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I am playing a mental game with myself right now. I am persuading myself NOT to eat that last piece of chicken. No its not ok to eat it because I have reached my allotted calories for the day, and if I eat that chicken I will gain the weight back one way or the either. I spend the entire day at the zoo today to get some exercise in, and walked for an hour yesterday followed by going to the gym everyday. This cant happen! I dont want to end up back at square one!!
Why not work out harder [presumably earlier] to account for the caloric value of that extra piece of chicken [presumably eaten later] which is a solid nutritional intake item as opposed to a brownie? You would then not be stressed. If you needed to eat more then you have exhausted the necessary calories, if you elect to eat less then you have a caloric deficit. Win-win all around.
You can always work out harder the next day or days to account for that chicken.
Why not work out harder [presumably earlier] to account for the caloric value of that extra piece of chicken [presumably eaten later] which is a solid nutritional intake item as opposed to a brownie? You would then not be stressed. If you needed to eat more then you have exhausted the necessary calories, if you elect to eat less then you have a caloric deficit. Win-win all around.
You can always work out harder the next day or days to account for that chicken.
What Felix C suggests can become a slippery slope because if you justify eating more by exercising more, you end up spending another hour or two at the gym, taking precious time away from other priorities in your life. You've ALREADY worked out today. Don't sabotage yourself by giving into a craving.
(Take it from me: I spent the last few years overeating and overexercising. My body was in nice shape, but I was exhausted and rarely got anything else done because all I ever did was overeat then compensate with exercising. THAT'S NO WAY TO LIVE!)
It's so much easier to withstand the torment of cravings, learn self control, and get other things done instead of spending another agonizing hour in the gym.
A portion, 4 ounces of chicken is 230ish calories. That is nothing. But then I am a guy and burning cals is easy for me. I do myfitnespal.com but also eat whatever I need. Post #1 and #4 must be women because as a guy you build muscle quicker when you overeat your calories. Trim the fat off in a recomp or cutting phase.
I could understand if the intention was to stop a craving for chocolate chip or similar useless food but chicken?
I am playing a mental game with myself right now. I am persuading myself NOT to eat that last piece of chicken. No its not ok to eat it because I have reached my allotted calories for the day, and if I eat that chicken I will gain the weight back one way or the either. I spend the entire day at the zoo today to get some exercise in, and walked for an hour yesterday followed by going to the gym everyday. This cant happen! I dont want to end up back at square one!!
Fight the good fight! You can do this. You WANT this weight loss and that very thing will get you far in your journey.
First, if you're going to eat a little extra, chicken is a great option.
Second, I was reading that dieters who do well, don't have the attitude that if they slip up, all is lost, back to square one. They just get back on track.
Third, one thing I've found helpful is just to accept the idea that you're going to be hungry. You're hungry, it's okay, you don't have to act on it.
A portion, 4 ounces of chicken is 230ish calories. That is nothing. But then I am a guy and burning cals is easy for me. I do myfitnespal.com but also eat whatever I need. Post #1 and #4 must be women because as a guy you build muscle quicker when you overeat your calories. Trim the fat off in a recomp or cutting phase.
I could understand if the intention was to stop a craving for chocolate chip or similar useless food but chicken?
Yes, chicken is a lot healthier than chocolate etc, but it seems OP was talking about simply resisting the urge to eat anything at all because he/she wasn't genuinely hungry, and had exercised so well that day, and didn't want to sabotage the diet, ending up at square one.
We don't know if OP is man or woman, but you're right, Felix C, a man who eats chicken then lifts weights will gain muscle pretty easily. A well-trained woman might also have that experience maybe to a lesser degree and would have to work harder than she is used to, but OP simply expressed that the day was over, the exercise was done, and the eating needs to stop for the day. I fight the same daily battle
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