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Come on, you know this is the question you are asking, right? How much can I get away with?
Our brains are programmed to light up with pleasure when we eat sweet, salty-savory or fatty foods and our food environment is absolutely laden with the very foods our brain and taste buds crave, so to NOT eat them constantly takes concentrated effort.
Still, even for those of us who put a lot of effort into menu planning, prepping and cooking veggie laden meals, tempting treats are everywhere. Sometimes there's nothing that satisfies quite like a homemade chocolate chip cookie. But the question is, how often can I eat those treats I crave and not gain weight? Daily? Weekly? Monthly?
The answer is...it depends on the person. There are so many factors that impact an individual's ability to lose, gain, or maintain weight. For example:
When it comes to weight loss and weight maintenance, consistency is key because even cheating three days a week is enough to negatively impact your gut microbiome as much as if you were eating a diet consisting entirely of junk food (Journal of Molecular Nutrition and Food Research). That being said, food is meant to be enjoyed and that includes some well-timed, pre-planned indulgences. The trick is to cap your indulgence to a single treat or meal. Enjoy it guilt-free and then go right back to your veggie and fruit loving ways.
Here are some additional thoughts from the experts...
First of all, you might want to reconsider calling it a cheat day or cheat meal. "The notion of a 'cheat day' actually does more harm than good. If you dedicate a frame of time (a day, a week) as the time to 'cheat,' then you're more likely to eat just to eat because you feel like this is your one time to do so," says Caspero. (Just take it from Zoe Saldana, who doesn't believe in 'cheat days' or diets, for that matter.)
Instead, think of it as consciously indulging, offers Tori Holthaus, R.D.N., founder of Yes! Nutrition in Ohio. Find what matters to you — if brunch is your go-to meal, then enjoy that. If you love pizza, have a slice and really relish it. "There's so much power in enjoying your meal without guilt. Ironically, the more guilt we feel about eating decadent food, the more likely we are to overeat," adds Caspero. Read the entire article HERE
Aim to stick to your healthy diet 90 percent of the time. If you eat three meals and a snack each day (plus a workout shake four days a week when you exercise, which may not be true for everyone), that means you eat 32 times per week. Twenty-nine of those 32 meals and snacks should stick to your healthy diet plan, leaving three to do whatever you want. It sounds simple, but once you start tracking your adherence to your diet plan, you'll be surprised how easy it is to skip a meal or grab a quick, refined sugar-rich snack when you're short on time and, next thing you know, you're calling it a cheat day. Read more of the article
HERE
Many of us can fall into the trap of treating food like a tool to punish or comfort ourselves. While eating a big slice of cake may help you immediately feel better after a bad day, most times, you’ll eventually feel a bit worse from all that sugar and regret that choice.
Cheat meals can, over time, also create a feeling like a diet or meal plan is all or nothing, that if you don’t strictly follow that plan, you’re a failure. “It’s about maintaining a healthy balance overall,” says Patton. “It’s possible to have a healthy diet or meal plan that doesn’t cut anything out, it just shifts the focus to portion control.” Read the entire article
HERE
Just because a particular method worked for your best friend doesn't mean it will work for you. There is no "one-size-fits-all" method when it comes to losing or maintaining weight. Some people can have just a bite of a dessert and walk away feeling satisfied while others have more of an addition personality. To borrow an AA saying and extrapolate it to food, "One bite too many, 500 too few."
Proponents of the cheat meal strategy for weight loss further theorize that intermittent periods of higher-calorie foods will trick your hormone cycle into producing more leptin temporarily and prevent the desire for rebound overeating. Unfortunately, there is little rigorous scientific research to support this theory. It’s still unclear how fluctuations in leptin levels associated with weight changes affect someone’s ability to control their eating behaviors and maintain weight loss. As a result, more research is needed. At this stage, it’s more likely that weight loss occurs for some people with the cheat method because of a reduction in overall calorie intake that is achieved by sticking to a well-planned diet most of the time and limiting high-calorie junk foods. Read the entire article HERE
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