07-02-2016 11:54 - edited 07-02-2016 12:45
07-02-2016 11:54 - edited 07-02-2016 12:45
I made the mistake of eating a total of 12 Oreos this morning, and by the time lunch rolled around, and we had eaten, I found that with everything since this morning, I was over 1000 calories in the whole on the wrong side of the equation - like 1277 to be a little more precise.
So, after lunch was over, I decided to take my really long walk around town. The last time I was able to complete this walk, I burned off 830 calories. However, I wanted to do more than this because I wan't to work as much as I could to get my meter back on the right side of things.
While I didn't exactly zero out my calorie boo boo, I did take a massive bite out of it. In 1 hour, 36 minutes and 25 seconds, I was able to burn 980 calories. I still have 297 more to burn off, but I'm a lot more sure that I can cover that ground than I was a couple hours ago.
07-02-2016 12:43
07-02-2016 12:43
Oreos are a massive weakness for me, which is why I refuse to keep them in my apartment. Oreos are a "binge food" for me. I tell myself I'll have two or three and then I've suddenly eaten half the package. If I could find a mini-pack that had maybe three or four Oreos in it that I could purchase once a month or so, then I would allow myself the indulgence.
07-02-2016 12:45
07-02-2016 12:45
Sounds like the closest to what you're describing might be the to-go cups that are in the cookie aisle. However, I don't know if that's any better or not.
07-02-2016 14:31
07-02-2016 14:31
While I can certainly understand an attraction to oreos, and a determination to stay on the right side of the equation, I wanted to lend you some perspective.
There are some diets that suggest/condone a "cheat meal". I tend to avoid them because it's a slippery slope. But - consider this next idea in the future:
Tomorrow - "pretend" you ate 3 oreos; add 3 oreos to your caloric intake as if you ate them. Log them in, but make a note that you didn't really eat them.
The next day, repeat the same exercise. Log them, but don't eat them. Just pretend you did.
Do this for 6 days - and on the 7 day, eat no more than 15 oreos - and you're still 3 cookies ahead of the calorie game, on the right side of the equation. This is how I manage my "cheat" meals, so I can know how much over the meter I can go without losing progress on the week.
I would say eat oreos as a last resort, though. Not a lot of nutrition in them, but sometimes, the taste of food is enough to overcome that. As someone who considers chocolate one of the 4 major food groups, I do get it.
07-02-2016 16:55
07-02-2016 16:55
Every time I think about picking up a package of Oreos, I look at the ingredients and immediately decide they aren't on my healthy diet list. Some of the ingredients that I do not want to ingest are Palm Oil, High Fructose Corn Syrup, and Corn Starch. And then, I remember reading that there is very little chocolate in Oreo cookies, just mostly artificial flavoring. So, I leave the Oreos on the grocery store shelf....
07-03-2016 03:38
07-03-2016 03:38
07-03-2016 06:35
07-03-2016 06:35
Interesting. Saw there were posts on Oreos and had to get here. For decades, that was my only binge food and I never would have used the word "binge". A package is one serving size, right? I thought that when you eat Oreos, you, you know, eat them. I was skinny most of that time, so, who cared? A friend in med school one day said I had to stop because they are carcinogenic, cause diabetes, and inflammation, etc etc. He was on my case for years. And no, I didn't stop. Not until I had some health problems and went chemical free (mostly) which really helped. I recently had a struggle with cancer, and that friend came to visit and was kind enough not to say anything. But at one point, when I had been bed-ridden for weeks, I did acknowledge that the Oreos didn't just go to my hips. They went to my immune system, all my organs, the core of my life. I haven't had one in years, won't put that kind of chemical garbage into my body again.
And, yes, I still miss them. And if I ate one, I would still eat the whole package.
07-03-2016 06:54
07-03-2016 06:54
@Bobbinyc wrote:
And, yes, I still miss them. And if I ate one, I would still eat the whole package.
"You can't eat just one!" - they are intentionally created and advertised for that very purpose!
Hope you are recovering well from your battle with cancer! I am a cancer survivor, and have lost many family members to cancer - I know the emotional toll it can take.
07-03-2016 13:25
07-03-2016 13:25
@USAF-Larry Thank you. I have been very lucky - caught it very early, and the treatment was simple. I also have lost too many to cancer. I have been doing a lot of reading about cancer prevention and am working on making a lot of changes in lifestyle. I hope you are doing well, and I am sorry for your losses.
07-03-2016 17:02
07-03-2016 17:02
I guess to each his own when it comes to binge food- but for me Oreos would never do it. Give me homemade pie with vanilla ice cream or freshly made creme brulee, homemade brownies with huge dark chocolate chunks- anything but factory pumped out cookies that will literally make you sick. I remember eating oreos for breakfast with a huge cup of coffee when I was 19 and zooming to work. I tried that again years later and ended up with the worst case of heartburn ever. Yes, sign of age but also a sign that they are not a food one should waste calories on. My opinion of course. And now I am hungry from my list of binge food. sigh.
Elena | Pennsylvania