I am really going to miss mine...but I've been well trained. For me the biggest advantage was his knowledge and ability to keep me focused without over-doing things. It may come as a surprise that I tend to push myself too hard :rolleyes: Anyway, I am glad to hear that it is working out for you!
As far as food is concerned, I find I must say no all of the time or I am doomed... I do, occasionally, give in to ice cream, but as much as I love it I am satisfied with small amounts - probably because I get quality ice cream. No "reduced calorie/fat" ice cream for me - ick.
I am another woman for whom bread can be like crack...and I gave in today...sigh.
I had my "bread" day, yesterday and now back to reality. I didn't do too much damage.
I also find that if I am in a social situation, like a meeting with lots of food that is really bad, I don't eat any of it. The longer I can go without eating it, as I watch others stuff their faces, it makes it easier to not eat it. Let's just say the visual reinforcement of this works for me.
You all are inspirational! Thank you for the tips and suggestions. Saying "no" seems to be the key to foods that I'm barraged with, but saying "yes" to an occasional treat that I plan sounds like the ticket. It's just a matter of picking which. It's funny -- I have said no to french fries and other greasy fried foods for years now and now they don't even attract me in the least, in fact they gross me out, so thank you all for reminding me about that!
For some reason yesterday was just like that. Good idea about social situations. Typically I try to eat something prior to going, then just try and find the healthiest thing on which to nibble...but it never works that way. This is a good approach. Visual reinforcement sounds a good approach.
On a different note, I've been invited to a vegan's "share-in" that some friends of mine are starting. Of course I am not but always willing to expand my horizons. It is pretty interesting, they have 40 people on the list. So once a month 5 of those people/families are invited to their house and they bring a vegan dish + recipe. The recipes become part of a cookbook that is shared with everyone there. The next month another group of 5 come, and their recipes are added to those from the previous month, and so forth. Pretty cool.
I am hoping this will help me learn better/more ways of incorporating veggies in my diet - that is where it is lacking.
It is interesting how that works. Years ago I loved soda, but then I didn't drink it for about 1.5 years and then tried it - I was shocked at how bad it tasted. That was in 1990 and I've not had one since then.
Cravings are interesting, and I like Veronica's approach about trying to figure out their source. I've not eaten deep fried food at all in about 3 years, and haven't eaten it on a regular basis since the early 1990's. There are times however when I really want fried chicken - even though I know my digestive system would punish me and the aftertaste would be awful. Obviously this isn't a body-hunger craving but something else - most likely from severe stress...