When I hit my plateau at around 150, I started calorie counting. Before, I had just significantly improved my food choices and portion sizes and that had been working for me. Then I quit losing, and I realized I needed to actually count calories so I could control the in/out process to keep losing. When I first started, I got obsessive about it. I counted every stick of gum (once my friend split her last piece of gum for us and I recorded 1/2 stick of gum), I measured every particle of every food stuff that entered my mouth, and I spent way more time weighing, measuring, and recording than I did eating. And I suppose, in theory, that's the "proper" way to calorie count, but I quickly recognized that it was not sustainable for me. So I backed off. I measured and weighed the important things, like 1/2 cup oatmeal or 6 oz chicken, etc, but I eyeballed the rest. And I still lost at a good rate. I was getting comfortable in the "who cares if I go over by a little bit...I move around plenty during the day that I don't record as exercise, it won't matter if I don't record an extra 10 cal or so"
But lately, in the last month or so, my "estimations" have turned into blatant calorie creep. Not only am I purposefully underestimating what I eat to record it, I'm sneaking bits of food in. Little things, I've been adding 1/4 cup of milk to my coffee lately, I've discovered that a little drizzle of honey on my oatmeal is yummy, I might snatch a slice of turkey breast lunch meat from the fridge, etc etc. Little 5-20 calorie additions throughout the day that I'm not recording. I'd estimate that I've been eating as much as 150 extra calories in a day...it adds up quick!
And I am not gaining, actually still losing, but I need to nip this habit in the bud. 20-ish calories of extra milk everyday won't sabotage me, but the mindset will. The mindset of "those 20 milk calories don't count, they're so insignificant, so I won't record them." What happens when a Big Mac doesn't count either? I am not going to go back to obsessively measuring/weighing/recording, but I AM going to record much more accurately. I've also added up the things that I eat daily and haven't been recording (milk in coffee, honey on oatmeal, etc) and I'm just going to add that total to my calories when I'm planning everyday. That way I don't have to add "1/4 cup milk, 1/2 tbsp honey" etc into my caloriecount.com food log everyday. Then convenience of adding every little thing won't even be an excuse.
There, I said it. I, Megan, am guilty of calorie creep, lol. And I'm stopping it now!



