Saturday, October 6, 2018

On Food Cravings: Navigating the Minefield of Sugar Addiction

After a lifetime of experimenting with weight loss, ultimately I found it wasn't about what I wasn't eating, weight loss was never about simply not eating. I eat. I eat all sorts of things. Things that are high in fat, low in fat, high carb and low carb. I eat all hours of the day. I follow a simple CICO routine.

But the hardest challenge for me has just been sticking to it and not feeling demoralized by it

I've always like to tell people, "how do you quit heroin when you have to shoot a little heroin every day". And what I've realized lately is that not all food is heroin, there's just heroin in some of it. I've been through a few cycles now, during my weight loss journey, where I would treat myself with one thing and end up eating a lot of other similar things, saying yes to more and more things. Never dropping my goals or giving up, but struggling to lose weight because I'm stuck on those food cravings. So I just kinda maintain and try to make them stop so I can keep pushing on. I've managed to beat them a few times, enough that I'm seeing a pattern emerge

I'm not strong enough to test myself to see specifically which foods cause the most cravings (I would lose my damn mind) but there are a few super obvious ones and almost all of them are processed food based.

  • Any and all stereotypical 'sweet treats': candy, baked goods, soda. Sugar. Goddamn. Five minutes of happiness five weeks of nagging food cravings.
  • Salty processed foods: salt and vinegar potato chips--we like to joke that they're addictive......but they kinda are? They often add sugar to salty food to balance it out or add an extra note
  • regular processed food - shelf salad dressings, bag salad kits, freezer aisle dinners, cans of soup. I eat a few of these and I don't just want to eat more of those specific items, I want sweet treats, and salty treats. They add sugar or whatever, my body goes "did someone say sugar, yeah man let's get some more of that" and then I have to fight myself to turn down buying more treats
  • Granola bars and 'healthy' cereal - the sneaky! Switched to these after I got rid of treats in my diet, I considered it a good compromise for a treat. That the nuts are good for me and if I have a craving, a granola bar is a good way to feed it without giving up and eating the bad stuff. Nope! Just as bad. Makes cravings worse. Even the good stuff still has grams and grams of sugar. Anything over 6 grams gives me cravings (and realistically under 6 does too, I just aim for as low as possible and 6 is for some unknown insane reason the lowest I can find) and perpetuates me wanting more of the bad stuff.
  • Takeout, especially fast food. I'm a chef and no stranger to restaurant food, I recognize that even in higher end restaurants the food we eat uses processed foods that we process further. I call it 'half scratch'. Soup bases, canned or jarred sauces like ketchup or chili sauce, these are just ingredients for us. We save hours of time by not making these from scratch (labor is expensive!!) so everywhere except the finest dining restaurants ($$$-$$$$) use these. And many supposedly fine fine dining restaurants will even use them, especially the old school ones. Private clubs etc, if the menu looks like it came out of the 70s, y'all, abandon ship.

Cravings are subversive. I don't recognize I'm having food cravings, I only tell myself 'it's okay to be kind to yourself', 'it's fine to live your life', 'you are capable of eating this small thing and then not falling off the bandwagon' 'CICO' 'you're still within your calorie budget'

And all of those things are true! But the thing about weight loss is that it's mentally exhausting. Food cravings are exhausting. It's like a crying toddler in my brain and the only thing that shuts him up is the one thing most detrimental to my personal health. It's like negotiating with terrorists. It wears me down.

Weight loss doesn't have to be exhausting! It's just navigating a minefield around things that will make it more exhausting. It just starts with saying no one time. I don't have the strength to cut out everything that causes cravings at once (withdrawal is REAL!) so I just say no when I can, my strength builds as time goes on. My food cravings are in my head, throwing a tantrum on my brain's kitchen floor, begging for sugar. Eat a peach. Eat strawberries or an apple instead. Fill my stomach with sauerkraut if I have to. Then it's easier to eat something I made for breakfast instead of the cereal I want. Then it's easier to turn down the candy at the check out aisle later. Then it's easier to drink water instead of soda. Then its easier to turn down the cake at the staff party. Then I can walk past the pastry aisle with my eyes forward. Then I can wake up in the morning without feeling sad that I have to eat the healthy option. Then I eat my lunch at work without thinking twice about what it is or what I really want to eat. Then I eat my homemade dinner and feel good about it and don't want more after. Then I don't even think about how I don't give a fuck about the pastry aisle.

It takes about a month for me to one by one pull it all out of my diet. This month is a really great month! I got my husband on board with helping me eat only food that we make, as much from scratch as possible. The lack of food cravings is astonishing this month compared to last month. This is like the fourth time in a row I've managed to cut cravings down but this time I am cutting out more takeout and restaurant food than I ever have before (this is hard for a chef!) and it's like I can hear the silence. It is deafening. And it's temporary, because avoiding sugar permanently is a pipe dream. But at the very least, I know how to manage the cravings.

If you struggle with food cravings, it's about the baby steps away from the things that propogate the cycle.

It's not about holding yourself to a seemingly impossible standard of discipline, it's just about realizing the full gravity of your choices. Sometimes I do say yes to the treat, but I do it knowing it's an iceberg of cravings. It's not just the treat, it's awakening the toddler and putting him back to bed later.

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NSV - I'm pregnant! UPDATE

It has been some time since I last posted, but my last post got so much attention I figured I owed you all an update.

My son Josiah arrived August 30, perfect in every way, healthy and adorable. He weighed a whopping 10 lb. 5 oz. and was 22 inches long! He is now 5 weeks old and my husband and I are loving every minute if being his Mom and Dad.

A few weight and weightloss things that happed during and after my pregnancy:

  1. I ended up getting diagnosed with gestational diabetes (EXTREMELY common for pregnant people with PCOS). Since the whole food plant based diet is very carb heavy, I struggled to keep my sugars under controll on it and had to reintroduce some animal products to my diet. Sucked, but at least the baby beetus was well controlled after that and I was able to remain off insulin and stayed diet controlled. Because I was watching what I ate, I used MFP and counted calories to ensure I was eating the recommended number of cories for my gestational age. This impacted how much weight I gained, which ended up being mostly water weight. I lost all of my pregnancy gains in my first week postpartum, and by week five I am actually 5 lb. BELOW my prepregnancy weight without specifically trying to lose weight.

  2. I am breastfeeding, so I am hungry all the time and need about 800 extra calories a day to keep my supply from tanking, so CICO and MFP have been indispensable in helping to prevent me from gaining while still allowing me to produce enough milk for my huge, hungry baby.

  3. I told my husband about you people shortly after I posted about my pregnancy. He has since joined the sub and started doing CICO about 6 months ago. He has lost 53 lb. and is only 16 lb. away from his goal weight! He is inspiring me to keep going post-baby!

And a quick thought/soap box:

Many people say that pregnancy will "ruin" your body or your weight loss goals. My body has changed, sure, but it isn't ruined. It did something AMAZING, but it couldn't have done it if I didn't first care for it properly. Yes, my weight loss goals were postponed, but because of the principles I learned on this sub and because I didn't just "eat for two" (he is a baby, he doesn't make me need double the amount of food I do), I am able to start right back where I left off! I am still trying to figure out a good plan to lose weight while breastfeeding without losing milk supply, but I plan to continue eating a WFPB diet while doing CICO like before.

Thank you again for all of you support, r/loseit! I was able to have a healthy pregnancy despite complications because I know how to monitor my food intake and make healthier choices. These principles apply not only when you are trying to lose weight, but at all times! I never thought I would get to be a mom, but you have helped make it possible! ❤

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Weight loss buddy

Hi guys, I've been wanting to lose weight for about a year now but have always struggled in the past. Every time I start, I can keep it up for a few days but then lose motivation/ am tempted and binge. I really do want to lose some weight, and if I had a group of people doing it alongside me I would be more productive and be forced to carry on! The reason I am doing this on reddit is because I love how supportive this sub is and am quite a shy and insecure person (don't like talking about my weight with others). If anyone who would be willing has any ideas I would really appreciate it, thanks guys:)

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First time below 350 lbs in several years.

I've played the diet game for many years now. Failing every single time. In January I weighed 384 lbs. I did my usual New Years Resolution of "I'm finally going to lose weight." Well since then, I've failed numerous times. Numerous binges. I rarely logged what I ate. During the week I was always decent about being mindful of what I ate.The weekends were a different story however. I guess I was doing something partly right because the weight was slowly coming off. I stagnated at around 355 for the past couple months. This week I decided to at least try a Keto diet. I started on Monday counting my calories, never going above 2000 (which is about a thousand below my TDEE) and staying below 20g of carbs. I failed on Wednesday. My boss had a birthday and everyone brought in food. None of it was low carb and I didn't want to be the odd man out and look like an asshole. I was careful what I ate but still hit about 60g of carbs that day. Mentally I felt like shit. I had failed again. I continued doing Keto Thursday and Friday. This morning I stepped on the scale and saw 349.2 lbs. Now, I know that was water weight. I know I probably never actually got into ketogenesis. But it felt good. Like I did something. I don't know if I can sustain Keto long term. It's just SO hard to do. I ironically miss the freedom of pure CICO. I don't know, but I made progress and passed a milestone of sorts. 30 lbs lost in 9 months. Not as fast as I want but it is weight loss nonetheless.

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Is anyone else worried about winter?

I started my weight loss journey on April 15, and am now down 45 pounds. Like most people in Loseit, I’ve done it through eating less and moving more. The moving more piece comes in the form of long walks in the morning and evening with my dog. What feels like suddenly, maybe because I was traveling internationally for the last part of September, it is dark until almost 7 am and dark by 6:45 pm. During my weight loss, I also discovered that I was suffering from depression (only once I realized I wasn’t depressed anymore). I’m worried about what winter’s darkness is going to do to my exercise routine and my depression (which I think was SAD related but don’t really know). Anybody else feeling this concern? What are you doing about the winter blahs?

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NSV - Who knew clothes shopping could actually be fun.

Hey fellow losers, I don't post often but I wanted to chime in with a NSV because the end goal is not the only achivement that should be celebrated.

The journey is equally as important as the destination as the wise interwebs has taught me.

As of 4 days ago, I was approaching a fourth week of a plateau. All thoughts were running through my mind and not to mention unwanted opinions of those around me.

"Your body can't handle any more weight loss. "

"You look fine now, you're turning anorexic."

"This is the weight you should be at."

The last one annoyed me as it's these kinds of comments that allowed me to be complacent and a tad delusional in the first place.

However I am happy to report that after reading some hard truths (from fellow redditors of course), that I have tightened my calories once again and am back on track. Despite this, I was still feeling somewhat disappointed at myself for allowing this plateau to happen in the first place. My mother, who is my number one fan, suggested I go clothes shopping with her. I generally hate shopping. I'm an in and out kind of girl and I had already decided to clothes shop after I reached my GW.

Let's just say that my in and out turned into a 4 hour shopping trip and while my wallet is looking a little sad, my confidence is shooting through the roof ATM.

I highly encourage window shopping as an ego booster. Sometimes it can be hard to see the losses in the mirror or on the scale but remember that your body is no longer the body it was when you started this journey.

Embrace the changes and remember that you don't need to be scared of the numbers on your scale but don't let it be the only number you rely on to tell your story. The numbers on your clothes size and the numbers on the measuring tape are just as important on this journey of yours.

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How do I deal with people who pressure me to eat more?

Im forced to visit some of my relatives' house on a weekly basis and what pisses me off is that each time I eat with them they pressure me to eat more of their unhealthy food, like they constantly question me about the amount of food that im eating and they keep telling me that im "not eating enough", I eat until im satisfied but their comments about my food never cease. I am able to resist the pressure but sometimes I give in and eat more out of pressure but then I get uncomfortably stuffed and feel bad for eating too much, the fact that they want me to eat more might sound considerate but if they really were considerate then they won't be pressuring me like this. I hate it, it sucks that they're my family so there's nothing I can say other than "im full" but even that they don't get, like I keep repeating that I'm full but they don't fucking understand I feel so unheard, its no wonder that they're all overweight with diabetes and all those fun diseases, I don't want them to keep interfering with my weight loss goals. Im sorry if this was kinda rant-y, I just want this to stop I don't know how to deal with them.

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