alligatorob
Respected Member
Today was a busy day, I managed to stay on calories but not with the greatest foods, and I got no exercise.
My wife had a hip replacement operation this morning so I was busy first taking her to and from the hospital and then helping get her set up and fed. The surgery went well and she seems fine, even walking a bit. Physical therapist comes tomorrow morning to get her started. I am amazed how much quicker and easier a hip replacement is, or has been for her, than my knee replacements were.
Tomorrow my life and diet will start to return to more normal. However, I'll have to do more of the housework and things than usual for a while, not a big deal. I failed at folding a fitted sheet tonight, just not a skill I think I will ever learn...

My wife had a hip replacement operation this morning so I was busy first taking her to and from the hospital and then helping get her set up and fed. The surgery went well and she seems fine, even walking a bit. Physical therapist comes tomorrow morning to get her started. I am amazed how much quicker and easier a hip replacement is, or has been for her, than my knee replacements were.
Tomorrow my life and diet will start to return to more normal. However, I'll have to do more of the housework and things than usual for a while, not a big deal. I failed at folding a fitted sheet tonight, just not a skill I think I will ever learn...
I'm not much on video games either, you could try my too old excuse if they do ask.You are funny, Rob! I hate video games. I'm glad our GKs haven't asked me to play them.
I know you are right, calorie precision is probably impossible and so long as you try probably not necessary... Never been called a spherical cow before...Yay for not feeling guilty and another good day! The detail will take a while to sort out either way but even if you're off by 250 kcal/day it takes about a month to gain/lose a kilo (assuming a spherical cow, or no adjustments by your body) so it's not a big risk.
I am not very good at it, never have been. Never thought of it as "emotional hunger", what does that mean?This sounds like not being able to distinguish between physical hunger and emotional hunger and when you need to eat something versus when you want to eat it.
I hope so, but it is more than just eating whatever I want. At times the binge urges get really strong, more than just wanting. Not quite sure how to describe it, more a desperation for food. Kind of like I am starving when I am not. And not always when I am in a calorie deficit.I believe you can learn this if you listen to and identify correctly the right signals. Also, I think the junk including any processed sugar, trans and even more saturated fats can mess with these signals and even the fact that you have additional weight can change how hormones signal satiety. If you eat flour and simple carbs they’re more quickly absorbed and spike blood sugar. Meal timing too. There’s a lot of research around these things. I believe most people, to some degree or another, desire to eat more food all the time. People can “let themselves go” by giving in and eating whatever they want. I had to accept that I couldn’t eat whatever I wanted anymore. I had to change myself at a level that was closer to my actual personality or identity. I had to allow myself to see myself as a different person. I don’t eat whatever I want anymore. I still smell and see foods that make me want to binge on them but I don’t. I say no and accept that I can’t have them. I changed and accepted a new me. Eating enough healthy whole food greatly reduced my cravings and abstaining from eating whatever looks or smells good or eating only a little helped satisfy my cravings just enough and over time it all got easier and it’s not that big of a deal anymore. I think, yeah that looks good but better not go there and I go on. It’s not my food. I changed Rob, and I think you can too if you start to look at things differently, even after a lifetime of eating that way, I believe you can change.
I don't expect the cravings or urges to go away, but hope they become more manageable. More like you described above "over time it all got easier and it’s not that big of a deal anymore". I am glad to hear you got there, I hope to, or somewhere similar anyway.If you truly think you’re some other type of human with this disease (because of your genes e.g.) and you’re always going to want more and more and more and those cravings won’t ever go away, go to OA and pray to a higher power to relieve you of those obsessions. You’ll undergo a “personality change” as it states in Appendix 2 of the “Big Book” by identifying your character “defects” and pray to God to remove them. You work the steps, you make amends where needed and try to live a spiritual life and be helpful to others. You let go of your will and accept God’s will for you. That’s how it works…. I can go on and on about all that but just trying to give you the basics so you can decide if you actually think OA is a good solution for you. There are plenty of other helpful messages if you just show up to meetings too and just listen which is totally fine to do, you don’t have to believe in all that other stuff.
Maybe I used the wrong word, its more like applying will power. I know you must do it, and not weighing is not so hard as abstaining from eating too much.This mentality is very worrisome. It’s ok to acknowledge how you feel and deal with it honestly and appropriately. Forcing is part of the problem in my experience.
