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Some people may create a diet that focuses on calorie counting ignores macronutrients and only focuses on calories. Others may create a diet that balances macronutrients and fiber and focuses on calorie. Both are using calorie counting as one of the many tools in their weight loss toolbox. Calorie counting is a method, or tool. What someone does with it is their own responsibility, not an inherent "better" or "worse" feature of the tool. |
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I generally focus on the calories alone in my diet, but I cannot eat too many processed things or I'll get ill. My diet is full of fresh, unprocessed things and I always strive to make nutritious meals because I feel better. Some days I get more protein than others, other days I have more carbs, but I figure it all evens out in the end and hey, I've lost almost 60 pounds so I must be doing something right. The thing is, I didn't change my diet all that much. I always had a diet that mainly consisted of non-processed food. I always got sick if I had too much processed food and made sure to keep it to a minimum. So why was I 200 pounds? I ate WAY TOO MUCH. Calorie counting really opened my eyes. Sure, I was eating the right foods and whenever I had medical tests done I was always perfectly fine, just obese. It's really, really important to watch the amount. All diets do this in some way. If you're limiting your carbs you're still eating less. If you're doing weight watchers you're still eating less. It doesn't matter what you choose, they all usually limit your intake somehow. You can focus on the nutrients all you want, but if you eat too much you're not going to reach your goals. |
I eat a lot of processed foods. I live alone and don't like to cook much, so dinner during the work week is almost always something microwaved (Lean Cuisine pasta dishes and personal size pizza, mostly). I have granola or a protein bar for breakfast and cheese and crackers for lunch. I eat almost no vegetables and not a lot of fruit. But I've lost 45 pounds in 4 months, my cholesterol is fine (I eat almost no red meat) and I don't have diabetes. I do have high blood pressure (but it's coming down) and kidney stones so I should eat less sodium than is found in processed foods, but that's a choice I'm making at the moment because my biggest health problem is obesity. I need to find a way to successfully reduce my calories - and trying to force myself to eat healthier foods that I don't like just doesn't work for me. And I'm really just too lazy to calculate my macros.
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For me, nothing is as basic to weight management as calorie counting, although there are other factors that help out.
But I also think it is distracting to argue semantics about it or even if it it is valid. It is an individual thing and we should do as we like. Hope everyone has a great week. :wave: |
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While I HAVE made some changes to my "diet" (or as I prefer, "my permanent way of eating"), I don't have any officially "banned" foods. There are certain things I choose not to eat anymore because my awareness of their caloric/nutritional content just doesn't make them "worth it" to me. And yes, I do eat, overall, "healthier", (more fruits & veggies, whole grains, etc.) but I will never be a tofu and spinach type of person, lol. So whether or not you want to call calorie counting a "diet" or a "lifestyle change" or a "tool" whatever really doesn't matter to me. It works for me and that's the important thing. |
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