nicksaiz65
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2017
- Messages
- 3,737
- Reaction score
- 1,476
- Age
- 27
I’ve been having a really hard time sticking to my diet lately. I could use you guys help!
I‘ve lost a good amount of weight up to this point. My diet is extremely enjoyable. I do Intermittent Fasting, count my calories, and IIFYM. I eat 1-2 big satisfying meals a day, and can even have dessert if I please. My diet is basically a slightly modified version of Kinobody’s plan with a lot of OMAD inspiration.
But recently, I can’t get even a pound lower. I’ve tracked everything I’ve put in my mouth for the last month, including the cheats. It comes down to one thing: the social eating. I plan to eat 2200 calories one day but then my friend comes over wanting to day drink and get fvcked up: over my calories. My friend takes me out to a Mexican dinner as thanks for helping them move: over my calories because I didn’t plan for that. I’m visiting with my family and they order takeout: over my calories. I get bought shots/beer at my album release party and it would be rude to turn that person down: over my calories. I get a “you up” text from one of the girls I’m banging, and we have some shots and drink some wine while hanging out to make the seduction smoother. Over my calories.
This is a huge problem towards me achieving my physique goals. Something comes up 3/4 days of the week, putting me in a surplus. That cancels out the other days that I am in a deficit, and I end up right at maintenance. The food log I kept for the last month agrees with that when I average out the numbers.
So what is the sustainable, long term solution here? I suppose I could just be like “NO NO NO” all the time and turn people down. Whenever I’ve tried that though, it burns up a sh*t ton of willpower and stresses me tf out. I can totally understand if you’re prepping for a bodybuilding show, that you need to use that much willpower because you need to be extremely strict. So life coming up is a non issue in that scenario. Does it have to be this way for a regular diet though? Is using my willpower and constantly having to be like “NO” just part of having a nice physique?
At one point though, I implemented a plan that seemed to work pretty damn well to get around this issue. I’m already down with Intermittent Fasting hardcore. Fasting has been so key in changing my physique, it’s literally the only thing that worked for me. So I would use a really “extreme” fasting window compared to what most people eat like. Something like 20:4, or 22:2. (I don’t care about meal timing or spreading out protein at all, I think it’s mostly irrelevant. IMO all that matters are the calories and macros once your head hits the pillow.)
This worked really well for 2 reasons. One, it created a “buffer” or “insurance” against life. Fasting for that long creates a massive calorie buffer to work with. Whenever anything would come up life wise, it would simply be absorbed by said buffer. I would basically always have some calories “in the tank” so that if anything came up, I could enjoy it without being thrown off the diet. I could then just shift around my one big meal, and make sure I was still hitting my macros NO MATTER WHAT happened with life. If I didn’t use the calories in the tank, I would just eat them back before bed! I felt mentally clear and reassured, because no matter what happened, I was able to stick to the diet. Keeping my calories under control was effortless. Plus, once you get used to it, you feel great and “sharp” during the fast. Any sluggishness goes away. My logic was something like “You wouldn’t drive a car without insurance. So you shouldn’t try to diet in the real world without insurance!”
With these strategies, I could eat 1000-1500 calorie meals in restaurants with friends and still be on the plan. I could even go out and drink in somewhat moderation while still being on the diet. And it took no willpower! I didn’t have to be stressed, paranoid, or anal retentive about my diet all the time because I always had my “insurance.” Even if something came up I was still able to stick to my diet. I didn’t feel like I needed to be disciplined 24/7, or constantly exercise my willpower to stay on the plan. I could just relax and stick to it. Constantly having to use willpower like that is very draining.
I feel that this method just worked great for the lifestyle. Additionally, if I screwed up and went over one day, I could just eat a bit less the next day. If I completely blew it and went over by thousands of calories, a 24 hour fast would put me right back on track. It was basically impossible to screw up or fail on this diet. When I was doing this, I’d say I had a 90-95% adherence rate to the diet.
Additionally, the diet was just plain enjoyable(unlike the suffering on most diets.) Once you got used to the fast, eating those big satisfying meals was absolutely incredible. Eating 5-6 300 calorie meals a day is like torture. Instead, you fast during the day, and you feast like a king at night. The diet was way more flexible, and therefore way easier to stick to. And I’ve found just in general with dieting, the more that I push that first meal back into the day, the easier and easier it is to hit my macros. If you can fast for long enough, hitting those macros every single day becomes an absolute joke. Doing the fast gives you so much dietary freedom. And besides, late night eating is the sh*t! Love dieting like that, it is so easy to stick to. I know some YouTubers eat like this as well.
I wanted to ask, am I crazy for trying to implement a routine like this? I guess some people could see it as extreme. I really thought that this method worked great with fixing dietary adherence, even if my methods go against the bodybuilding grain. I want to go back to this old plan I devised, but idk if it is crazy or not. Or is just saying “NO” to those social temptations/using willpower truly the only way?
I‘ve lost a good amount of weight up to this point. My diet is extremely enjoyable. I do Intermittent Fasting, count my calories, and IIFYM. I eat 1-2 big satisfying meals a day, and can even have dessert if I please. My diet is basically a slightly modified version of Kinobody’s plan with a lot of OMAD inspiration.
But recently, I can’t get even a pound lower. I’ve tracked everything I’ve put in my mouth for the last month, including the cheats. It comes down to one thing: the social eating. I plan to eat 2200 calories one day but then my friend comes over wanting to day drink and get fvcked up: over my calories. My friend takes me out to a Mexican dinner as thanks for helping them move: over my calories because I didn’t plan for that. I’m visiting with my family and they order takeout: over my calories. I get bought shots/beer at my album release party and it would be rude to turn that person down: over my calories. I get a “you up” text from one of the girls I’m banging, and we have some shots and drink some wine while hanging out to make the seduction smoother. Over my calories.
This is a huge problem towards me achieving my physique goals. Something comes up 3/4 days of the week, putting me in a surplus. That cancels out the other days that I am in a deficit, and I end up right at maintenance. The food log I kept for the last month agrees with that when I average out the numbers.
So what is the sustainable, long term solution here? I suppose I could just be like “NO NO NO” all the time and turn people down. Whenever I’ve tried that though, it burns up a sh*t ton of willpower and stresses me tf out. I can totally understand if you’re prepping for a bodybuilding show, that you need to use that much willpower because you need to be extremely strict. So life coming up is a non issue in that scenario. Does it have to be this way for a regular diet though? Is using my willpower and constantly having to be like “NO” just part of having a nice physique?
At one point though, I implemented a plan that seemed to work pretty damn well to get around this issue. I’m already down with Intermittent Fasting hardcore. Fasting has been so key in changing my physique, it’s literally the only thing that worked for me. So I would use a really “extreme” fasting window compared to what most people eat like. Something like 20:4, or 22:2. (I don’t care about meal timing or spreading out protein at all, I think it’s mostly irrelevant. IMO all that matters are the calories and macros once your head hits the pillow.)
This worked really well for 2 reasons. One, it created a “buffer” or “insurance” against life. Fasting for that long creates a massive calorie buffer to work with. Whenever anything would come up life wise, it would simply be absorbed by said buffer. I would basically always have some calories “in the tank” so that if anything came up, I could enjoy it without being thrown off the diet. I could then just shift around my one big meal, and make sure I was still hitting my macros NO MATTER WHAT happened with life. If I didn’t use the calories in the tank, I would just eat them back before bed! I felt mentally clear and reassured, because no matter what happened, I was able to stick to the diet. Keeping my calories under control was effortless. Plus, once you get used to it, you feel great and “sharp” during the fast. Any sluggishness goes away. My logic was something like “You wouldn’t drive a car without insurance. So you shouldn’t try to diet in the real world without insurance!”
With these strategies, I could eat 1000-1500 calorie meals in restaurants with friends and still be on the plan. I could even go out and drink in somewhat moderation while still being on the diet. And it took no willpower! I didn’t have to be stressed, paranoid, or anal retentive about my diet all the time because I always had my “insurance.” Even if something came up I was still able to stick to my diet. I didn’t feel like I needed to be disciplined 24/7, or constantly exercise my willpower to stay on the plan. I could just relax and stick to it. Constantly having to use willpower like that is very draining.
I feel that this method just worked great for the lifestyle. Additionally, if I screwed up and went over one day, I could just eat a bit less the next day. If I completely blew it and went over by thousands of calories, a 24 hour fast would put me right back on track. It was basically impossible to screw up or fail on this diet. When I was doing this, I’d say I had a 90-95% adherence rate to the diet.
Additionally, the diet was just plain enjoyable(unlike the suffering on most diets.) Once you got used to the fast, eating those big satisfying meals was absolutely incredible. Eating 5-6 300 calorie meals a day is like torture. Instead, you fast during the day, and you feast like a king at night. The diet was way more flexible, and therefore way easier to stick to. And I’ve found just in general with dieting, the more that I push that first meal back into the day, the easier and easier it is to hit my macros. If you can fast for long enough, hitting those macros every single day becomes an absolute joke. Doing the fast gives you so much dietary freedom. And besides, late night eating is the sh*t! Love dieting like that, it is so easy to stick to. I know some YouTubers eat like this as well.
I wanted to ask, am I crazy for trying to implement a routine like this? I guess some people could see it as extreme. I really thought that this method worked great with fixing dietary adherence, even if my methods go against the bodybuilding grain. I want to go back to this old plan I devised, but idk if it is crazy or not. Or is just saying “NO” to those social temptations/using willpower truly the only way?
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