If you're serious about
dropping some pounds (and keeping them off!), it's important to take note of
what you eat. You may even consider tracking what you're eating either by counting calories or macronutrients, or
keeping a food log of some sort. As you do this, you inevitably start to
wonder: how accurate do you need to be to see results?
The reality is, when you want
to lose weight, tracking your food helps to ensure that you're not unknowingly sneaking in extra calories, which could happen,
even if you think you're following the serving size on the nutrition label to a
T.
Cupboard-raiders should
especially pay attention. "Being accurate is important because if you're a
habitual snacker, you could easily be overeating on a daily basis and have no
real awareness around it," JC Deen, a fitness coach who helps clients
lose weight.
Let's say you wanted to eat a
plain bagel (about 250 calories) with some peanut butter (standard serving is 190 calories). If you eyeball the serving size, it's easy to overdo it without
measuring it on a kitchen scale. Since peanut butter is so calorically dense, going
over a little bit every time means extra calories that add up over the long run
and could stall your progress.
Related: What Are Macros? And Should You Count Them For Weight Loss
Related: What Are Macros? And Should You Count Them For Weight Loss
In addition, Deen says that
high levels of accuracy only really matter when you want to make consistent
progress toward your goal weight, or get to it "a little faster" than
normal (in the most healthy and sane way possible, of course). Accuracy is also
necessary for women who have overall less weight to lose, such as competitive bodybuilders. If you're not on
a strict timeline or are not a bodybuilding type, you don't need to be
measuring every morsel of food you put in your mouth.
At the same time, striving for
accuracy can be a double-edged sword, no matter what your method. On the one
hand, when you plainly see what you're eating in your diary, there's no mystery
to why you haven't made as much weight-loss progress as you'd hoped for. On the
other, it's possible to develop an unhealthy obsession with tracking
every single thing, where anxiety can claw its way to the front of your mind.
In other words, there needs to
be a balance.
"If you're known to become
obsessive with tracking your food, a good method is to track for a short period
(two to three weeks), take note of your eating patterns and behaviours, then
step away from tracking and stick to good eating habits," Deen says.
Related: 8 Weight Loss Secrets Recommended By Nutritionists
Related: 8 Weight Loss Secrets Recommended By Nutritionists
If you normally make a smoothie
with banana, a handful of kale, and Greek yoghurt in the morning, then keep it
up! Just don't track it anymore, he adds.
While counting calories (or
macronutrients) can be helpful for weight-loss efforts, you should take a break
from tracking if you start to get too obsessive. Because where's the fun in
life and eating if all you think about is getting onto MyFitnessPal to log the
three spears of broccoli you just ate?
That's a bit much.
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