Maybe You Should Just Stay Fat. (Yes, I’m Serious.)
Hey!
Josh here.
Lemme show you a quick pic.
This is me from a few years ago.
For reference, I’m 5’7″ and was pushing close to 180 in this photo. At the time I felt like a tub of lard but I recently showed my brother this photo and his response was, “You’re in much better shape now, but you weren’t fat back then.”
I musta looked at him like he was on a train to LocoLand.
To me, at that time, I may as well of weighed a thousand pounds. I felt terrible. My self-confidence was in the dumps. I avoided cameras like the plague. My clothes bulged against my skin making me look like I was always rocking spandex. I was constantly tired, always fatigued, never able to stick to any weight-loss or fitness program. I was depressed. Frustrated. A bit angry.
All-in-all, my life sucked.
I’m not gonna go so far as to say I hated myself, but I certainly hated how I looked and felt.
Long story short: I was not able to live within my own body and still be happy with my life.
Let me say that again: I could not be overweight and be happy. I just couldn’t. It’s not in my DNA. I couldn’t accept looking and feeling the way I was looking and feeling.
Something had to change.
Because no matter what my brother or anyone else said, I was ashamed of my body and it was making me miserable.
But here was the problem:
Even though I was not willing to accept my body, I was also not willing to stop drinking coca-colas. I was not willing to stop snacking on Publix Peanut M&M cookies. I was not willing to give up fast food, or Publix Carrot Cake, or Tostitos chips.
As much as I wanted to get in better shape, I was not willing to make the sacrifices that were required to get in better shape. Instead, I wanted some method or system that would allow me to continue to live the way I was living while also transforming my body into a physique I was able to accept.
I needed to find that one special diet. That one secret workout routine. That miracle weight loss pill.
But here’s what I eventually figured out:
There is no special diet, no secret workout routines, no miracle weight loss pills.
There are only choices.
On November 12th, 2022, I made a choice as to how I was going to live and what was going to make me the happiest.
The way I saw it, these were my three options.
Do nothing. I could just keep eating how I was eating, doing what I was doing, living how I was living. AKA: I could just keep on being miserable and hating how I looked and felt.
With this option, I would continue to binge on fast food, and Publix cookies, and Publix carrot cake, and Tostito’s chips; and I would be blissfully happy while I was stuffing my face; but when I was not busy shoving food down my throat, I would be ashamed and embarrassed by my body and frustrated by my inability to exercise any level of self-discipline to accomplish my goals. Every now and again I’d surely summon up a burst of motivation and start a diet and workout routine but after a few weeks or months I would fizzle out again and find myself right back wearing my fat boy pants.
With this option, I would keep blaming low self-discipline or weak willpower for my failures. I’d keep blaming life, or my current circumstances. I’d keep promising myself that I would try another diet, another workout routine at some point in the future. I’d go my entire life being ashamed of my own body, frustrated with who I am, not realizing or being aware of all the opportunities and happiness I missed by not becoming the version of myself that I wanted to become.
This is how I was currently living, and I was sick and tired of living this way. For me, this wasn’t much of an option. This was hell. It was miserable. I needed change. I wanted (and still want) to be happy and proud of myself with this one life I have been gifted.
This option is open to you as well. It’s available to everyone. And let’s be honest, it is by far the easiest option to choose. It’s easy to do nothing. It’s easy to ignore change. It’s easy to keep living how you are living and then to pretend you had no other choices. It’s easy to make excuses, to live your life and throw up your hands and say, “This is my fate. It’s who I am! It’s how I was born! It’s the cards I was dealt! There’s nothing I can do!”
It’s easy to pretend you are a victim to fate, but in all honesty, fate is only the destiny of those who fail to make a decision.
You have a choice.
You can make a decision.
You can change.
And if you are unhappy with your life and your body, then I’m begging you to make a change. Because there are already too many unhappy and miserable people in this world.
Please…be different.
Make an actionable choice.
Because if you make no choice at all, then by making no choice, you are still making a choice. You will be choosing this option. To do nothing. And in my opinion, anything is better than allowing yourself to be unhappy while hiding behind nothing but hope and excuses.
Enough preaching. Let’s get to option two.
Be Fat & Happy! First off, let’s start with this: There is nothing wrong with being overweight. There is nothing wrong with being a bit thick and having a little extra padding. If you are happy with your body and happy with your lifestyle, then I see no reason to sacrifice your happiness only to conform to other people’s perceptions of how you should live or how you should look. The goal is to be happy.
If you are happy being a few pounds heavier than your fighting weight, then good on you!
Live your best life.
I, however, was not happy with my weight, or my body, or my lifestyle. My body and my weight were a source of my unhappiness. I hated how I looked and felt. I couldn’t accept being overweight. I couldn’t be happy living inside that body.
But’s that’s me. And you are you. If you are comfortable carrying around a few extra pounds, and it does not detract from your happiness, then by all means… eat a full carton of Publix M&M cookies for me!
For some people, making the required sacrifices that come with losing weight and keeping the weight off will be the very thing that takes away from their happiness. Some people will be miserable not eating certain foods or drinks. They will not be able to live that way. They would rather eat and drink all the foods, snacks, and drinks they want, whenever they want, and accept a body that is a bit flabby and pudgy rather than having to restrict certain foods, snacks, and drinks from their diet.
I completely understand this.
Because losing and keeping off fat requires sacrifice.
No matter whether you are trying to lose five pounds or five hundred pounds, it requires commitment and effort.
It takes work. In my opinion, that is what makes it such an impressive feat.
But if you choose to not partake in the game of health and fitness, there is absolutely nothing wrong with this.
The problem is not with the person who is a few pounds overweight, instead the problem is when being a few pounds overweight makes a person unhappy.
Life is way too short to be miserable for the entire duration of it.
So either learn to be happy with your too tight pants and with your fat rolls, or start getting back in shape and learn to be happy with a healthier lifestyle and more controlled eating habits.
Either decision is fine, but for God’s Sake, please choose something.
And please choose something that you can accept and that will make you happy!
Be Fit & Happy!
Let me show you another quick pic.
This is me now.
Am I super jacked?
Nope, I’m not.
Am I gonna win any Olympic Bodybuilding Competitions?
Nope, I’m not.
But here’s the thing: I love how I look now! I love how much more energy I have! I love how my clothes fit! I love where my self-confidence is at!
So yea, even though I could be more muscular, and I could have less fat, and I could have a more defined six pack, and I could be better in a million different ways – the question is…why would I do that?
My goal isn’t (and has never been) to be an Olympic Bodybuilder. My goal has never been to be the most muscular man in the world. My goal has never been to have crazy-ripped-eight-pack abs.
My goal has always been to look good and feel good about myself.
My goal is (and has always been) to be happy.
If I were to pursue a more muscular physique, or if I wanted to get crazy-ripped-eight-pack abs, or to develop bigger shoulders, or to have less body fat, or to be an Olympic Bodybuilder, or whatever…that goal would then require me to eat differently than I currently eat, and to spend more time in the gym than I want to spend in the gym, and doing those things would only take away from my current level of happiness.
Again…why would I do that?
At this point in my life, I’m not willing to exert any additional effort in an attempt to look or feel any better than I look or feel right now.
And that is perfectly okay!
The message I am trying to get across is this: the entire point of weight loss and fitness is to reach a point where we are content and happy with not only our bodies, but also with the efforts and sacrifices required to get and maintain that body.
The goal is to be happy. With both your body and with your lifestyle.
There’s no point trying to develop the body of a Greek God if you’re absolutely miserable because of all the restrictions required to develop the body of a Greek God.
That’s foolish.
On the flip side, there’s no point in gorging on all your favorite unhealthy foods if being overweight is what makes you miserable.
The goal is to find an equilibrium where you can happily accept both your body and also the sacrifices required to get and maintain that body.
And you can do that! You can get in great shape and still eat the foods you love. For me personally, I still eat lasagna two or three times per week (I Love Lasagna!). For lunch today I had spaghetti with meatballs and for dinner tonight I’m having a half pound cheeseburger with french fries. I only spend roughly ten to thirty minutes per day exercising.
It’s easier than you may think.
None of this fitness and weight loss stuff is rocket science. It doesn’t have to be super complicated. It doesn’t have to be crazy difficult. You don’t have to eat chickpeas and salads for the rest of your life. You don’t have to spend hours in the gym.
However, I don’t want to make it sound like everything about fitness and weight loss is all rainbows and sprinkles.
There are challenges.
To lose weight and get in better shape (no matter whether it be five pounds or five hundred pounds) it does require a level of sacrifice and commitment.
Anyhow, the entire point of this article is to let you know that you have choices, and the choice you make should always be the choice which leads to your long-term happiness.
If being fat makes you happier than having to make certain sacrifices, then be fat and happy!
If, like me, you cannot accept living inside a body you despise, then maybe it’s time to make some changes.
If you’d like to learn more about how you can lose weight and get in great shape while still eating the foods you love, then the bus to Camp Weirdo starts by clicking HERE!
And nope, I’m not trying to sell you a course, a book, a meal plan, a coaching program, nothing. I believe everyone should have free access to information that will lead them to a healthier and happier life.
But it’s up to you to implement and take action.
No one can do that for you.
It’s your choice.
Hey! You’re Busy.
Don’t waste time searching for all the latest diet tips, health hacks, and limitless pills. I’ll send all my best finds straight to your inbox!
Don’t waste time searching for all the latest diet tips, health hacks, and limitless pills. I’ll send all my best finds straight to your inbox!
Maybe You Should Just Stay Fat. (Yes, I’m Serious.)
Hey!
Josh here.
Lemme show you a quick pic.
This is me from a few years ago.
For reference, I’m 5’7″ and was pushing close to 180 in this photo. At the time I felt like a tub of lard but I recently showed my brother this photo and his response was, “You’re in much better shape now, but you weren’t fat back then.”
I musta looked at him like he was on a train to LocoLand.
To me, at that time, I may as well of weighed a thousand pounds. I felt terrible. My self-confidence was in the dumps. I avoided cameras like the plague. My clothes bulged against my skin making me look like I was always rocking spandex. I was constantly tired, always fatigued, never able to stick to any weight-loss or fitness program. I was depressed. Frustrated. A bit angry.
All-in-all, my life sucked.
I’m not gonna go so far as to say I hated myself, but I certainly hated how I looked and felt.
Long story short: I was not able to live within my own body and still be happy with my life.
Let me say that again: I could not be overweight and be happy. I just couldn’t. It’s not in my DNA. I couldn’t accept looking and feeling the way I was looking and feeling.
Something had to change.
Because no matter what my brother or anyone else said, I was ashamed of my body and it was making me miserable.
But here was the problem:
Even though I was not willing to accept my body, I was also not willing to stop drinking coca-colas. I was not willing to stop snacking on Publix Peanut M&M cookies. I was not willing to give up fast food, or Publix Carrot Cake, or Tostitos chips.
As much as I wanted to get in better shape, I was not willing to make the sacrifices that were required to get in better shape. Instead, I wanted some method or system that would allow me to continue to live the way I was living while also transforming my body into a physique I was able to accept.
I needed to find that one special diet. That one secret workout routine. That miracle weight loss pill.
But here’s what I eventually figured out:
There is no special diet, no secret workout routines, no miracle weight loss pills.
There are only choices.
On November 12th, 2022, I made a choice as to how I was going to live and what was going to make me the happiest.
The way I saw it, these were my three options.
Do nothing. I could just keep eating how I was eating, doing what I was doing, living how I was living. AKA: I could just keep on being miserable and hating how I looked and felt.
With this option, I would continue to binge on fast food, and Publix cookies, and Publix carrot cake, and Tostito’s chips; and I would be blissfully happy while I was stuffing my face; but when I was not busy shoving food down my throat, I would be ashamed and embarrassed by my body and frustrated by my inability to exercise any level of self-discipline to accomplish my goals. Every now and again I’d surely summon up a burst of motivation and start a diet and workout routine but after a few weeks or months I would fizzle out again and find myself right back wearing my fat boy pants.
With this option, I would keep blaming low self-discipline or weak willpower for my failures. I’d keep blaming life, or my current circumstances. I’d keep promising myself that I would try another diet, another workout routine at some point in the future. I’d go my entire life being ashamed of my own body, frustrated with who I am, not realizing or being aware of all the opportunities and happiness I missed by not becoming the version of myself that I wanted to become.
This is how I was currently living, and I was sick and tired of living this way. For me, this wasn’t much of an option. This was hell. It was miserable. I needed change. I wanted (and still want) to be happy and proud of myself with this one life I have been gifted.
This option is open to you as well. It’s available to everyone. And let’s be honest, it is by far the easiest option to choose. It’s easy to do nothing. It’s easy to ignore change. It’s easy to keep living how you are living and then to pretend you had no other choices. It’s easy to make excuses, to live your life and throw up your hands and say, “This is my fate. It’s who I am! It’s how I was born! It’s the cards I was dealt! There’s nothing I can do!”
It’s easy to pretend you are a victim to fate, but in all honesty, fate is only the destiny of those who fail to make a decision.
You have a choice.
You can make a decision.
You can change.
And if you are unhappy with your life and your body, then I’m begging you to make a change. Because there are already too many unhappy and miserable people in this world.
Please…be different.
Make an actionable choice.
Because if you make no choice at all, then by making no choice, you are still making a choice. You will be choosing this option. To do nothing. And in my opinion, anything is better than allowing yourself to be unhappy while hiding behind nothing but hope and excuses.
Enough preaching. Let’s get to option two.
Be Fat & Happy! First off, let’s start with this: There is nothing wrong with being overweight. There is nothing wrong with being a bit thick and having a little extra padding. If you are happy with your body and happy with your lifestyle, then I see no reason to sacrifice your happiness only to conform to other people’s perceptions of how you should live or how you should look. The goal is to be happy.
If you are happy being a few pounds heavier than your fighting weight, then good on you!
Live your best life.
I, however, was not happy with my weight, or my body, or my lifestyle. My body and my weight were a source of my unhappiness. I hated how I looked and felt. I couldn’t accept being overweight. I couldn’t be happy living inside that body.
But’s that’s me. And you are you. If you are comfortable carrying around a few extra pounds, and it does not detract from your happiness, then by all means… eat a full carton of Publix M&M cookies for me!
For some people, making the required sacrifices that come with losing weight and keeping the weight off will be the very thing that takes away from their happiness. Some people will be miserable not eating certain foods or drinks. They will not be able to live that way. They would rather eat and drink all the foods, snacks, and drinks they want, whenever they want, and accept a body that is a bit flabby and pudgy rather than having to restrict certain foods, snacks, and drinks from their diet.
I completely understand this.
Because losing and keeping off fat requires sacrifice.
No matter whether you are trying to lose five pounds or five hundred pounds, it requires commitment and effort.
It takes work. In my opinion, that is what makes it such an impressive feat.
But if you choose to not partake in the game of health and fitness, there is absolutely nothing wrong with this.
The problem is not with the person who is a few pounds overweight, instead the problem is when being a few pounds overweight makes a person unhappy.
Life is way too short to be miserable for the entire duration of it.
So either learn to be happy with your too tight pants and with your fat rolls, or start getting back in shape and learn to be happy with a healthier lifestyle and more controlled eating habits.
Either decision is fine, but for God’s Sake, please choose something.
And please choose something that you can accept and that will make you happy!
Be Fit & Happy!
Let me show you another quick pic.
This is me now.
Am I super jacked?
Nope, I’m not.
Am I gonna win any Olympic Bodybuilding Competitions?
Nope, I’m not.
But here’s the thing: I love how I look now! I love how much more energy I have! I love how my clothes fit! I love where my self-confidence is at!
So yea, even though I could be more muscular, and I could have less fat, and I could have a more defined six pack, and I could be better in a million different ways – the question is…why would I do that?
My goal isn’t (and has never been) to be an Olympic Bodybuilder. My goal has never been to be the most muscular man in the world. My goal has never been to have crazy-ripped-eight-pack abs.
My goal has always been to look good and feel good about myself.
My goal is (and has always been) to be happy.
If I were to pursue a more muscular physique, or if I wanted to get crazy-ripped-eight-pack abs, or to develop bigger shoulders, or to have less body fat, or to be an Olympic Bodybuilder, or whatever…that goal would then require me to eat differently than I currently eat, and to spend more time in the gym than I want to spend in the gym, and doing those things would only take away from my current level of happiness.
Again…why would I do that?
At this point in my life, I’m not willing to exert any additional effort in an attempt to look or feel any better than I look or feel right now.
And that is perfectly okay!
The message I am trying to get across is this: the entire point of weight loss and fitness is to reach a point where we are content and happy with not only our bodies, but also with the efforts and sacrifices required to get and maintain that body.
The goal is to be happy. With both your body and with your lifestyle.
There’s no point trying to develop the body of a Greek God if you’re absolutely miserable because of all the restrictions required to develop the body of a Greek God.
That’s foolish.
On the flip side, there’s no point in gorging on all your favorite unhealthy foods if being overweight is what makes you miserable.
The goal is to find an equilibrium where you can happily accept both your body and also the sacrifices required to get and maintain that body.
And you can do that! You can get in great shape and still eat the foods you love. For me personally, I still eat lasagna two or three times per week (I Love Lasagna!). For lunch today I had spaghetti with meatballs and for dinner tonight I’m having a half pound cheeseburger with french fries. I only spend roughly ten to thirty minutes per day exercising.
It’s easier than you may think.
None of this fitness and weight loss stuff is rocket science. It doesn’t have to be super complicated. It doesn’t have to be crazy difficult. You don’t have to eat chickpeas and salads for the rest of your life. You don’t have to spend hours in the gym.
However, I don’t want to make it sound like everything about fitness and weight loss is all rainbows and sprinkles.
There are challenges.
To lose weight and get in better shape (no matter whether it be five pounds or five hundred pounds) it does require a level of sacrifice and commitment.
Anyhow, the entire point of this article is to let you know that you have choices, and the choice you make should always be the choice which leads to your long-term happiness.
If being fat makes you happier than having to make certain sacrifices, then be fat and happy!
If, like me, you cannot accept living inside a body you despise, then maybe it’s time to make some changes.
If you’d like to learn more about how you can lose weight and get in great shape while still eating the foods you love, then the bus to Camp Weirdo starts by clicking HERE!
And nope, I’m not trying to sell you a course, a book, a meal plan, a coaching program, nothing. I believe everyone should have free access to information that will lead them to a healthier and happier life.
But it’s up to you to implement and take action.
No one can do that for you.
It’s your choice.
Hey! You’re Busy.
Don’t waste time searching for all the latest diet tips, health hacks, and limitless pills. I’ll send all my best finds straight to your inbox!
Don’t waste time searching for all the latest diet tips, health hacks, and limitless pills. I’ll send all my best finds straight to your inbox!
There’s Only Two Things You Need To Know About Eating For Weight Loss. (And They’re Not Nearly As Complicated As You Think.)
Number One: Calories Matter Most!
It’s not carbs. It’s not fats. It’s not sugar. It’s not how many burpees you can do. It’s not how far and fast you can run.
It’s Calories.
I’m gonna say it again. But in bold this time:
It’s Calories!
You will lose weight if you eat less calories than your body burns. Period. End of story. That’s it.
Again, it doesn’t matter if you eat foods that are loaded with sugar and carbs and fats and whatever other things the media says you cannot eat, as long as the foods that are loaded with sugar and carbs and fats and whatever other things the media says you cannot eat contain less calories than your body burns.
If you are serious about losing weight, then figure out how many calories your body typically burns in a day, and then eat less calories than that.
It’s easy in theory, but hard to consistently apply.
Here are a few tips and tricks that made the process easier for me.
I think they will help you as well. Don’t worry, they’re all free.
Number Two: Your Muscles Need Protein!
First off: Protein is essentially food for your muscles.
And you need to feed your muscles a sufficient amount of protein. Why? Because if you are not using your muscles, and feeding your muscles (with protein), then your brain (which is pretty effing smart) will decide that you no longer need those muscles.
And when losing weight, you want your body to burn fat, not muscle.
So how much protein should you be stuffing down your throat every day? Chances are you’ll get different answers depending on who is preaching. But to keep it simple and safe, let’s just go ahead and say you should be eating one gram of protein for every pound of body weight.
So if you weigh 180 pounds, eat 180 grams of protein every day. If you weigh 250 pounds, eat 250 grams of protein every day.
Look…that’s it. There’s no point in complicating things any further.
Quick Recap: If you consistently eat less calories than your body burns, you WILL lose weight. But the weight you lose may be from muscle loss rather than from fat loss. This is because all your body cares about is in getting the energy it needs to keep your body functioning. It doesn’t care whether that energy comes from fat or from muscle. But you do. So eat enough protein and make sure your body is burning fat rather than muscle.
And that’s it.
That is everything you need to know about eating to lose weight.
Ignore everything else and only focus on those two things.
If you can do this, I guarantee you will lose weight.
The problem is that most people (Normies) can’t do this consistently, and so they start searching for shortcuts and quick hacks instead.
And shortcuts and quick hacks are the absolute wrong place to start. Because there are no effective shortcuts or quick hacks. Those scams will only lead you into circles of frustration and wasted energy.
I think you’ll agree that it’s always smarter and more effective to start in the right spot. If you’ve been struggling to lose weight and to get in the best shape of your life, then please allow me to introduce you to a different way to start.
It’s completely FREE, I promise!
No upsells.
No ‘gimme your email address and then I’ll send you a free guide.’
No stupid marketing tricks.
No B.S.
Click below, and let’s get started! (The Weirdo Way!)
First off, Congrats! The hardest part of your weight loss and fitness journey is over. You’ve made it over the steepest ledge of marshmallow mountain. You’ve made it through the thickest foliage of Fatboy Forest.
Let’s recap to make sure you’re now skipping along on the lush, thick, pleasant path that leads to the kingdom of a fitter, healthier, and happier you!
By now you should have completed both Step 1, and Step 2?
If you’re unsure whether you’ve completed both steps 1, and step 2, then here’s a quick synopsis of both of the steps:
Step 1.) You’ve started, right? And by ‘you’ve started,’ I mean you’ve started doing one easy little thing consistently every single day? Whether it be walking, pushups, dancing, cartwheels, backflips, ninja kicks, whatever. As long as it’s something that gets you moving every single day, and it’s relatively easy for you to do…then you’re doing the right thing! Keep doing this easy little thing for 15 days in a row.
Every single day.
For 15 days.
If you can’t do this easy little thing consistently (every single day) for 15 days, then make the thing easier. There are no pass-go’s with this.
15 days is 15 days. So don’t even think of trying to skip ahead to Step 2 until you have done this easy simple little thing for 15 days in a row. There are no cheat days on this. There are no skipping days. Yes, weekends count too. They are still days. Fridays are days. If today is your birthday, then it is still a day. Christmas is a day. So is Thanksgiving. And Easter. And Hanukkah. If you are tired, then that is still a day. If you have the flu, then you still do your one easy little thing. There are no excuses. No skipping. No cheating. Doing something every single day means doing something every single day. This is important. I know you probably don’t think doing something that is super, super easy can also be super, super important, BUT IT IS!
It’s everything at this point.
It’s the only thing you need to focus on.
Do it!
No matter what.
For 15 consecutive days.
It should be so easy that you have no real excuses not to do it anyway. It’s something like walking. It’s a few pushups. It shouldn’t be super crazy difficult. You can do this. The question is will you?
Step 1a.) I made this step up just to tell you that you should not even be reading this made-up step if you have not consistently done your 15 days of your ONE easy little thing. If you have not done that, then do that. Why in the world would you move on from step one if you have not done step one?! That’s Normie behavior! That means you’re not going to commit. Don’t be a Normie. For the love of God, be different. Do something.
Step 2.) Okay, awesome! You’ve survived the first 15 days of Camp Weirdo. Now it’s time to search, discover, and acknowledge all the devilish foods, meals, drinks, or habits that are causing you to gain weight. These are often high in calories and low in protein. Think cookies, cake, snacks, chips, ice cream, etc.
One-by-one it’s time to snipe these enemy calories.
And one-by-one means one-by-one.
And by ‘sniping these enemy calories’ I mean you put them in the grave for a long, long time.
How long?
We’re talking decades, not days. You want to keep these enemy foods dead and out of your mouth for as long as you want to be in good shape.
Is this extreme?
Yes.
Is it weird?
Yes.
Will it work.
Yes.
Will you actually do it?
Most will probably not. And that’s what makes most people normal. (And chubby.)
So I am asking you to be Weird, my friend. I am asking you to Be Different.
Because that’s how you will reach your goals.
Also, keep doing your ONE easy little thing every single day. You should be past 15 days at this point. Keep your streak going!
Your streak is important.
If you’ve actually reached this point, then you’ve now reached a level of fitness and mental transformation that ninety percent of humans are unable or unwilling to reach.
The hardest part is done.
For some of you Weirdos, the process of locating and eliminating the enemy foods, meals, drinks, snacks, or habits that have been causing you to eat more than your body can burn will be all you need to do.
This depends on your goal, and on how you want to look and feel, and on how much you are willing to sacrifice for the type of body you’re willing to accept.
By simply eliminating one of your devil foods, meals, drinks, snacks, or habits may have already put you into a calorie deficit.
To find out, you have two options:
You can keep eating how you normally eat (minus that one devil food you eliminated) and in 15 days you check to see if you’ve lost weight. If you did, great! Keep that devil dead.
You can calculate all the calories going into your mouth and compare this number with your TDEE. If your daily calorie intake is 10-15% lower than your TDEE, then you are losing weight. This means calories are consistently leaving your body rather than consistently being added to your body.
If either of these situations pertain to you, then you are losing weight, and your next step is to create a fitness routine so you can either gain or maintain your muscle tone.
However, for those who have eliminated their devilish foods, meals, drinks, or habits, but are still taking in more calories than their body can burn, it’s now time to construct your Three Piece Nutritional Puzzle so you can begin eating the foods you love while also creating a body that makes you want to streak butt-naked across the fifty yard line at this year’s Superbowl!
Ready!
Let’s get to it!
Completing Your Three-Piece Nutritional Puzzle.
Finally! It’s time we get to talk about one of my favorite subjects: Lasagna!
No one quite believes me when I tell them I lost forty pounds eating Stouffer’s Microwave Lasagna, but it’s the truth.
To do this, I just had to figure out a way to fit the noodles and cheese into my Three-Piece Nutritional Puzzle.
You can do the same thing with all your favorite foods as well!
As a quick reminder, here are the three pieces of the puzzle we’re playing with:
1.) Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE): This is an estimate of how many calories your body burns in a single day. We need to eat less calories than this number to lose weight, an equal number to maintain our current weight, or more than this number to gain weight. If you’re trying to lose weight, you must eat less calories than your TDEE. There’s no way around this. Math is math.
2.) Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR): These are your ‘keep me alive’ calories. Your body needs a certain amount of energy (calories) to keep your body properly functioning. RMR is the minimum amount of calories your body needs just to keep the lights on and the electricity running. To safely lose weight, it’s best to eat more calories than your RMR, and less calories than your TDEE. These are the first two pieces of the nutritional puzzle.
3.) Protein: Your body has muscles. I’m assuming you already know that! I’m also assuming you want to keep the muscles you have or add more muscle to what you wish you had. In order to accomplish this, your muscles need protein for both maintenance and growth. Our goal is to eat approximately one gram of protein per pound of body weight.
And that’s it.
That’s the puzzle.
Everyday we’re trying to piece together our meals so we eat a number of calories that fall between our RMR and TDEE, and also provide us with roughly one gram of protein per pound of body weight.
These three elements are the primary drivers for both weight loss and muscle maintenance. No need to worry about carbs, sugars, fats, ketones or any other complicated numbers.
Calories and protein.
That’s all we’re focused on.
In ‘Phase 1’ we worked to eliminate the majority of foods, meals, snacks, drinks, and habits going into your mouth that were high calorie and low protein. By doing so, this process of eating less than our TDEE while still getting enough protein to maintain muscle becomes significantly easier.
Here’s how this looked for me when I was concentrating on losing weight:
When I first calculated my TDEE, I weighed about 160 pounds. (I only wanted to lose about ten pounds at this time, but I blinked and before I knew what was happening I had ballooned up to about 180 pounds. Ugh.)
As I gained more weight, I should have recalculated my TDEE because my body was lugging around twenty extra pounds of fat, which meant my body needed more energy to do this, which meant my TDEE would have been higher.
However, this was when I was still figuring things out and didn’t know any better, so I stuck with a TDEE of roughly 2,000.
Since my goal was to lose weight, I needed to eat less calories than my TDEE while still getting roughly one gram of protein per pound of body weight.
As my goal, I chose to eat no more than 1,800 calories per day, which was 10% less than my TDEE. I would suggest setting a target of 10-15% less than your TDEE as well.
While calculating my TDEE, I discovered that my RMR was 1,200 calories per day. As a reminder, this was the minimum amount of calories I should consistently eat in order to lose weight in a safe manner.
That’s it!
My puzzle was complete.
To lose weight I would need to eat within a daily range of 1,200-1,800 calories while getting roughly 160 grams of protein.
Was this possible all the time, every single day, no exceptions?
Of course not.
On some days I ate out at restaurants and on other days I ate meals with my family. On these days only Jesus himself knows how many calories and protein were on my plate.
But for the most part I remained loyal to my Nutritional Puzzle. And I did this by constructing meals that I love, so that I would love the way I eat.
Because when you love something, you don’t want to cheat on it.
You want to devour it!!!
Mmmmmmm!
*A Quick Note To The Normies And The Naysayers!*
Right now, you may be thinking, ‘No way.’
You may be thinking, ‘I can’t give up my jelly donut with my morning coffee.’
You may be thinking, ‘I can’t eat weird like this where I have to count everything.’
The good news is that you are a grown up and you don’t have to do anything you don’t want to do! You can eat your jelly donut with your coffee today, tomorrow, and the day after, but the bad news is that you cannot eat your jelly donut with your coffee and also lose weight unless you structure your eating habits in a way that causes you to eat less calories than your body burns.
And for some, it may be possible to do this.
Yah!!!!!
Maybe you skip lunch completely so you can eat that high calorie jelly donut. Maybe you eat an itty-bitty lunch and a tinny tiny dinner to compensate for a calorie splurge at breakfast. Maybe your TDEE is high enough to allow you to splurge on junk food and cookies and cake and coca-colas. Maybe you’re ninja at controlling yourself on cheat days.
If you can do these things, then you do you. But just know that math is still math, and you can’t lose weight while eating more calories than your body burns.
It is not possible.
Thinking you can is like thinking you can make a balloon smaller by adding more air.
It’s just not going to happen. Sorry.
As for counting calories…you don’t have to count anything. You can one hundred percent wing all this eating and calorie counting stuff. You can eyeball a cheeseburger and fries and make a game-time decision on whether you think you’ll be eating more calories than your body can burn.
Good chance this method will not work.
Good chance you’ll make a guesstimated game-time decision at breakfast, and then another game-time guesstimated decision at lunch, and yet another game-time guesstimation for dinner, and then a few months later you’ll be in Kohl’s guesstimating how many pant sizes you have increased.
Then you’ll start thinking maybe it was the Fruity Pebbles at breakfast making you fatter, so you’ll try something different. A bagel maybe. Some egg whites. Some yogurt. But then the fat remains so maybe it was the burger and fries after all. Maybe it was the donut. Could it be the donut. Oh God, please don’t let it be the donut!
Normies waste away their entire lives playing this stupid game of guesstimating calories. Always hiding behind the hope that some new fad diet will allow them to eat their donuts and still fit into their high school jeans.
But maybe you’re the exception.
I certainly was not.
I tried the guesstimating game, and it did not work for me. For me, it was like continuously playing the lotto so I could hopefully pay my bills.
Eventually, I had to eliminate the foods, snacks, and drinks causing me the most damage and then I had to be an accountant with my calories.
This may sound terrible. It may sound like an extreme burden, but contrary to what you may believe, losing weight while not knowing how much energy you’re putting into your body is much more time consuming and frustrating than just counting the darn things.
Yes, you read that right.
Unless you have already developed a structured eating habit that works for you, then counting calories is quicker and less frustrating than simply guesstimating your food intake. Counting calories is perhaps the only method that provides a guaranteed certainty of losing weight and it does not have to be as hard as you’re thinking.
You can still eat the foods you enjoy.
You can still go out with friends and family to restaurants, parties, and events, and feast on BBQ, burgers, and pizza. This method of eating is not a calorie prison where the calorie police are going to lock you outside of the McDonalds playpen and never let you come back inside.
It’s easier than you think.
Here’s what has worked for me.
Normies will say: “I can’t eat the same meals over and over again.”
And then they eat the same fast food, sweets, and snacks over and over again.
We all do this. Weirdos. Normies. You. Me. All of us.
We’re all humans.
And us humans have a strong tendency to avoid change unless we’re in a situation where we’re forced to change.
Again, your biological brain doesn’t want change. Change is hard. It’s uncomfortable. It’s painful. And your brain’s job is to avoid pain and to pursue pleasure.
Point being, there’s a really good chance you eat the same five to ten meals, week-in, week-out, all the time, most of the time. You like what you like, and there’s not one damn thing wrong with that.
Sure, you like to spice it up from time-to-time. But for the most part, who has the time and temperament to constantly experiment with new recipes and meal plans.
If you have foods, meals, and recipes you already know you love, why would you stop eating them?
My philosophy: Don’t.
Me, I like lasagna. I like Cajun foods such as gumbo, red beans & rice, and jambalaya (I’m from Louisiana if this didn’t give it away!). I like a great steak. I like a juicy cheeseburger with fries. I like tacos. I like chicken, pork, and BBQ. I like pizza, and spaghetti. Did I already mention that I like lasagna!
Give that list to nearly any dietician and you’ll get a ‘tsk…tsk’ and a scowl in return. You can’t eat like this and lose weight, they’ll declare.
They’ll say you must eat salads, fruits, fish, eggs, oatmeal, lentils, and vegetables. They’ll talk of kale and chickpeas.
And that’s fine. I’m not downing any of those foods. I’m not discrediting dieticians.
However, I can honestly state that I lost forty pounds of flab and watched my body-fat go from nearly thirty percent to under five percent while I ate lasagna, steaks, cheeseburgers, and all the other foods I love.
This baffled people.
My friends and family would see me eating lasagna and couldn’t understand how I was losing weight, when, to them, it was so obvious I should be getting fatter.
The answer to this question is simple.
Math is math.
As I mentioned above, my TDEE was roughly 2,000 calories, so to lose weight I just had to eat less than 2,000 calories.
You must consistently eat less calories than your body burns. You know this, but the problem is that you cannot make yourself consistently do this.
But to do it is simpler than you think. You must first kill your devil foods one-by-one. Slowly eliminating them.
Once that is settled, you then focus on structuring your meals. Here’s how I accomplished this while still eating the foods I enjoy.
Start with one meal at a time. What do you like to eat for breakfast, or do you eat breakfast at all? Jot down 5-10 meals that you normally eat at breakfast. Calculate the calories for that meal. Now, how can we make essentially that same meal, but with less calories? What substitutions can be used?
For me, I normally only have a protein shake for breakfast. My goal is to have a protein shake that I enjoy drinking and that has low calories/high protein.
One thing I quickly learned: not all protein shakes are created equal. That I can promise you. Some are super high in calories. Others are lacking in the protein department. Premier Protein is pretty decent. So is a company called Pure Protein. These days I primarily stick with protein powder and make my own shakes. But Premier, Pure, and a brand called Body Fortress were my primary breakfast drinks when I first started on this weight loss journey.
Most Premier Protein Drinks have 160 calories and 30 grams of protein so let’s go with those numbers for this example of how I normally eat.
Breakfast: *Calories: 160 *Protein: 30 grams
For the record, I certainly didn’t (and don’t) always eat lasagna for lunch, but if heaven is nothing but noodles and cheese, then me and Jesus gonna be besties! I love this stuff! It tastes like heaven and it’s a good amount of grub! Do you see this big ole serving size in the below picture…
This is only 660 calories.
For all the food on the plate.
It’s amazing!
To top it off, there’s 40 grams of protein in this super meal.
Now if you don’t like lasagna, then don’t fret. I’m not trying to insinuate that you should eat these exact foods or any exact foods. I’m only showing you one of my typical meals to show you that you can eat the foods you love and still lose weight. You can do this with all sorts of foods and meals. It’s just a matter of pinpointing your top 10-20 favorite meals and then finding (or creating) a healthier version of those meals. Point being: you don’t have to always eat salads and chickpeas and tuna to lose weight and get in the best shape of your life.
But if you continue to eat your devil foods that are high calorie/low protein, then no matter what meals you eat you will gain weight. So again, your first step is to murder your devil foods and to keep them dead for a long, long time.
Moving on…
For my lasagna lunch: *Calories: 660 *Protein: 40 grams
Now I love big dinners, and I cannot lie. Typically, my eating schedule goes something like this: small breakfast, normal size lunch, a feast for dinner.
This is me, though, and you are you.
There’s no magic in my eating schedule. This is just what works best for my personality and for my daily schedule. If breakfast is typically your largest meal of the day and that’s how you like to roll, then do that. If you prefer intermittent fasting and opt to eat only one big meal per day, then do that. I tried this for a while but had a difficult time reaching my protein goals. But you can eat whatever you want, whenever you want, and still get in great shape as long as your daily calorie and protein numbers fit within your three-piece nutritional puzzle.
Again, if you’re the type of person who can eat a few chips and then put the bag away, then you may be able to have a small snack and still end up eating less calories that your body burns.
As I confessed earlier, I am not that type of person. I’m an ‘eat all the food until all the food is gone’ type of person. Because of that, it became much easier for me to lose weight by completely eliminating the foods, meals, drinks, snacks, and habits that were causing me the most harm.
Most people cannot accept that as an option. Most people would rather be overweight and miserable and clinging to the hope that they’ll one day stumble across that one really, really big secret workout or diet that only the most successful people actually know about.
I did that same thing for nearly thirty years.
THIRTY YEARS!
Of reading magazine articles about how to get in shape, and watching Youtube videos, and constantly trying different diets and different workout routines.
And what I finally learned is that I was not actually achieving much of anything because I was always too busy searching for that one really, really big secret thing that only the most success people actually know about. But here’s what finally hit me…What if there is no really, really big secret thing that only the most successful people actually know about? Instead, what if there are only small everyday simple things that everyone already knows about, and the really, really big secret (that only the most successful people actually know about) is that you have to do those small everyday simple little things over and over and over, consistently, everyday, and then that is what will eventually turn me into one of those successful people who others believe have the knowledge of one really, really big secret thing that only the most successful people actually know about.
This changed everything for me.
Because it is one thousand percent true.
Listen, I say this all the time and I’m gonna say it again here. The secret you keep searching for is this: Success comes from doing simple easy little things over and over and over again, consistently, for a long period of time.
That’s it.
That’s how you win.
But that is also the hardest part.
It’s the consistency that is hard, not the actual diet or workout.
So if you are the type of person that has problems putting the bag of chips away, then I suggest you do the same weirdo action that I did.
You give up the chips!
For a long, long time.
Yes, it’s possible.
Yes, you can do it!
To do this, I’ve found the trick is in starting as easy as possible. And you start as easy as possible by killing only one specific food at a time. And then you get a streak going. And then you protect that streak as if you were protecting your child. Nothing causes you to break that streak. I don’t care if Jesus himself, with Santa Claus and the angel of Elvis standing beside him, are offering you your devil food on a magical golden platter, YOU STILL SAY NO!
Saying no when it is hard to say no is what commitment looks like.
And to lose weight, you must fully commit to quitting the foods that are causing you the most harm.
This is not a diet.
This is eating in moderation. However, to reach your goals, with some food’s moderation is best kept at zero.
No matter how good the food may taste, if it is ultimately bad for you, then it is no better than doing crack cocaine or heroin. It’s time for you to eliminate the drugs from your life, so you can make your life better.
Normies can’t understand this because society promotes severely unhealthy foods that are instantly gratifying but that cause long-term unhappiness. Don’t fall into this. You can eliminate the foods causing you the most harm. You’re just gonna be viewed by some as being a bit weird for doing it.
But it’s better to be weird and happy, than normal and ashamed of your body.
Moving on…
Dinner.
I enjoy a good burger from time-to-time at dinner.
Some will say you can’t eat cheeseburgers and fries and still lose weight. I call those people Normies.
Normies are strange.
But Weirdos are wise!
To make this classic Weirdo cheeseburger, I focus on lowering the calories. To do that, I substitute regular hamburger buns for reduced calorie bread; I use fat free cheese which is lower in calories; I use lean ground beef.
These seemingly small substitutions matter.
And it’s easy to look at the label at the grocery store and to choose the option that has less calories.
Same great taste, but less jiggle when you wiggle!
Here’s a breakdown of the nutritional values of this cheeseburger and fries, which was a regular staple of my weight loss dinner plan:
There are a few things about this burger that may cause you to raise your eyebrows. One, it’s a half pound of beef so it’s good-sized hearty meal, but there’s no bacon, no onion ring toppings, nothing really crazy and wild about it. You could add more toppings if you wanted, but doing so adds more calories and my goal was to create a meal I love but to create it in a manner that limits calories, maximizes protein, and does not destroy the taste. I season this burger with Tony’s Creole Seasoning and, to me, it tastes great! Now let’s look at my total calorie count for the day:
Totals for the entire day: *Calories: 1,623 *Protein: 129
As shown earlier, my TDEE was roughly 2,000 calories per day. So if I ate less than 2,000 calories for the day then I know I lost weight. On this specific day, I ate 1,623 calories which sent my body into a deficit of 377 calories.
2,000 – 1,623 = 377
So at the end of the day my body was at a deficit of 377 calories, which means it did not have enough readily available energy to get me through the day, so it had to break down 377 calories of stored fat so it could convert those calories to energy and use them to keep my muscles working, and my heart beating, and my brain thinking, and to perform all the other processes needed to keep me alive and functioning properly.
And this is how you lose weight. On this day I lost 377 calories. If I do this for a full seven days, then I would lose 2,639 calories. That’s creeping close to a pound of fat lost in one week by eating lasagna for lunch and a half-pound cheeseburger with french-fries for dinner.
Try doing this same process the normie way, by severely restricting your diet or by eating foods and meals you don’t much enjoy. Your biological brain will eventually begin to whisper about how much it sucks to eat the same crappy things every single day. Chickpeas and salads. Lentils and cabbage. Over and over and over.
You’ll be feenin for a cheat day, but at this point in your journey one single cheat day could uproot an entire week of sacrifice and hard work.
The pure secret to this weight loss and fitness game is not in hacks, or pills, or fad diets. It’s in longevity. And you can’t maintain longevity by eating things you don’t enjoy and by doing things you absolutely despise.
Your biological brain will always outlast your willpower in these situations. It will convince you to try this other method, or to come up with a more feasible plan, or that you do not have enough self-disciple to keep this up.
None of these things are true. Instead, you only need to start easier and go slower, so that you are steadily strengthening your self-discipline and willpower. You need to devise a plan that allows you to eat meals you enjoy while still losing weight. You need to accept that this process requires a long-term commitment. Being a Weirdo is not about how much you can lift or how stringent of a diet you can survive, instead it’s all about how long you can do the easy simple little things.
For me…
Today is day 706 in which I have not drank a normal calorie soda. Today is day 706 in which I have not had any chips or sweets. Today is day 724 in which I have done pushups every single morning.
Individually, none of these things are all that impressive.
Any normie can go a day without drinking a normal calorie soda. Any normie can go a day without eating any chips or sweets. Any normie can do three measly sets of pushups tomorrow morning.
One day is not all that difficult.
But difficult is the day you are exhausted. It’s the day your child is sick. It’s the day you worked a twelve-hour day. It’s the day you have the flu. It’s the day you’re busier than Superman in an earthquake.
Every single day is where the difficulty lives.
Consistently doing the easy things is what is difficult.
But difficult is also where results are born. I’ve done morning pushups for 724 days now. Consistently. Every single day. No exceptions. I’ve done them when I had the flu. When I had COVID. When my back was hurting. When I was in a rush. When I was tired. When I absolutely didn’t feel like it. When I was in Mexico City. When I was visiting my family. On Christmas. On Thanksgiving. On New Years. On my birthday. On the weekends.
Every single day.
For 724 days.
You may be saying, “Whoa, whoa, whoa whoa, wait…this is a little extreme, a bit too weird. Does this mean I can never have another cheat day? Like…ever?
No!
It doesn’t mean that at all. I still have cheat days, but I structure them so that my cheat days end with victory parades.
Let me explain.
First off, the secret to success in weight loss and fitness is consistency. You know this, but for whatever reason, normies have somehow spread a false belief of how we are all entitled to one cheat day (or cheat meal) per week.
I don’t know where or by who this idea originated from, but in my opinion this idea was surely formulated by someone’s conniving biological brain. The logic being that we deserve this cheat day because we’ve sacrificed and worked so hard during the entire week. I mean, hey, even God (sitting up there in his lasagna paradise) kicked back and rested and ate cookies and drank cokes on the seventh day, right?
Maybe.
But the difference is that we are not God.
I’m guessing God does not get fat.
God plays by a different set of rules.
However, you and I, it turns out we’re not so lucky. We will get fat if we eat more calories than our bodies can burn.
And the truth is that you can ruin an entire week’s worth of sacrifice and hard work with one monster meal per week, and you can certainly reverse your efforts with an entire day of gorging.
At the end of each week, the determining factor that dictates whether you have lost or gained weight is based on whether you have put more or less calories into your body than your body can burn.
That being said, I still think cheat meals are fine. There will be times when you are out with friends, or at a restaurant, or spending time with family, and you flat out are not going to be counting calories.
I get it.
I have gotten in the best shape of my life while also enjoying the occasional sit down at Papa John’s Pizza, and at Five Guys, and at Mission BBQ, and at Fogo De Gaue. (Mmmm, candy bacon!)
However, I was not able to do this every single day.
But when these situations pop up, or when I find myself twitching for some cheesy greasy pizza, I will have what I call a controlled cheat meal.
First, and really the only rule of having a controlled cheat meal is this:
I never do my nevers, and I always do my always.
This means that no matter what, a cheat meal does not violate my streaks.
A cheat meal does not mean I get to eat or drink any of the devil foods, meals, drinks snacks, or habits that I have already put time and effort into killing.
For me, this means I won’t drink a normal calorie coke no matter where I go. If I find myself in the Coca-Cola Museum in Atlanta and there are free samples of Coca-Cola passed around, then I will be the odd ball out that respectfully declines.
No matter what, this streak does not get broken. No matter what the situation, this door does not get reopened. I will eat anything else, be it six cheeseburgers smothered in sauce and an entire carton of mozzarella sticks slathered in ketchup, but in no way, shape, or form can one drop of Coca-Cola calories go into my mouth.
And whenever I am eventually rolled out of whatever party, or food museum, or restaurant I was stuffing my face at, I always leave, no matter how full or how fat I feel, as though I have won. As long as I do not break my streak, then I’m riding in a victory parade on my way home because I have stayed true to the core principles that matter the absolute most.
This may seem easy to you, especially if you do not love Coca-Cola as much as I did, but the point is that just because you are at a special event does not mean you suddenly have a full-fledged pass to completely break your streak.
I warn you of this because these are the very situations where your biological brain will perk up and sense an opportunity.
It’s like a dog sensing your weakness, and so it takes this one rare time to test you by jumping onto the couch with its filthy paws and innocent eyes.
It’s times like these when you and I are most vulnerable. It’s when we’re at dinner with friends or family or during the holidays or at a loved one’s wedding (maybe even our own) or on our birthday or whatnot, we’re at a one-time special event, and this is when your biological brain will speak so eloquent and logical in its conviction of how just this once we should allow ourselves to enjoy just this one single Coca-Cola. Just this one time. And it will badger you on-and-on about how this is such an unusual and unique opportunity and because it is such a one-time event, it should not even count against your streaks at all. It will be an exclusion. A one-time cheat moment. It will be like this day never happened. It won’t even count.
And if you fall into this trap, then this one situation that seemed so innocent will actually be the beginning of your new season of failure.
Imagine a recovering alcoholic who is enjoying a once in a lifetime meal at his best friend’s bachelor party. They’re gazing at the beautiful blue waters of the Cancun coastline. They’re at a five-star restaurant. This is a long due reunion with all his old high school drinking buddies and sure enough, the only seating available is there at the bar.
But that’s okay.
He can handle it.
It’s not a big deal.
Then one friend buys them all a shot of tequila.
It’s there in front of him.
His biological mind is nagging and begging and convincing him of how it will be okay. It’s just this one time. With old friends. In Mexico. For your best friend’s wedding. Never again will they all be together to share a memory such as this one. It is literally a once in a lifetime event.
These kinds of temptations happen.
They’re real.
Surprisingly, this desire most often hits me not with alcohol or Coca-Colas, but with chips. Sounds stupid, I know. But when I’m at a Mexican restaurant with friends or family and the free chip bowl is brought to the table, I find myself gazing at it with a peculiar and razzled sense of confusion.
In these situations, I can almost feel my biological brain trying to alter the rules of how my streak is worded. It’s attempting to find even the narrowest of cracks where it can wiggle some type of justification of why and how I should be allowed to break my rule for this specific circumstance and for this specific event.
And this is why it is so important that you leave zero wiggle room in your convictions when you are defining your streaks.
As an example, take the following statement:
‘I will not eat any sweets or chips for the next ten years.’
There is very little room (if any at all) to misinterpret, misconstrue, or argue with that statement. It’s nearly impossible for my biological brain to find a way to circumvent that rule.
‘Any’ means ‘any,’ and ‘for the next ten years,’ means ‘for the next ten years.’
Let me be clear though, when I find myself in these situations where I am having a cheat meal, I am firm on not breaking my streaks and I am dedicated to not eating any of my devil foods, meals, drinks, or snacks, but anything else is one hundred percent free game.
This makes it much easier to satisfy your biological brain. You are essentially giving it something so that it will shut the hell up and leave you alone.
So even though I don’t eat from the chip bowl, I may very well order an appetizer of cheesy bacon covered french fries with sour cream and devour the entire dish.
And I consider that a victory.
And it is a victory because I did not break my own rules. I did not fall into the sweet soothing singsong temptation that my own brain will devise.
This is important because each time you resist one of these provocations from your biological brain where it begs and pleads and tries to convince you to break your streak, you become stronger. You build your confidence. Your results slowly begin to compound, and you will begin to notice visible results in the way your clothes fit and in how you feel. But most importantly, you will be strengthening your self-discipline and your willpower in every situation in which you prevail.
This is the primary reason why it is so important to start with a task that is so easy it seems borderline ridiculous.
Starting as easy as possible, with the daily accomplishments of tiny simple consistent little goals, is imperative because it allows you to build up a steady consecutive streak of victories. Maybe you don’t see these victories immediately in the way of changes in your pant size, but the battles being won inside your own brain are far more important at this point.
With all this said, I don’t go out and gorge on these cheat meals very often. When I first begin to take my health and fitness serious, I normally went somewhere around every two weeks before I found myself partaking in a cheat meal.
However, creating healthy versions of the foods/meals that you already enjoy is the best way I have found to discourage any constant cravings for cheat meals. Once you create healthy versions of the meals you already love, you’ll find that you are often just as content with eating these meals as you would be feasting on a cheat meal that will take you farther from your ultimate goal.
But, from time to time, cravings will surely come so I say cheat when you must cheat, but just know that when the sun falls at the end of each week, math is still math.
If you have consumed more than your body can burn, you will gain weight. Excessive cheat meals only increase the likelihood of this happening, so cheat moderately, as an exception, not as a habit.
After my cheat meals, on the very next day, I always find myself a couple pounds heavier on the scale. This is obviously to be expected. And it’s alright. It’s going to happen. A good amount of this is most likely water weight and undigested food, but the important thing is that I stuck to my streak and that I get right back to eating meals that align with my Nutritional Puzzle.
Again, the secret is to do the easy thing for a long duration of time.
Easy workouts.
Eat foods that you enjoy (only make them with less calories.)
You’ll be weird to others by doing these things.
You’ll be side eyed by normies. You’ll be labeled as an oddball when you refuse to eat those devil foods you were once so insistent to stuff down your throat.
You’ll be counting your calories and your protein, and some people will simply not understand why or what you are doing.
You’ll be eating lasagna and cheeseburgers while losing weight.
Your friends and family will not understand.
At some point, they will surely explain a new exercise or a cardio or a fad diet they are currently trying. And if it sounds great and logical, then maybe you should try it as well, but whatever you do, whether you try it or not, DO NOT sacrifice your streaks.
Because that is really all that matters.
Never quit your nevers, and always do your always.
Stick to your easy little things that you have committed to doing for a long duration.
Do not let anyone or anything stop your progress of those easy simple little tasks.
Keep moving.
No matter what.
It may seem like a slow train, but trust me, you will be steadily moving forward, even on the days when it feels you are not moving at all.
Choo! Choo!
Now, if you haven’t already, it’s time to go murder your extracurricular calories and begin piecing together your nutritional puzzle.
You can do it.
Just take it slow.
One easy thing at a time.
And once that is done, it’s on to the least important, yet most popular aspect of weight loss and fitness. Exercising.
Let’s build, or at a minimum, maintain our muscle.
This one question quiz helps us get you in the Weirdo Classroom that helps you the most. Don’t worry, no one is gonna show this test score to your mom!
Question: Which of the below activities is the single primary factor that causes you to gain weight? Click on the best answer.
Have you ever caught yourself mindlessly doing some boring chore (that didn’t even really need to be done) just so you could put off the thing you knew you should be doing?
I was a champion at doing this.
One second I’d be thinking of hitting the gym… a few seconds later I’d find myself doing laundry. Or the dishes. Or yardwork. Or checking emails.
I may have even laid down to watch part of a TV series I’d been neglecting.
So, yea, I had a hard time consistently sticking to a workout program.
I had an even harder time sticking to a healthy eating program.
It’s tough.
Both of them.
But, here’s the thing…
You Can Strengthen Your Self-Discipline Muscles.
Yep, you read that right.
Self discipline is nothing more than an untrained muscle. It’s the scrawny bicep within your brain that has withered away from years of neglect.
But here’s the good news.
You can strengthen your self discipline.
Doing this was a complete game changer for me, so if you’re having the same problem sticking to your goals then I think figuring out how to build up your self discipline will help you as well.
Let’s jump in…
Here’s The Super Ninja Tactic That Helped Me Strengthen My Self-Discipline
Have you ever heard of Duolingo?
It’s a language learning app.
A while back I was using the app to learn Spanish, and I got a bit addicted.
For those not familiar with Duolingo, it’s an app you download onto your phone and it allows you to take quick and simple lessons to learn a new language.
Each lesson only takes somewhere between two to five minutes, they’re super easy, but here’s the weird thing…
Whether I wanted it or not, everyday I’d get a strange notification on my phone from Duolingo.
It would look something like this…
Every single day Duolingo would send me one of these notifications reminding me of my daily streak for completing a Spanish lesson.
Now this is going to sound weird and stupid and I understand that it makes no logical sense but there were many days when I’d go completely out of my way to ensure my streak did not end.
If needed, I’d hide from the crowds and hunker down in a bathroom so I could knock out my Duolingo lesson and protect my streak.
It was weird, for sure.
Even when I no longer wanted to further my language learning, I still found it difficult to stop.
That’s when I realized that when you have a goal and your goal is based on consistency and not quitting, then a streak grows to strange levels of importance in your brain.
It’s a powerful motivator.
Here’s how I used the power of streaks to keep me consistent with my weight loss and fitness routine.
First things first, I made the tasks as easy as humanly possible.
Imagine if I would have first opened the Duolingo app and the first lesson was two hours long and the assignment was to look up fifty Spanish verbs and then use all the verb conjugations in five different sentences for each verb.
The next day’s lesson was going to be more of the same.
I’ll tell you now, my streak would have lasted all of five seconds.
Trying to start like that…with that level of extreme difficulty…
It makes zero logical sense.
No one is going to stick with it. Not for the long term.
But this is exactly how normal people all over the planet choose to start a fitness and weight loss program.
They want to start as difficult as possible.
They want to start with HITT training, or with a hard-core super restrictive diet. They want to punish themselves in the gym. They want to walk from the gym hunched over, sweat pouring down their face. They want to brag about how sore their thighs are the next day.
They want to hurt.
I mean…
What The Hell????
Normal people are nuts.
But as nutty as they may be, I get why they do this.
Heck, I did it too. For many, many years.
It’s because normal people worldwide are focusing only on the immediate goal rather than focusing on the process of obtaining the goal.
They want to do everything now, thinking that by doing so it will get them to their goal quicker.
But in reality, they are only making things so difficult now that both their brain and their body will not be able to handle the long term process of continuing.
And to stay fit and in good shape, you have to continue the process.
Today.
And tomorrow.
And the next day.
And the next.
And the moment your foot comes off the gas and the cookies go back in your mouth, that’s when you’re depressed and buying a bigger pant size again.
That’s when you have to start over.
Normal people do this.
They’re continuously in a cycle of starting and stopping, of trying this and then trying that, of looking for the newest workout, the newest supplement, the newest diet that will give them their dream body now.
Unfortunately, they will be going through this cycle forever, always searching until they finally give up and accept their excuses as reality.
Don’t fall into this trap.
Don’t do the normal things that all the normal people are doing.
Be different.
The first different thing I did was to start with a task so freaking easy that my mind could not possibly come up with a valid justification for not completing the task.
And trust me, even when the task is ridiculously easy your mind will sometimes still hee and haw.
And your mind is one savage negotiator.
It’s like a five year old in a toy store. Nagging and begging and pleading until it eventually gets its way.
Give your mind two or three weeks of going to the gym and doing those grueling workouts and it will revolt. It will suddenly remind you of how important it is to do the laundry. Or the dishes. Or the yardwork. Or to check the emails.
It will insist that you need to lay down and finish watching the TV series you’ve been neglecting.
It will barter. It will conjole. It will beg.
And that is your brain’s job. To keep you away from the things that will cause you pain and discomfort, and to bring you closer towards the things that will give you pleasure and safety.
Your brain does not want to start as difficult as possible.
That is not it’s job. That goes against it’s very nature.
If you don’t enjoy HITT training, then your brain is going to give you a million different reasons why HITT training should not be done consistently.
If you do not associate a hard-core super restrictive diet as pleasurable, then your brain’s job is to keep you away from doing it.
Your brain doesn’t want to punish itself in the gym. It doesn’t want to walk from the gym hunched over with sweat pouring down its face. Your brain doesn’t want to brag about how sore its thighs are the next day.
Your brain doesn’t want to hurt.
Consciously, you want these things because you think they will bring you to your goal quicker, but unconsciously your brain does not want to do these things because they are painful and cause discomfort.
And here’s the BIG lesson I learned:
If You Are Always Fighting Against Yourself, Then You Will Never Win.
So in order to win the war against weight loss you must become an ally with your brain.
In order to do this, it’s imperative that you start your streak with simplicity.
Again, the way I did this was to start with a task that was so freaking easy that my brain could not possibly come up with a valid justification for not completing the task.
For me it was pushups.
For you it may be something else.
I don’t mind doing pushups.
Sounds weird but I kinda enjoy pushups.
Now I don’t enjoy them to the point where I go out every Saturday night and do pushups at a fancy restaurant and then do more pushups during the preview at the movie theater.
I’m not an idiot about pushups.
I don’t necessarily love doing any exercises, but my goal was to get in the best shape of my life, so I knew I had to do something.
So I committed to starting with pushups. Because I don’t hate them and I don’t consider them to be complicated or backbreaking.
On the morning of Tuesday, November 08th, 2022, I did 10 pushups, then I waited one minute, did another 10 pushups, waited one minute, then I did 17 more pushups.
And then I went to work.
The next morning, I did the exact same thing. 10, then 10, then 17 more pushups.
I was not killing myself. It was not punishing. I was not pouring sweat when I left the house. I didn’t go to bed dreading having to do my three sets of pushups the next morning. I wasn’t waking that next morning and thinking of how I should take out the garbage instead of doing my pushups.
It was relatively easy.
It took all of about four minutes.
Some days, there was a slight grumble from my brain about not wanting to do this. But it’s easy to silence those thoughts when you can counter with: “It’s literally only three measly sets of pushups that take less than five minutes to complete.”
Not even my moody brain could muster a winning rebuttal against doing something that was so painless, quick, and easy.
Today, this morning before I left the house for work, 08NOV2023, I did my three sets of pushups.
I do more now, because I can do more. I’ve gotten stronger. Now it’s 20 pushups, wait one minute, do 20 more pushups, wait one minute, then I do 28 pushups.
I do them regardless of where I’m at. If I’m at home, I do them first thing in the morning. If I’m at a hotel, first thing in the morning. If I’m at a friends, first thing in the morning.
And today is my one year streak.
365 days in a row of doing pushups every single morning.
Tomorrow I will do them again.
And I will do them the next day, and the next, and the next.
But the first step is to start. With the easiest task you can possibly think of.
And then track it. Daily. Religiously. And focus only on the doing of that one easy simple thing every single day.
Your new goal should not be to lose weight.
Or to get ripped.
Or to fit into your old comfy pair of Levies.
Your new goal should be 1,000 days.
1,000 days of doing something every single day that is so freaking easy that your brain will not possibly be able to come up with a valid justification for not completing the task.
And once you start on that journey…once you begin to build both your streak and your confidence, then you will most likely begin to add other tasks to your streak counter.
That is what inevitable happened to me.
Here is a look at the super sophisticated system that I use to keep track of my streaks.
This Whiteboard poster is literally scotch-taped to the wall in my kitchen.
Is it tacky?
Absolutely.
Am I sometimes embarrassed when people see it?
At first I was…but now I am only proud.
Because it’s my Weirdo Wall.
It represents my journey.
My victories.
You will see that over time I also incorporated weight workouts, and cardio, and diet restrictions onto my streak counter.
As with the pushups, I made the doing of these items as easy as humanly possible.
I now drink Coke Zero rather than the normal calorie cokes. I walk instead of doing any strenuous cardio. I workout every single day but the workouts are quick and easy. I’m normally in-and-out in 10-30 minutes.
Normal people can’t understand this.
To them, it’s all too simple.
Or it’s too easy.
Or the process just takes too dang long.
But to the Weirdos…this is the way.
The way that works.
I hope your own fitness streak begins today.
Because tomorrow is coming quick, and the sooner you start, the sooner you will reach your goals.
If you have any questions at all, please reach out to me at [email protected]
I am one hundred percent more than happy to help you reach your goals.
Earlier today I read a random article about Taylor Swift making history at the Grammy’s with her album ‘Midnights.’
Cool!
But what does that have to do with weight loss and fitness, and more importantly, how does it help us lose weight and get in the best shape of our lives?
It doesn’t, and that’s why we’re gonna talk about her acceptance speech instead.
So check this out…
Taylor Swift is on stage, all dolled up, holding a freaking Grammy in her hands. Adrenaline is pumping through her veins. She’s looking at thousands of star struck spectators. She’s living this incredible moment most humans only dream about. (A moment she undoubtedly once dreamed about). And after she has achieved this unbelievable, record breaking achievement, she says this:
It’s a seemingly innocent statement, but in this one simple paragraph is the entire operating manual for success — not just relating to music, but to obtaining any meaningful goal.
Let’s break this down, because it’s so profound.
The award is the work.
For Taylor Swift, her everyday achievement is the true award, and the Grammy’s, the fame, the money, the adoration, all those things are simply derivatives of her everyday achievements.
Okay…
Cool…
But again, what does this have to do with weight loss and fitness, and more importantly, how does it help us lose weight and get in the best shape of our lives?
To best explain, I’d like to share this photo with you.
I’ve shown a version of this photo several times before, but for those not aware this now hangs in my kitchen.
It is scotch taped straight to the cabinets.
Fancy, I know!
Anyway, the point is this: For me, this is my Grammy award.
My happiness comes from completing these daily tasks. Every. Single. Day.
It’s in knowing that I did not give up.
My happiness is when I finish a workout, or go another day without drinking a calorie soda, or go another day walking on the treadmill.
My happiness is in keeping these streaks alive.
It’s being able to erase and replace and add a checkmark to this tacky little streak counter that hangs in my kitchen.
It’s knowing that ninety-nine percent of the world will never stick to anything for this long.
It’s knowing that I’m doing something different. Something meaningful. It’s knowing that I chose to be different. That I have not quit. That I have not given up on my goals.
So for me, my award is the daily work, and losing forty pounds, and gaining muscle, and fitting comfortably into my clothes, and having more energy, more self-confidence, a low body-fat, having people treat me differently…all these things — they are just derivatives of my everyday achievements.
But Now Let’s Jump Back To Taylor
Notice Taylor Swift says she feels this supreme happiness when she finished a song. And when she has cracked the code to a bridge that she loves.
She is saying that she feels this happiness after the song is finished and after the code is cracked.
She doesn’t say she is happy during the struggle of creating the song or when trying to crack the code.
She doesn’t say she never gets frustrated.
She doesn’t say things never get hard.
I’m sure there are times she bangs her head on the wall trying to figure out a lyric or a sound or how to structure certain parts of a song.
I’m sure there are times she would rather lie in bed and watch YouTube rather than slogging through a song that is stubborn to come together.
I’m sure there are times when she has a headache or is depressed or is straight up feeling blah and she would rather stay home rather than jumping on a stage in Tokyo.
Why am I sure of these things?
Because she is human, and this is real life.
But the fact is: She keeps going. Every. Single. Day.
And she does this because she has a work process and the process is something she has committed to and this commitment is important to her.
Let me wrap this up with a quick personal story.
The Not-So-Famous Flu Workout
You’ve probably watched or heard about Michael Jordan’s famous flu game during the 1997 NBA finals.
Legendary.
For sure.
But not many of you (meaning no one) have ever heard of the famous flu workout that took place in my garage a few months ago.
It started on Christmas evening at my house where I began to feel a bit off. Not necessarily ill, but fatigued, tired, sluggish. All I wanted to do was crash.
So I went to bed early, even by my standards. (I have to work at four AM so I’m normally in bed rather early anyway.)
When I woke, it felt as though barrels of thick sludge had been pumped inside my body. Moving was laborious. My muscles, bones, joints — everything ached. My brain was foggy. A killer headache was crushing my thoughts. Snot leaked from my sinuses. It felt like someone had sandpapered my throat.
But because I’m an idiot, I decided to shrug on my uniform and try going to work.
Bad idea.
About halfway there and I came to my senses. This was stupid. Work could do without me for a day. Going would be absolute torture, for me, and for my coworkers. So I called my boss and took a sick day.
When I got back home, I slept solidly for four hours, then woke and came downstairs. Still feeling like death, I saw my streak counter taped there to the cabinets. It was waving and taunting and giggling as I shoved three Tylenol PM’s down my throat. Streaks end, I thought, already starting to head back upstairs.
And they do.
All of them do.
Eventually, they will come to an end.
And if having the black plague is not an acceptable reason to skip a day then I don’t know what is.
Taylor Swift is long past making music for money. She doesn’t need the fame. She’s won multiple awards many times over.
But here’s the thing, when I developed my fitness plan, my process, I developed it to withstand my worst days, not my normal days, and certainly not my best days.
If you notice my janky streak counter, it only says ‘## of days working out with weights.’
That’s it.
And it’s like that intentionally.
So I went back upstairs and pulled my sneakers on. I put my workout shorts on.
And I came back downstairs to earn my fucking Grammy.
Am I going to lie and say I put on a Jordan worth performance.
I did not.
All I did was what I normally do as my warm up for that day, and all this entailed was doing two pullups, waiting one minute, doing three pullups, waiting one minute, doing five pullups, waiting one minute, and then doing one pullup while wearing leg weights.
And then I went back upstairs and I went to bed for about ten hours.
But I won.
And to this day, if you were to ask me to tell you of my proudest workout ever, that would be right there in the top three.
Because any normal person would have done nothing. They would have believed in their excuses.
At this point, she’s simple trying to make the absolute best music that she can possibly create. She’s trying to entertain to the best of her ability. She’s trying to put on the best concerts that you’ll ever witness.
She’s trying to do the best that she can.
She’s competing solely with herself.
Not necissarily the doing of the thing, but it’s the having done the thing. It’s the accomplishment. And you do this by making the process bearable enjoyable if possible and bearable if not.
you must make your process the award.
you have to make it
Because she’s human. and trying to live up to thousands of people’s expectations but she shows up consistently and little by little, piece by piece the song begins to build.
And it builds the same exact way muscle builds — note by note, line by line, day by day, with simple easy actions done consistently over a long period of time.
Taylor Swift is great because she has been doing the same thing consistently for a long, long time. For years and years and years now.
And this is the same winning principle that applies to fitness and weight loss.
Like Taylor Swift, you have to discover a process that you can stick to and it’s more important than all the other things that most people get fixated worrying about.
All the mind chatter like: should you do CrossFit, keto, paleo, HITT training, refeed days, fasting, carb cycling, and blah, blah, blah, blah…
Who cares.
Just choose something that moves the needle, no matter how slight it may seem, and then stick with it for the long term. Make ‘your thing’ something that you can do everyday. Make it something you do not completely hate.
And then do it every single day for the next ten years.
Yes I’m serious.
Because once you become committed to doing that, then your process will begin to become your reward.
And at that point, you become unstoppable!
But today, right now…start.
Commit.
Decide to be different.
Please shoot me a line at [email protected] if you have any questions or comments about either this article, or about how to implement this habit into your fitness routine and life.
In honor of this article, guess what I’m having for lunch today!
You guessed it…
I’m having Stouffer’s microwave lasagna.
And you know what else…
Tomorrow morning I’ll weigh the same as I did this morning.
I won’t gain one single pound.
This evening I’ll have a half-pound cheeseburger with fries for dinner.
And in case you’re wondering, when I hit the scale tomorrow morning I still won’t weigh any more than I did this morning.
A candy bar, some chocolate covered raisins, a brownie, and some buttered popcorn will be my snacks today.
And I still won’t gain any additional weight.
Right now you may be thinking, ‘Uh huh. Keep eating like that and tell me how your pants fit in three months.’
You may be thinking I have some special genetics, or that I’m a high metabolism twenty year old. (I wish.)
You may be thinking it’s not possible to eat lasagna, then snack on popcorn and chocolate, then have a cheeseburger and fries for dinner, and still gain absolutely zero weight.
But the truth is that you can.
It is one hundred percent possible!
You can eat the foods you love and still get in the best shape of your life.
Don’t believe me?
I’m living proof.
Here’s a before and after pic of me, myself, and not Irene.
The picture on the left is when I was first beginning this fitness journey and the one on the right is a picture of me from a few weeks ago.
Trust me, I am no where close to being a twenty-year-old spring chicken.
I was 43 when I first started this fitness journey; I am 44 now.
And I promise you, I have no super high metabolism.
What I do have is a method that has helped me lose over 35 pounds of fat, gain a significant amount of muscle, and get in the absolute best shape of my life — all while eating foods that I actually enjoy.
But my journey is definitely not all cupcakes and sprinkles.
It took me years of searching, testing, failing before I figured out how to eat the foods I love and still get in the best shape of my life.
After this article I hope you choose to do the same!
Let’s get to it.
Are you losing weight today, gaining weight today, or staying the same weight today?
Quick question: let’s say I’m sitting on my couch watching Sports Center, and I’m munching on a salad and an avocado and I’m washing it all down with a great big glass of ice water — will I lose weight, gain weight, or stay the same weight when I hop on the scale tomorrow morning?
I’m guessing most people would think I’d lose weight eating a salad and an avocado.
Maybe a few would make an argument that I’d gain or stay the same weight.
But here’s the God-to-honest truth:
You don’t know.
You can’t.
Not with any certainty.
And the first reason you can’t realistically know the answer to this is because you don’t know how many calories I burn per day, and the second reason is because you don’t know how many calories I’m actually putting inside my body.
Sure, you’d know I was eating a salad.
And an avocado.
But here’s the thing:
You can still get fat eating salads and avocados and eggs and all the foods that we’ve always been told are ‘healthy.’
Now I’m not saying you should no longer eat salads or avocados or eggs or any of the foods we’ve always been told are healthy.
What I am saying is that in order to lose weight and get in great shape, we have to know which foods and how much of these foods we can actually eat before the balloon we call our bellies starts to expand.
Why?
Imagine this: you’re at a pizza restaurant with friends and you’re at that point where you’re thinking, ‘Hmmm, should I have one more slice?’
In today’s fairy tale you look down at your arm and there’s a handy dandy nifty little fuel gauge build right there into your body. Pretty neat, I know! Even better, it shows that your tank is only half full which means you’re good to eat another slice. You greedily grab another piece of Meat Lover’s Supreme and savor this cheesy gooey meaty delight, swallowing every last morsel. Then you look at your nifty fuel gauge again.
You’re three quarters full now.
Yessss! This means you can eat even more. So a few chicken wings go down your throat, two mozzarella sticks, a fudge brownie, and…yep…that did it. Your tank is now completely full. Blaaannkkhhhh Blaaannkkhhhh Blaaannkkhhh – that’s the overflow alarm going off. Even if you tried grubbing on one more tiny little loose piece of pepperoni then your throat would not allow it into your stomach.
You’d have to wait until some calories were burned and then there’d be more room in your tank. So you wait, and you walk; and your heart is beating (which burns calories), and your brain is thinking (which also burns calories), and your lungs are working, and so are your muscles, and all the while you are burning calories and before long it’s time to fill up again. This time maybe with the sweet nectar of Stouffer’s lasagna!
In all honesty, the above scenario would be a great way to live because we’d never have to worry about overeating or being overweight, but unfortunately we live in the real world and in the real world we don’t have a handy dandy nifty little fuel gauge built right there on our body.
Here in the real world most of us are completely clueless as to how much fuel we are putting inside our bodies at all.
People guesstimate.
Or… to put it more accurately, normal people guesstimate.
And 99.999999 percent of normal people are absolutely terrible at this.
But these normal people, which is the vast majority of the world, will justify their terribleness by blabbering on and on about how healthy they are eating. I’m eating fruits, they’ll say. Or, almonds. Or you’ll hear all about how yogurt is extremely healthy. As are lentils and lean meats and salads and oats.
And then they’ll eat and eat and eat these things, and have a large M&M Blizzard as a reward for dessert. And why not, they’ve earned it. I mean they’ve been eating healthy, right?
Riiiiiiggggghhhht???
These same normal people will say, “I’m doing the Keto diet.” Or, “I’m doing Paleo.” Or avocados have healthy fats. Or eggs have a lot of protein.
And that’s great!
Because all those things are good and true.
But here’s another truth: you can still get fat on Keto and on Paleo and by eating avocados and eggs and any other foods out there.
You will get fat if you eat more calories than your body can burn.
The diet doesn’t matter. Nor does the food type. Nor does the time of day you eat.
What matters is this:
If you eat more calories than your body can burn, you will gain weight.
Period.
It’s that simple.
If you enjoy the Keto diet, then awesome. Keep doing the Keto diet, but to lose weight you must ensure that you are not eating more calories than your body can burn while on the keto diet.
Same with Paleo.
And Adkins.
Same with any other diet or eating preference.
The rules of all these different diets (like Keto or Paleo) are in place to encourage you to eat lower calorie foods so that you do not eat more than your body can burn.
Normal people have a hard time swallowing this. They think there is a magic in the Paleo diet. A magic in Keto, but there is no magic.
There is only math.
And the math looks like this:
If you eat 2,200 calories today but your body burns only 2,000 calories, then you will gain weight.
That extra 200 calories has to go somewhere.
And it goes into thunder thighs, love handles, and chubby chins.
However, if you eat 1,800 calories today and your body burns 2,000 calories, then you will lose weight.
Because your body needs those 2,000 calories for fuel, so if you’re not giving it all 2,000 when you eat, then it will steal what it needs from the thunder thighs, the love handles, and the chubby chin.
That’s it.
That’s how fat loss works.
So now that we know that eating more than our bodies can burn is what causes us to gain weight, the two key questions for weight loss become:
1.) How many calories does my body burn everyday? 2.) How many calories can I eat everyday to guarantee weight loss?
These were (and still are) the fundamental questions I had to answer before I structured an eating plan that would both guarantee I would lose weight and allow me to maintain my sanity.
Both are important!
So the first thing I did to ensure I could eat the foods I love (Hello Lasagna!) while still getting in great shape was to figure out how much I could realistically eat without getting fatter.
Basically, when was my tank full?
There’s a couple different ways to figure out the answer to this simple question, but keep in mind, you only need one to figure it out.
Normal people will research method after method and decide they need to do the most difficult one, which they’ll then determine they can’t do right now and because they can’t do it right now they’ll justify that as a reason to not do anything right now and then they will eat half a Domino’s pizza and blame their ever increasing weight gain on their terribly slow metabolism.
This is not a joke. It’s not me trying to be funny.
I honestly used to do things like this. It happens.
But that doesn’t mean it has to happen to you.
With that said, the simplest and easiest way to figure out how many calories you can eat per day without getting fatter is to use one of the hundreds of online calorie calculators.
Are some of these online calorie calculators better than others?
Of course.
Is this method one hundred percent accurate?
Absolutely not.
But here’s the thing, nothing is going to be one hundred percent accurate in this regard. The amount of calories you burn today will be different than the amount of calories you burned yesterday. And they’ll be different than the amount you burn tomorrow.
If you sneeze tomorrow and didn’t sneeze today, then you’ll burn additional calories tomorrow because your body had to exert energy while sneezing. If you took a few stairs yesterday, or walked one more step than you did the previous day, or lifted an Amazon package, or any of a hundred things that change from day to day, then the calories that you burn would change in proportion to those different levels of activity.
So don’t worry about obtaining one hundred percent accuracy in regards to daily expenditure of your calories burned. Don’t let something that mundane prevent you from beginning. You only need to worry about getting yourself a baseline that is fairly accurate.
Here is the calorie calculator I used when I started my journey.
If your goal is to get in shape but you didn’t plug your info into the above calorie calculator and calculate how many calories you can eat to reach your goal, then go back up there and do it. Otherwise, why read any further.
I used to read and read and read and read, always learning but never doing. And that’s why it took me 44 years to reach my goal of getting in great shape and having a body that I like, rather than a body I hate.
Don’t make that mistake.
It sucks being out of shape and not liking yourself and not liking how you look.
Trust me, I know. So choose to be different.
Choose to not be normal.
Because normal is not what you want to aspire to be, it’s what you want to get away from.
Normal is the majority. And the majority of people will do nothing and then get nothing and then make excuses as to why they are getting nothing.
So be different.
And start.
And then be really different. And continue: day after day after day, rain or shine, on both the rare days when you actually feel like doing it, and especially on all the days when you don’t.
Anyhow, enough ranting. Plug your info into the calculator. It won’t hurt, I promise!
Moving on…
Once you’ve submitted your info into the calculator, you’ll see some numbers pop up. The two that will safely help you drop pounds are TDEE and RMR.
Let’s break those down.
TDEE stands for ‘Total Daily Energy Expenditure.’ This is the amount of energy (how many calories) your body expends each day. Essentially, this is your fuel gauge.
If you eat more calories than your TDEE, you will gain weight. If you eat less calories than your TDEE, you will lose weight.
It is honestly that simple.
Right now you may be wondering: ‘Well if it’s really that simple then why is everyone not doing this?’
And it’s because the hard part is not in knowing, it’s in doing – consistently.
But don’t worry, we’ll get to how to conquer consistent action later, but right now let’s roll through the other parameter that will help shrink your pant size: RMR.
RMR is your ‘Resting Metabolic Rate.’ This is the number of calories your body burns while you’re at rest. Otherwise known as your ‘keep me alive calories.’ These are the required calories your body needs to keep your heart beating, and your brain functioning, and your lungs inhaling/exhaling.
RMR has nothing to do with the calories you expend when you tug the sweatband on and beat feet on the treadmill. These RMR calories are being burned day and night, asleep or awake, twenty-four hours per day, seven days a week, all the freaking time.
So why is RMR important and why should you care about it?
Again, these are the calories needed to keep you alive and healthy. If you consistently eat a lower calorie amount than your body needs to function, then your body will cease to function.
So if your body needs a minimum of 1,200 calories per day to ensure your vital organs are able to function and you instead consistently eat 1,000 calories per day, then your body will not have enough energy to keep you alive and healthy.
Your body won’t have the fuel it needs to keep your heart beating and your brain functioning and your lungs breathing.
Don’t let this freak you out too much though, because this process of self destruction would take weeks, months, years. If you fast for a day or two every now and again, then good on you. But in general, it’s a good idea to consistently give your body at least the minimum fuel it requires everyday.
My Real World Numbers.
Now that we know a quick and easy method to determine the amount of calories needed to guarantee weight loss, let’s jump into a real world example of how this all comes together.
Here’s what my own personal TDEE and RMR looked like when I began:
I’m 5′ 7″ and was 43 years old and weighed 177.2 pounds.
As for my goal weight: at one point I had read an internet article about fitness, and the guy in the article was also 5’7″. But unlike me, he was ripped at 160 pounds with something like 10 percent body fat.
The picture of that guy became a baseline dream of what I believed to be possible. It was what I wanted to look like.
He was 5’7″.
I am 5’7″.
In hopes of having a body like that guy, my goal weight became 160 pounds, but no way I ever thought I could get and maintain 10 percent body fat. Which is funny because today I weigh 140 and my body fat is 5.7 percent.
I say this to let you know that you can obtain and surpass your wildest goals. You may not fully believe that right now, and that’s okay. But you need to believe that you can do something easy for a long time. Because that is truly, honestly the key to fitness. That is the secret of it all. It’s what makes a weirdo a Weirdo. Just start and then stick with it consistently. Every single day. Click here to read more about how to create and stick to your streaks.
Anyway… for my activity level I put ‘Moderately Active’ because I was beginning to workout at the time. I was walking. I would get out and about. My day job does require me to kinda sorta sometimes do something that halfway resembles moving around.
After I entered all that info into the above calorie calculator I got a TDEE of 2,488.
This means if I ate more than 2,488 calories during the day, I would get fatter. Simple as that.
My RMR was 1,659.
So if I consistently ate less than 1,659 calories per day, then I would be begging for health concerns. And these potential health concerns would be caused by my body having too little fuel. My body would not have enough fuel to provide me with the resources needed to properly function.
Armed with my TDEE and RMR, I knew my calorie range fell somewhere between 1,659 – 2,488.
If I ate anywhere between those calorie limits I would lose weight.
At this point, most people (me included) would jump at the lowest number (the RMR) and say, “Okay I’m gonna eat the least amount of calories possible because I need to lose (10) (20) (30) (40) pounds like yesterday.”
I did this and it is a mistake. You’ll most likely fail. It will put you in a place I call ‘The Fat Boy Rollercoaster,’ and ladies, don’t worry, this ride does not discriminate. There is most definitely a line for ‘The Fat Girl Rollercoaster’ as well.
If you’re unfamiliar, this is how the ‘The Fat Boy Rollercoaster’ works:
You get all amped up to lose weight. There’s fire in your belly and motivation in your veins. You can eat healthy, you know you can. “Bring it!” you whisper scream at yourself in the mirror.
And then you suffer through low calorie meals that you don’t much like. Day after day you do this. And you begin to lose weight.
Yahhhh!!!
And you reach your goal!!!
Whoo Hoo!!!!
I did it, you think. I really, really did it.
And because you did it, you reached your goal, then you stop eating the things you don’t very much like to eat.
You go back to being a normal person.
Eating with your friends. Eating with your family.
And that means you start eating just like your friends. And just like your family.
And then the rollercoaster of weight begins to go back up. Click. Click. Click. Click. Click. And your pants suddenly don’t fit anymore. Your chubby thighs are back. And then you’re exactly where you started, ashamed and completely disgusted with yourself all over again.
I’ve been on this ride so many times I should be a manager at Fatboy Amusement Park.
If you’ve ever experienced this, you know how frustrating and disheartening it can be.
It will literally steal your hope. Leaving you to wonder if long term fitness is ever really possible for you.
It is.
Possible for you.
You just have to stay off the Fatboy Rollercoaster.
Here’s what worked for me…
The ‘Fat Boy Rollercoaster’ Survival Guide
Okay, so how do you avoid looping around on Fatboy Rollercoaster for all eternity?
The answer:
You don’t get on Fatboy Rollercoaster in the first place.
Yes, I’m serious.
Let me explain…
This depressing cycle of eating ‘healthy,’ then reaching our goal, then getting fat all over again is caused when we go on a restrictive diet that we don’t enjoy and then we come off the diet and start eating to our heart’s content again.
You may be thinking, ‘Yep, knew it, the problem is the diet.’
And in a sense, you’re right, because if you could find a diet that you didn’t hate, one that you instead actually enjoyed, then you would be able to stick with that enjoyable diet forever and ever and everything would be summertime happiness in this place I call lasagna and cheeseburger heaven.
So… yes, there is some validity to this notion that everything is the ‘diets’ fault.
But here’s the weird thing, that devil diet that didn’t work for you…the one you tried and hated…the one that seemed impossible to stick with…the one that gave you stomach problems and headaches and made you feel blah.
That same diet worked for some people.
It is still working for some people.
And the reason this diet (that you hated) is working so well for these other people is because it is not a diet for them.
You hated it.
But they enjoy it.
To you, it’s a diet, it’s temporary until you reach your goal, it’s a struggle, it’s about using sheer willpower to eat a certain way.
To them, it’s how they like to eat. It’s permanent. It’s not called a diet, it’s only called lunch. Or dinner. Or my usual snack.
Dieting isn’t dieting if it’s permanent and if it’s how you like to eat all the time.
So the real problem is not necessarily ‘The Diet’ but rather it is ‘Dieting’ in general.
Dieting is temporary and that’s a problem because you need a long term permanent solution to eating how you like to eat while losing and then staying in a weight range that makes you happy.
Knowing that, I chose to eat foods that I like.
The caveat: I had to either find the healthiest versions of those foods that I like, or I had to figure out a way to create the healthiest versions of those foods.
I would recommend that you do the same.
But I Don’t Want To Eat The Same Foods Over And Over And Over And Over…
For some, this whole idea of finding the foods you like, making them healthier, and then primarily eating only those foods may sound terrible because who wants to eat the same foods over and over and over again all the time.
I felt this same way, but then I realized that I was already eating the same 10-20 meals over and over, each and every day. The bulk of my meals were primarily coming from Papa John’s, or Five Guys, or Taco Bell, and from a handful of other places.
So I was already eating cheeseburgers, and tacos, and pizza, and lasagna over and over but I was eating the Fatboy versions of those foods.
Which was a big problem.
To fix this problem I had to figure out how I could make those same meals healthier so the calories could come in lower than my TDEE.
To this day, it’s still primarily cheeseburgers, and tacos, and pizza, and lasagna going into my belly, but it’s now a heathier version.
So if you are reading this because you are serious about losing weight, then your homework at this point should be to pay attention to what you eat, not to necessarily count the calories, but to get a good idea of what 10-20 meals you are already eating eighty percent of the time.
Then the goal is to make those same foods healthier, but still scrumptious.
That is the process I have used to lose forty pounds while eating lasagna, cheeseburgers, steaks, pasta, and several other meals that I love. It’s how I’m still maintaining my weight to this day.
As an example: I’m having a massive bowl of Chicken & Crawfish Gumbo tomorrow for lunch and then a seventeen ounce steak with rice and sweet peas and ketchup and a coke zero for dinner.
I’m already looking forward to it!
Yesterday I had a massive serving of Chicken Pot Pie Stew for lunch and then six hefty beef tacos for dinner. Full on with cheese and salsa and seasonings.
To me these are all great meals and even better, they all fall well under my TDEE so I also get to have my usual snacks of a candy bar, some chocolate raisins, a brownie and then some popcorn.
So that’s pretty much it.
Now you know exactly how I eat, but let’s go a little deeper and wrap all this up by jumping into the heart of the noodles and cheese where I’ll show you one of my actual meal plans that I used when I was losing weight.
Let’s Jump Into The Noodles & Cheese
As I mentioned earlier my TDEE was 2,488. So I needed to eat less than 2,488 calories per day to ensure I would lose weight.
I also needed to do this while eating foods that I enjoyed so that I could ensure I would stick to this eating plan for a long, long time.
Note: When I mention long, long time I’m not referring to a 30 day diet. None of this is a 90 day challenge. Think, ‘decade diet’ if you must think in terms of dieting.
By now, I’m assuming the secret is out and you know I like lasagna and cheeseburgers. Being that I love them so, I will use those as my examples.
I log the majority of my meals because I am a true and absolute weirdo, and I’ve been logging them for quite a while. During both the fat times when I was struggling to lose weight and I still log them now.
Anyhow… I just went back and looked at my very rudimentary food journal. November of 2022 is when I really began to start taking weight loss serious.
On November 14th, 2022 this is exactly what I ate for the day:
Breakfast:
Body Fortress Protein Shake: 180 Calories/ 40 grams protein
Lunch:
Stouffers Meatlovers Lasagna: 820 calories/ 39 grams protein
Dinner:
Half Pound 93% Lean Burger: 340 calories/ 46 grams protein
2 servings Ore-Ida Fries: 180 calories/ 04 grams protein
14g Kraft Mozzarella Cheese: 25 calories/ 04 grams protein
90g Heinz Ketchup: 106 calories/ 00 grams protein
Daily Total: 1,771 Calories/ 148 grams protein
I didn’t eat salad, or fruits, or fish, or avocados. I ate the foods I liked. But I made sure those foods would put my total daily calories at less than my TDEE.
And then I ate in a similar fashion every single day, finding more and more foods that I like to eat and then making them so they are low enough in calories to work with my plan.
I follow this process religiously.
And that is the other side of the equation.
Following your process.
Every single day.
No matter what.
Even if people think you are a weirdo.
Because being weird is what you want to be — being ‘just like everyone else’ is what you want to avoid.
I hope this helps you better achieve your fitness goals, but please keep in mind that this is what worked for me. And you and I are different people. With different tastes, different likes, different dislikes.
And this is obviously fine. So if you’re grimacing right now and dreading eating this way then don’t do it. Instead, find a method that you enjoy and that you are confident you can consistently stick with for years and years.
There are a million methods out there. You just need to find the one that works perfectly for you.
I have created a ‘method’ collection, so if you are still searching for your perfect method then these are true and tried, time tested methods that have worked well for others. Steal one that you like and get started!
Please feel free to email me at the following email address if you have any questions, comments, or advice on how this article could be better: [email protected].
In honor of this article, guess what I’m having for lunch today!
You guessed it…
I’m having Stouffer’s microwave lasagna.
And you know what else…
Tomorrow morning I’ll weigh the same as I did this morning.
I won’t gain one single pound.
This evening I’ll have a half-pound cheeseburger with fries for dinner.
And in case you’re wondering, when I hit the scale tomorrow morning I still won’t weigh any more than I did this morning.
A candy bar, some chocolate covered raisins, a brownie, and some buttered popcorn will be my snacks today.
And I still won’t gain any additional weight.
Right now you may be thinking, ‘Uh huh. Keep eating like that and tell me how your pants fit in three months.’
You may be thinking I have some special genetics, or that I’m a high metabolism twenty year old. (I wish.)
You may be thinking it’s not possible to eat lasagna, then snack on popcorn and chocolate, then have a cheeseburger and fries for dinner, and still gain absolutely zero weight.
But the truth is that you can.
It is one hundred percent possible!
You can eat the foods you love and still get in the best shape of your life.
Don’t believe me?
I’m living proof.
Here’s a before and after pic of me, myself, and not Irene.
The picture on the left is when I was first beginning this fitness journey and the one on the right is a picture of me from a few weeks ago.
Trust me, I am no where close to being a twenty-year-old spring chicken.
I was 43 when I first started this fitness journey; I am 44 now.
And I promise you, I have no super high metabolism.
What I do have is a method that has helped me lose over 35 pounds of fat, gain a significant amount of muscle, and get in the absolute best shape of my life — all while eating foods that I actually enjoy.
But my journey is definitely not all cupcakes and sprinkles.
It took me years of searching, testing, failing before I figured out how to eat the foods I love and still get in the best shape of my life.
After this article I hope you choose to do the same!
Let’s get to it.
Are you losing weight today, gaining weight today, or staying the same weight today?
Quick question: let’s say I’m sitting on my couch watching Sports Center, and I’m munching on a salad and an avocado and I’m washing it all down with a great big glass of ice water — will I lose weight, gain weight, or stay the same weight when I hop on the scale tomorrow morning?
I’m guessing most people would think I’d lose weight eating a salad and an avocado.
Maybe a few would make an argument that I’d gain or stay the same weight.
But here’s the God-to-honest truth:
You don’t know.
You can’t.
Not with any certainty.
And the first reason you can’t realistically know the answer to this is because you don’t know how many calories I burn per day, and the second reason is because you don’t know how many calories I’m actually putting inside my body.
Sure, you’d know I was eating a salad.
And an avocado.
But here’s the thing:
You can still get fat eating salads and avocados and eggs and all the foods that we’ve always been told are ‘healthy.’
Now I’m not saying you should no longer eat salads or avocados or eggs or any of the foods we’ve always been told are healthy.
What I am saying is that in order to lose weight and get in great shape, we have to know which foods and how much of these foods we can actually eat before the balloon we call our bellies starts to expand.
Why?
Imagine this: you’re at a pizza restaurant with friends and you’re at that point where you’re thinking, ‘Hmmm, should I have one more slice?’
In today’s fairy tale you look down at your arm and there’s a handy dandy nifty little fuel gauge build right there into your body. Pretty neat, I know! Even better, it shows that your tank is only half full which means you’re good to eat another slice. You greedily grab another piece of Meat Lover’s Supreme and savor this cheesy gooey meaty delight, swallowing every last morsel. Then you look at your nifty fuel gauge again.
You’re three quarters full now.
Yessss! This means you can eat even more. So a few chicken wings go down your throat, two mozzarella sticks, a fudge brownie, and…yep…that did it. Your tank is now completely full. Blaaannkkhhhh Blaaannkkhhhh Blaaannkkhhh – that’s the overflow alarm going off. Even if you tried grubbing on one more tiny little loose piece of pepperoni then your throat would not allow it into your stomach.
You’d have to wait until some calories were burned and then there’d be more room in your tank. So you wait, and you walk; and your heart is beating (which burns calories), and your brain is thinking (which also burns calories), and your lungs are working, and so are your muscles, and all the while you are burning calories and before long it’s time to fill up again. This time maybe with the sweet nectar of Stouffer’s lasagna!
In all honesty, the above scenario would be a great way to live because we’d never have to worry about overeating or being overweight, but unfortunately we live in the real world and in the real world we don’t have a handy dandy nifty little fuel gauge built right there on our body.
Here in the real world most of us are completely clueless as to how much fuel we are putting inside our bodies at all.
People guesstimate.
Or… to put it more accurately, normal people guesstimate.
And 99.999999 percent of normal people are absolutely terrible at this.
But these normal people, which is the vast majority of the world, will justify their terribleness by blabbering on and on about how healthy they are eating. I’m eating fruits, they’ll say. Or, almonds. Or you’ll hear all about how yogurt is extremely healthy. As are lentils and lean meats and salads and oats.
And then they’ll eat and eat and eat these things, and have a large M&M Blizzard as a reward for dessert. And why not, they’ve earned it. I mean they’ve been eating healthy, right?
Riiiiiiggggghhhht???
These same normal people will say, “I’m doing the Keto diet.” Or, “I’m doing Paleo.” Or avocados have healthy fats. Or eggs have a lot of protein.
And that’s great!
Because all those things are good and true.
But here’s another truth: you can still get fat on Keto and on Paleo and by eating avocados and eggs and any other foods out there.
You will get fat if you eat more calories than your body can burn.
The diet doesn’t matter. Nor does the food type. Nor does the time of day you eat.
What matters is this:
If you eat more calories than your body can burn, you will gain weight.
Period.
It’s that simple.
If you enjoy the Keto diet, then awesome. Keep doing the Keto diet, but to lose weight you must ensure that you are not eating more calories than your body can burn while on the keto diet.
Same with Paleo.
And Adkins.
Same with any other diet or eating preference.
The rules of all these different diets (like Keto or Paleo) are in place to encourage you to eat lower calorie foods so that you do not eat more than your body can burn.
Normal people have a hard time swallowing this. They think there is a magic in the Paleo diet. A magic in Keto, but there is no magic.
There is only math.
And the math looks like this:
If you eat 2,200 calories today but your body burns only 2,000 calories, then you will gain weight.
That extra 200 calories has to go somewhere.
And it goes into thunder thighs, love handles, and chubby chins.
However, if you eat 1,800 calories today and your body burns 2,000 calories, then you will lose weight.
Because your body needs those 2,000 calories for fuel, so if you’re not giving it all 2,000 when you eat, then it will steal what it needs from the thunder thighs, the love handles, and the chubby chin.
That’s it.
That’s how fat loss works.
So now that we know that eating more than our bodies can burn is what causes us to gain weight, the two key questions for weight loss become:
1.) How many calories does my body burn everyday? 2.) How many calories can I eat everyday to guarantee weight loss?
These were (and still are) the fundamental questions I had to answer before I structured an eating plan that would both guarantee I would lose weight and allow me to maintain my sanity.
Both are important!
So the first thing I did to ensure I could eat the foods I love (Hello Lasagna!) while still getting in great shape was to figure out how much I could realistically eat without getting fatter.
Basically, when was my tank full?
There’s a couple different ways to figure out the answer to this simple question, but keep in mind, you only need one to figure it out.
Normal people will research method after method and decide they need to do the most difficult one, which they’ll then determine they can’t do right now and because they can’t do it right now they’ll justify that as a reason to not do anything right now and then they will eat half a Domino’s pizza and blame their ever increasing weight gain on their terribly slow metabolism.
This is not a joke. It’s not me trying to be funny.
I honestly used to do things like this. It happens.
But that doesn’t mean it has to happen to you.
With that said, the simplest and easiest way to figure out how many calories you can eat per day without getting fatter is to use one of the hundreds of online calorie calculators.
Are some of these online calorie calculators better than others?
Of course.
Is this method one hundred percent accurate?
Absolutely not.
But here’s the thing, nothing is going to be one hundred percent accurate in this regard. The amount of calories you burn today will be different than the amount of calories you burned yesterday. And they’ll be different than the amount you burn tomorrow.
If you sneeze tomorrow and didn’t sneeze today, then you’ll burn additional calories tomorrow because your body had to exert energy while sneezing. If you took a few stairs yesterday, or walked one more step than you did the previous day, or lifted an Amazon package, or any of a hundred things that change from day to day, then the calories that you burn would change in proportion to those different levels of activity.
So don’t worry about obtaining one hundred percent accuracy in regards to daily expenditure of your calories burned. Don’t let something that mundane prevent you from beginning. You only need to worry about getting yourself a baseline that is fairly accurate.
Here is the calorie calculator I used when I started my journey.
If your goal is to get in shape but you didn’t plug your info into the above calorie calculator and calculate how many calories you can eat to reach your goal, then go back up there and do it. Otherwise, why read any further.
I used to read and read and read and read, always learning but never doing. And that’s why it took me 44 years to reach my goal of getting in great shape and having a body that I like, rather than a body I hate.
Don’t make that mistake.
It sucks being out of shape and not liking yourself and not liking how you look.
Trust me, I know. So choose to be different.
Choose to not be normal.
Because normal is not what you want to aspire to be, it’s what you want to get away from.
Normal is the majority. And the majority of people will do nothing and then get nothing and then make excuses as to why they are getting nothing.
So be different.
And start.
And then be really different. And continue: day after day after day, rain or shine, on both the rare days when you actually feel like doing it, and especially on all the days when you don’t.
Anyhow, enough ranting. Plug your info into the calculator. It won’t hurt, I promise!
Moving on…
Once you’ve submitted your info into the calculator, you’ll see some numbers pop up. The two that will safely help you drop pounds are TDEE and RMR.
Let’s break those down.
TDEE stands for ‘Total Daily Energy Expenditure.’ This is the amount of energy (how many calories) your body expends each day. Essentially, this is your fuel gauge.
If you eat more calories than your TDEE, you will gain weight. If you eat less calories than your TDEE, you will lose weight.
It is honestly that simple.
Right now you may be wondering: ‘Well if it’s really that simple then why is everyone not doing this?’
And it’s because the hard part is not in knowing, it’s in doing – consistently.
But don’t worry, we’ll get to how to conquer consistent action later, but right now let’s roll through the other parameter that will help shrink your pant size: RMR.
RMR is your ‘Resting Metabolic Rate.’ This is the number of calories your body burns while you’re at rest. Otherwise known as your ‘keep me alive calories.’ These are the required calories your body needs to keep your heart beating, and your brain functioning, and your lungs inhaling/exhaling.
RMR has nothing to do with the calories you expend when you tug the sweatband on and beat feet on the treadmill. These RMR calories are being burned day and night, asleep or awake, twenty-four hours per day, seven days a week, all the freaking time.
So why is RMR important and why should you care about it?
Again, these are the calories needed to keep you alive and healthy. If you consistently eat a lower calorie amount than your body needs to function, then your body will cease to function.
So if your body needs a minimum of 1,200 calories per day to ensure your vital organs are able to function and you instead consistently eat 1,000 calories per day, then your body will not have enough energy to keep you alive and healthy.
Your body won’t have the fuel it needs to keep your heart beating and your brain functioning and your lungs breathing.
Don’t let this freak you out too much though, because this process of self destruction would take weeks, months, years. If you fast for a day or two every now and again, then good on you. But in general, it’s a good idea to consistently give your body at least the minimum fuel it requires everyday.
My Real World Numbers.
Now that we know a quick and easy method to determine the amount of calories needed to guarantee weight loss, let’s jump into a real world example of how this all comes together.
Here’s what my own personal TDEE and RMR looked like when I began:
I’m 5′ 7″ and was 43 years old and weighed 177.2 pounds.
As for my goal weight: at one point I had read an internet article about fitness, and the guy in the article was also 5’7″. But unlike me, he was ripped at 160 pounds with something like 10 percent body fat.
The picture of that guy became a baseline dream of what I believed to be possible. It was what I wanted to look like.
He was 5’7″.
I am 5’7″.
In hopes of having a body like that guy, my goal weight became 160 pounds, but no way I ever thought I could get and maintain 10 percent body fat. Which is funny because today I weigh 140 and my body fat is 5.7 percent.
I say this to let you know that you can obtain and surpass your wildest goals. You may not fully believe that right now, and that’s okay. But you need to believe that you can do something easy for a long time. Because that is truly, honestly the key to fitness. That is the secret of it all. It’s what makes a weirdo a Weirdo. Just start and then stick with it consistently. Every single day. Click here to read more about how to create and stick to your streaks.
Anyway… for my activity level I put ‘Moderately Active’ because I was beginning to workout at the time. I was walking. I would get out and about. My day job does require me to kinda sorta sometimes do something that halfway resembles moving around.
After I entered all that info into the above calorie calculator I got a TDEE of 2,488.
This means if I ate more than 2,488 calories during the day, I would get fatter. Simple as that.
My RMR was 1,659.
So if I consistently ate less than 1,659 calories per day, then I would be begging for health concerns. And these potential health concerns would be caused by my body having too little fuel. My body would not have enough fuel to provide me with the resources needed to properly function.
Armed with my TDEE and RMR, I knew my calorie range fell somewhere between 1,659 – 2,488.
If I ate anywhere between those calorie limits I would lose weight.
At this point, most people (me included) would jump at the lowest number (the RMR) and say, “Okay I’m gonna eat the least amount of calories possible because I need to lose (10) (20) (30) (40) pounds like yesterday.”
I did this and it is a mistake. You’ll most likely fail. It will put you in a place I call ‘The Fat Boy Rollercoaster,’ and ladies, don’t worry, this ride does not discriminate. There is most definitely a line for ‘The Fat Girl Rollercoaster’ as well.
If you’re unfamiliar, this is how the ‘The Fat Boy Rollercoaster’ works:
You get all amped up to lose weight. There’s fire in your belly and motivation in your veins. You can eat healthy, you know you can. “Bring it!” you whisper scream at yourself in the mirror.
And then you suffer through low calorie meals that you don’t much like. Day after day you do this. And you begin to lose weight.
Yahhhh!!!
And you reach your goal!!!
Whoo Hoo!!!!
I did it, you think. I really, really did it.
And because you did it, you reached your goal, then you stop eating the things you don’t very much like to eat.
You go back to being a normal person.
Eating with your friends. Eating with your family.
And that means you start eating just like your friends. And just like your family.
And then the rollercoaster of weight begins to go back up. Click. Click. Click. Click. Click. And your pants suddenly don’t fit anymore. Your chubby thighs are back. And then you’re exactly where you started, ashamed and completely disgusted with yourself all over again.
I’ve been on this ride so many times I should be a manager at Fatboy Amusement Park.
If you’ve ever experienced this, you know how frustrating and disheartening it can be.
It will literally steal your hope. Leaving you to wonder if long term fitness is ever really possible for you.
It is.
Possible for you.
You just have to stay off the Fatboy Rollercoaster.
Here’s what worked for me…
The ‘Fat Boy Rollercoaster’ Survival Guide
Okay, so how do you avoid looping around on Fatboy Rollercoaster for all eternity?
The answer:
You don’t get on Fatboy Rollercoaster in the first place.
Yes, I’m serious.
Let me explain…
This depressing cycle of eating ‘healthy,’ then reaching our goal, then getting fat all over again is caused when we go on a restrictive diet that we don’t enjoy and then we come off the diet and start eating to our heart’s content again.
You may be thinking, ‘Yep, knew it, the problem is the diet.’
And in a sense, you’re right, because if you could find a diet that you didn’t hate, one that you instead actually enjoyed, then you would be able to stick with that enjoyable diet forever and ever and everything would be summertime happiness in this place I call lasagna and cheeseburger heaven.
So… yes, there is some validity to this notion that everything is the ‘diets’ fault.
But here’s the weird thing, that devil diet that didn’t work for you…the one you tried and hated…the one that seemed impossible to stick with…the one that gave you stomach problems and headaches and made you feel blah.
That same diet worked for some people.
It is still working for some people.
And the reason this diet (that you hated) is working so well for these other people is because it is not a diet for them.
You hated it.
But they enjoy it.
To you, it’s a diet, it’s temporary until you reach your goal, it’s a struggle, it’s about using sheer willpower to eat a certain way.
To them, it’s how they like to eat. It’s permanent. It’s not called a diet, it’s only called lunch. Or dinner. Or my usual snack.
Dieting isn’t dieting if it’s permanent and if it’s how you like to eat all the time.
So the real problem is not necessarily ‘The Diet’ but rather it is ‘Dieting’ in general.
Dieting is temporary and that’s a problem because you need a long term permanent solution to eating how you like to eat while losing and then staying in a weight range that makes you happy.
Knowing that, I chose to eat foods that I like.
The caveat: I had to either find the healthiest versions of those foods that I like, or I had to figure out a way to create the healthiest versions of those foods.
I would recommend that you do the same.
But I Don’t Want To Eat The Same Foods Over And Over And Over And Over…
For some, this whole idea of finding the foods you like, making them healthier, and then primarily eating only those foods may sound terrible because who wants to eat the same foods over and over and over again all the time.
I felt this same way, but then I realized that I was already eating the same 10-20 meals over and over, each and every day. The bulk of my meals were primarily coming from Papa John’s, or Five Guys, or Taco Bell, and from a handful of other places.
So I was already eating cheeseburgers, and tacos, and pizza, and lasagna over and over but I was eating the Fatboy versions of those foods.
Which was a big problem.
To fix this problem I had to figure out how I could make those same meals healthier so the calories could come in lower than my TDEE.
To this day, it’s still primarily cheeseburgers, and tacos, and pizza, and lasagna going into my belly, but it’s now a heathier version.
So if you are reading this because you are serious about losing weight, then your homework at this point should be to pay attention to what you eat, not to necessarily count the calories, but to get a good idea of what 10-20 meals you are already eating eighty percent of the time.
Then the goal is to make those same foods healthier, but still scrumptious.
That is the process I have used to lose forty pounds while eating lasagna, cheeseburgers, steaks, pasta, and several other meals that I love. It’s how I’m still maintaining my weight to this day.
As an example: I’m having a massive bowl of Chicken & Crawfish Gumbo tomorrow for lunch and then a seventeen ounce steak with rice and sweet peas and ketchup and a coke zero for dinner.
I’m already looking forward to it!
Yesterday I had a massive serving of Chicken Pot Pie Stew for lunch and then six hefty beef tacos for dinner. Full on with cheese and salsa and seasonings.
To me these are all great meals and even better, they all fall well under my TDEE so I also get to have my usual snacks of a candy bar, some chocolate raisins, a brownie and then some popcorn.
So that’s pretty much it.
Now you know exactly how I eat, but let’s go a little deeper and wrap all this up by jumping into the heart of the noodles and cheese where I’ll show you one of my actual meal plans that I used when I was losing weight.
Let’s Jump Into The Noodles & Cheese
As I mentioned earlier my TDEE was 2,488. So I needed to eat less than 2,488 calories per day to ensure I would lose weight.
I also needed to do this while eating foods that I enjoyed so that I could ensure I would stick to this eating plan for a long, long time.
Note: When I mention long, long time I’m not referring to a 30 day diet. None of this is a 90 day challenge. Think, ‘decade diet’ if you must think in terms of dieting.
By now, I’m assuming the secret is out and you know I like lasagna and cheeseburgers. Being that I love them so, I will use those as my examples.
I log the majority of my meals because I am a true and absolute weirdo, and I’ve been logging them for quite a while. During both the fat times when I was struggling to lose weight and I still log them now.
Anyhow… I just went back and looked at my very rudimentary food journal. November of 2022 is when I really began to start taking weight loss serious.
On November 14th, 2022 this is exactly what I ate for the day:
Breakfast:
Body Fortress Protein Shake: 180 Calories/ 40 grams protein
Lunch:
Stouffers Meatlovers Lasagna: 820 calories/ 39 grams protein
Dinner:
Half Pound 93% Lean Burger: 340 calories/ 46 grams protein
2 servings Ore-Ida Fries: 180 calories/ 04 grams protein
14g Kraft Mozzarella Cheese: 25 calories/ 04 grams protein
90g Heinz Ketchup: 106 calories/ 00 grams protein
Daily Total: 1,771 Calories/ 148 grams protein
I didn’t eat salad, or fruits, or fish, or avocados. I ate the foods I liked. But I made sure those foods would put my total daily calories at less than my TDEE.
And then I ate in a similar fashion every single day, finding more and more foods that I like to eat and then making them so they are low enough in calories to work with my plan.
I follow this process religiously.
And that is the other side of the equation.
Following your process.
Every single day.
No matter what.
Even if people think you are a weirdo.
Because being weird is what you want to be — being ‘just like everyone else’ is what you want to avoid.
I hope this helps you better achieve your fitness goals, but please keep in mind that this is what worked for me. And you and I are different people. With different tastes, different likes, different dislikes.
And this is obviously fine. So if you’re grimacing right now and dreading eating this way then don’t do it. Instead, find a method that you enjoy and that you are confident you can consistently stick with for years and years.
There are a million methods out there. You just need to find the one that works perfectly for you.
I have created a ‘method’ collection, so if you are still searching for your perfect method then these are true and tried, time tested methods that have worked well for others. Steal one that you like and get started!
Please feel free to email me at the following email address if you have any questions, comments, or advice on how this article could be better: [email protected].
On first thought, I was gonna start this article by briefly explaining how humans gain and lose weight but then I changed my mind because I decided you probably already know how humans gain and lose weight, and I didn’t want to waste your time.
But then I went to a work conference in California.
This was a cyber forensics conference, so I was surrounded by a bunch of techy nerd types.
Super smart people.
All of them.
Anyhow, here’s the biggest takeaway I got from the conference: techy nerds are smart at techy nerd things but not so smart when it comes to fitness and weight loss things.
A quick example: I mentioned to one guy that I had stuffed my rice cooker into my suitcase and brought it with me (I bring the old girl everywhere!) and he was dumbfounded that someone could eat rice and still be in good shape.
I was dumbfounded that he thought you couldn’t. I love rice. I eat it nearly every night with dinner.
Another guy was one hundred percent convinced you can’t eat carbs and still lose weight.
Again…whaaaaat?!
I love carbs. I eat lasagna, spaghetti with meatballs, and pancakes all the time.
So let’s clear the air and set things straight.
It’s not carbs, sugars, fats, or even your level of physical activity that primarily dictates whether you gain or lose weight.
It’s calories.
Calories, calories, calories, calories, calories.
If you’re one of my fellow nerd friends from the conference then listen up because here’s the quick and dirty version of ‘Weight Loss for Super Smart & Nerdy Tech Dummies’.
The Weirdo Guide To How Weight Loss Actually Works!
I’m sure many of you already know this, but your body needs lasagna food to properly function.
As humans, food is our fuel. It’s our power source. It’s our battery pack that energizes our muscles, fuels our brains, pumps our hearts.
Food keeps us alive. It provides all the required nutrients our body needs to properly function.
And because our bodies constantly need food to properly function, that means we have to keep shoving all kinds of ketchup covered slop in our hungry little mouths.
It’s a tough life, I know!
Switching gears, think of your cellphone for a second.
When you’re sitting on the toilet using your phone to scroll through Instagram, or to call your mom, or to text pics of yesterday’s food to your best friend, your phone is using up energy.
More specifically, it is using roughly one kilowatt of energy for every hour you use it.
So if you burn through 10 kilowatts of your phone’s energy, then your battery would be low and you’d need a recharge.
You’d plug your phone into the wall and charge it up, replenishing the power with 10 more kilowatts of electricity.
Food and our bodies work in a similar fashion.
Right this very second you are (hopefully) breathing, and you’re reading, and your brain is processing, and there are about a million other tasks your body is doing, all of which require energy.
Every single second, your body is using up energy. Whether you are asleep or awake, it does not matter. Energy is still getting used. If you’re breathing, your body is using energy, and as your energy levels get used, you need to eventually replenish that energy.
But instead of charging our bodies with electricity (do NOT try this!) we replenish our bodies with calories, which is a form of energy that comes from the foods we eat.
A calorie is simply a measurement of heat energy. More specifically, one calorie is the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius.
As an example, if our body needs 2,000 calories a day in order to keep us breathing, and thinking, and moving, and functioning, then we would need to replenish our body with 2,000 calories per day.
Most of you are probably aware of this. For many of you, it is not the knowledge of how fat loss works that you need, it’s the application of how to make fat loss happen.
It’s the doing, not the knowing.
But for those not aware of how fat loss works, let’s keep learning before we dive into all the ninja methods of how to make fat disappear forever.
Back to our example…if our body needs 2,000 calories per day to properly function but we eat 2,500 calories, those extra 500 calories must go somewhere.
And they go into our thunder thighs and latch onto our double chins.
They turn into fat.
Our bodies store these extra calories as fat for the same reason you store snacks in your pantry. Because one day, if times get tough and food gets tight, they will be needed.
And that’s how fat happens.
By consistently eating more calories than our bodies can burn.
Now to lose weight, we would do the exact opposite. If our body needs 2,000 calories a day in order to keep us breathing, and thinking, and moving, and functioning, then we would need to replenish our body with less than it needs.
Our bodies would then have to dig though its fat pantry and use some of those stored fat calories that it placed on our bulging bellies and flabby arms so that they could be used as energy to keep us breathing, and thinking, and moving, and functioning.
It’s as simple as that.
If you eat more calories than your body burns, you gain weight.
If you eat less calories than your body burns, you lose weight.
Every single fad diet in the world (and yes, this includes Paleo, Keto, Atkins, Intermediate Fasting, and any other diet imaginable) works on this same principle.
The primary function of all diets is to create a system where you eat less calories than your body burns.
As an example, let’s take a look at the Paleo Diet, also known as The Caveman Diet. It essentially consists of only eating foods our ancient ancestors could obtain by hunting and gathering. Things such as fruits, vegetables, lean meats, fish, eggs, nuts and seeds. The primary purpose of this diet is to deter you from eating all those other high calorie/processed foods like fruity pebbles, donuts, and chocolate molden lava cake. The theory is that if you don’t eat all those high calorie foods, then you won’t end up eating more calories than your body can burn.
Keto, Atkins, Mediterranean, Low-Carb, and many other diets have their own specific set of rules, but the underlying purpose of these diets remain the same: eat less calories than your body burns.
That’s it.
That’s the magic to weight loss.
It’s being in a calorie deficit.
To lose weight, all you need to worry about is calories.
There’s no point complicating it and fretting about fats, or carbs, or ketons, or macro this and micro that.
CALORIES!
Now I’m not knocking on any one diet; look, if one or more of them work for you and you can stick to one of those diet methods consistently, then you should definitely do it!
The problem is that a lot of people (myself included) are not able to consistently stick with these popular fad diets.
And by consistently, I am not referring to a thirty or ninety-day challenge. I’m talking decades, not days. Can you stick to one of these popular diet methods for the next five years? The next ten? For the rest of your life? If so, do that. If not, move on.
As I mentioned earlier, the true problem for most people isn’t that they don’t know how weight loss works. Instead, the problem is in finding a method of eating that allows for a caloric deficit while also being enjoyable enough to be maintained for a long enough time period to see consistent results.
The true and honest reason you are having trouble losing weight is because you are eating more calories than your body can burn, and you are eating more calories than your body can burn because of one of these three reasons:
You know you are overeating, but you don’t care that you are overeating.
You do not know when or if you are overeating.
You know you are overeating but can’t seem to muster up the willpower to stop overeating.
Let’s tackle each of these issues individually so we can pinpoint which issue applies specifically to you and then we can determine a viable solution.
1.) You Know You Are Overeating But You Don’t Care That You Are Overeating.
If you know you are overeating, but you do not care that you are overeating then I assume you have already made the decision to prioritize your current eating habits over that of your health. You have decided the sacrifice of making intentional changes to your lifestyle is not worth the goal of losing weight and transforming your body.
Make no mistake, there’s nothing wrong with this decision.
This is nothing to be frustrated or ashamed about.
Good on you for being honest with yourself, rather than lying to yourself over and over on what you intend to do but then never actually doing it. Be happy in your decision and be content and satisfied with yourself and your body exactly as you are!
Fitness and weight loss is not for everyone and that is okay, however, unfortunately, I do not foresee any information past this point as being beneficial to your journey. However, I wish you the best on all future endeavors. In the future, if your priorities change, then I am happy to help you reach your weight loss and fitness goals in any way that I can.
2.) You Do Not Know If You Are Overeating.
For everyday normal machines, we have so many convenient little gadgets and gizmos and widgets.
Need to know your car’s fuel level? A nifty little gauge makes it quick and easy to check.
Is your car running low on fuel? A persistent dinging alarm will notify you.
Getting close to overfilling your car’s fuel tank? A sensor will automatically click-stop the gas pump.
For our bodies on the other hand…there are no fuel gauges, no alarms, no automatic shutoffs to prevent overeating.
We get hungry, or bored, or stressed, and we eat.
And then we eat a little more…
And then we eat just one more cookie…
And we drink one more soda.
And the next thing you know, our pants are too tight.
We’ve gotten fat!
How in the heck did that happen?
As you now know, it happened by consistently overfilling the tank.
Which reminds me of an interesting fact regarding normies. Do you wanna hear something crazy?
If you were to ask a hundred everyday normal average Americans how much fuel the gas tank in their car holds, fifty out of a hundred would know the answer.
Half.
Fifty percent of people.
But if you were to ask those same hundred people how many calories they can eat before they begin to gain weight, no more than five would know that answer.
Five people.
So only a measly five percent of people know how much lasagna can go down their throats before they begin to get fat.
Here’s the truth, the vast majority of people treat their vehicles with more respect than they treat their very own bodies.
Sad, but true.
But you and I, we’re the odd balls, the Weirdos, the ones who have decided to be different.
And a big part of being different is knowing the answer to that one question that a whopping ninety-five percent of Americans do not even care to know the answer to.
How much food can you eat before you start getting fat?
A few weeks ago, one of my coworkers asked me what I was eating to stay in such good shape.
“Lasagna and Coke Zeros,” I replied.
His response…
He chuckled and fired back with, “Said no one ever.”
He completely did not believe me. He thought I was playing around, that I was joking.
But here’s the truth.
You can eat the foods you love and still get in the best shape of your life.
You absolutely can.
There’s no secret to it at all.
There’s no magic.
There’s only math.
With that said, first I want to show you exactly how I ate when I was in ‘weight loss’ mode. (I lost over forty pounds of fat eating like this!) And then I’ll show you how I have progressed to where I’m at now in my eating habits.
But before we begin, let’s address the nagging fear that you and many others are already bracing to hear. It comes in two words. They may be the most frightful two words in the history of humanity. They’re the words the boogieman whispers under your bed at night.
Now before you run and scream in horror, I get it. I hear your concerns and skepticism. You may be thinking you’re not gonna be able to count calories all the time. Well…take a breath, because you don’t have to. I don’t count calories all the time either. You may be thinking you’re not gonna be the lame duck at a restaurant doing calorie math on a calculator when you’re with friends and family.
I get it.
No one wants to be the psycho that keeps hassling the waiter: “Hey! Uh…excuse me again, how many calories are in these mashed potatoes?!”
You don’t need to go to any of those extremes.
Remember, our goal is to make this entire process as easy as possible, because, again, your brain will revolt if we make the food too restrictive or the process of tracking calories too cumbersome.
Both your subconscious brain and your conscious goals must be happy and in agreement with one another.
Please stick with me here.
I know counting calories sounds like a pain, but it is much easier than you think.
Moving on.
For me personally, before I lost any weight, I had to figure out how much I could eat. How much was too much? I needed to know how many calories I could put in my mouth before I started gaining any more weight. Basically, how much would my tank hold before my body received more calories than it could burn and then had no choice but to start storing these calories as excess fat.
Here’s the bad news: you will never get a completely scientific fail proof number for this.
As we discussed earlier, the number of calories your body needs are determined by how many calories your body burns. And your body burns a different amount of calories every single day. This is based on a whole host of factors, which includes how active you are throughout the day.
But even if you are the most boring bee in the hive, and all you do every single day is wake up, eat two bowls of Fruity Pebbles, watch Youtube videos until lunch, eat Lasagna, watch Netflix until dinner, eat a cheeseburger with fries, and then go to bed, your body will still burn a different amount of calories day-by-day.
Even though you do the same activities every single day there is always some variance that will cause your body to use more or less energy than it did the day before. Maybe you take a few extra breaths one day, maybe you take an extra bathroom break one day, maybe you walk to the mailbox one day, maybe you yawn, burp, fart, hiccup, whatever…all these things require your body to use energy.
But now the good news: you don’t need to come up with a completely scientific fail proof number of how many calories your body burns every day.
You only need a round-about-kinda-close number, which is great because not all us Weirdos are calorie accountants and math nerds.
When I started on this journey, I ended up using one of the many online body composition calculators. They’re quick and easy and give us a roundabout number of how many calories our bodies typically burn in a day.
There are literally thousands of these calculators on the interwebs, but this one actually ended up working pretty well for me. Here’s how it works.
You’ll see this screen when you get to the webpage.
Enter your data and click on ‘Calculate.’
A screen like this will then be displayed:
The only two numbers you really need to pay attention to are TDEE and RMR.
TDEE stands for ‘Total Daily Energy Expenditure,’ which is just a fancy pants way of saying this is the number of calories your body burns every day.
Essentially, TDEE is your fuel tank level. It’s how many calories you can put in your mouth before your body begins to overfill and is then forced to store those excess calories as fat.
Again, is this number one hundred percent accurate?
Absolutely not.
But that’s okay because we only need it to be relatively close.
You’ll see in my above example that my TDEE is 2,441. Based on that number, if I were to eat 2,442 calories then 2,441 of those calories would be used by my body as energy but that one extra calorie would not be needed and would be stored somewhere on my body as fat.
If I were to eat 2,451 calories and my TDEE is 2,441, then 10 calories would not be needed for energy and would be stored as fat.
If you’re wondering, it takes 3,500 calories to create one pound of weight gain. And the average person gains five pounds per year. This means the average normie is typically eating 17,500 extra calories per year.
Are you doing the same?
Are you lounging on the donut pool floatie at Camp Normal?
To answer this, let’s revisit the underlying question of this entire section:
Are you overeating? How can you tell?
In all honesty, there are two sure-fire guaranteed methods to establish whether you are eating more calories that your body is able to burn. One method is by counting the calories you are eating. Today, if you were to count every single calorie that goes into your mouth and that number is higher than your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE), then you are overeating. That would mean the number of calories you are putting in your mouth are more calories than your body can burn.
But, if you like, we can skip all that effort and determine if you are overeating by being honest with this one simple question:
Are you currently overweight and trying to lose weight?
If your answer is yes, then you are overeating.
It’s honestly as simple as that. If you are overweight, it’s because you’re eating more calories than your body is able to burn.
It’s easy to shy away from this, to deny it, to blame genetics, or thyroid problems, or a slow metabolism, or low willpower, or a host of other things, but when all the excuses are boiled down and drained from the pot all that is left is this: if you are overweight then you are eating more calories than your body can burn.
That is how weight gain occurs.
You may not think you are overeating. You may even be counting your calories religiously and ensuring that the calories you eat are less than your TDEE.
Even while doing that, you may still be gaining weight.
If that is the case, then either your TDEE is inaccurate, or some of the nutrition labels from the foods you are eating are inaccurate (which is not entirely uncommon), or there are some calories you are accidently forgetting to include in your calculation (ketchup, cooking oils, sodas, alcohol, etc.)
But the one accurate thing we know for certain is that if you are gaining weight, it’s because you are taking in too many calories.
Now the question is, what to do about it.
Again, like we discussed in the previous chapter, you have three different options.
1.) The first is to do nothing. You can simply continue to eat as you normally eat while continuing to try all the popular fad diets. With this option, you’ll get what you’ve always gotten. You’ll lose a little weight, feel pretty good about yourself, then gain the weight back, feel pretty terrible about yourself. You’ll stay in this perpetual state of frustration, where you cycle through periods of being fat and tired and out of shape. Where nothing seems to work, no matter how hard you try. Eventually the years will pass and you’ll either change your mind and decide to start eating different or one day you’ll completely give up and just accept all your excuses and justifications as reality (that you can’t lose weight because you’re too old, or because you weren’t born with enough self-disciple, or because you’re genetically inept). If you accept those excuses as truth, then you’ll stay fat and tired and out of shape, but you will finally have accepted it and will stop putting in anymore effort to combat it. Essentially, you would have wasted time, energy, and frustration in a failed attempt at reaching your goal of looking, feeling, and being your best self.
2.) The second option is to commit to change. With this option, you realize that if you are going to reach your goal of weight loss and fitness then you are going to have to start eating less calories than your body burns. This doesn’t mean you have to eat less food; it means you have to eat less calories. You are going to have to mix up your eating habits. You’re going to have to be more conscious of what goes in your mouth. This doesn’t mean you have to eat chickpeas, salmon, and salads all the time, but it does mean you’re going to have to make some strategic choices about when that Domino’s pizza goes down your throat and how much of it you’re going to eat. Once you make this decision and begin to implement these new habits, you will begin to lose weight, you’ll have more energy, more motivation, your clothes will fit better, you’ll look better, you’ll feel stronger, you’ll have more self-confidence, more ambition, you’ll sleep better, you’ll find that you have a renewed level of self-respect for what you have accomplished.
3.) The third option is knowing that you will have to eat less calories than your body burns but making the conscious decision to not make that sacrifice. Essentially, you decide the goal is just not worth it. You decide to stay as you are. With this choice, you accept it. You accept that you will gain weight on pace with everyone else, with all the normies, which on average is five pounds per year. You accept that you are going to buy bigger clothes year after year. And in all honesty, other than the obvious health concerns of obesity, in no way am I saying this is an option you should not choose.
Again: the ultimate goal is happiness.
If eating how you always eat, while staying at your current weight is making your life better than changing your eating habits and getting in good shape, then maybe that is what you should do.
Either way, you need to decide on how you want to live and on what would make you the happiest.
For me personally, as much as I love food and as much as I love to eat and as much as I don’t much enjoy exercising, I could not accept being overweight and tired and feeling how I felt about myself.
I hated being fat and chubby.
I hated how tired I always felt.
I hated where my self-esteem was at.
I hated how my clothes were fitting.
I hated seeing myself in pictures.
I hated the example I was setting for others.
I hated every single thing about being overweight.
So for me, I could not accept it. I couldn’t continue to live that way. There was no way I was going to give up trying to lose weight and get back in shape.
But that is me.
And you are you.
If you are the type of person who is okay with being overweight and normal, then that is okay. Because there is nothing wrong with being overweight and normal, but when you are overweight and normal and also angry and frustrated and unable to accept being overweight and normal, then you have a problem. Then there is something wrong.
When your weight and frustration are affecting your happiness then it’s time to either accept that you’re going to make the necessary sacrifices required to reach your goals or you need to accept your body as it is and learn to be content and happy in that decision.
But to continue to crave the goal while being unwilling to do the required things to achieve your goal, that is self-torture.
And life is way too short to live that way.
So my message to you is this:
Choose!
Are you willing to make the necessary changes to reach your goals and to change your life? Or will you be happier accepting and living as you are currently living with the body you currently have?
Choose!
Moving on…
To those few brave Weirdos who have not yet departed…
3.) If you know you are overeating but can’t seem to muster up the willpower to consistently stop overeating.
Maybe you’re thinking this is all a bit much. Maybe you’re just wanting to lose five pounds, ten max. Maybe you’re not trying to go all crazy about fitness.
Look…I get it.
But here’s the honest truth: whether you’re trying to lose five pounds, fifteen pounds, or five hundred pounds, the principles of weight loss remain the same.
To lose weight, you have to eat less calories than your body can burn.
Sure, the person losing five pounds will be able to make less dramatic lifestyle changes in order to experience less of a weight loss change. But there still must be a consistent change that is made.
A consistent change.
Those are three very important words that normies tend to ignore.
Most people will only commit to short term temporary changes. They focus on cutting back on their unhealthy eating habits for a short period of time, maybe they cut back on eating out for a while, or they do a thirty-day ‘No Alcohol Challenge,’ or a ninety day ‘No Chocolate Challenge.’
Basically, they go on a diet without realizing that diets are essentially a waste of time and effort.
Here’s why…
Because once someone successfully completes a diet and they lose those five or ten pounds, what do you think they do next?
You guessed it. They head right back to their dealer to get more dope.
They’re feenin at Five Guys, or at the liquor store, or at the donut shop.
They’re ready to start the entire process all over again.
I call this ‘Riding the Fat Boy Rollercoaster.’
It’s where your weight goes up and up and up, and then you go on a diet and lose a decent amount of weight only to watch it go right back up again.
I went through this cycle for years.
At one period in my life, I was religiously counting calories but still eating like the Cookie Monster. I convinced myself that because my self-disciple was so weak, I would focus primarily on gaining muscle, rather than losing fat.
If I was going to eat like a madman, I thought I should at least be getting something productive out of it. So I promised myself I would work out every day.
That was the deal my conscious mind made with my subconscious brain. “Okay,” it said, “you can keep eating guilt-free but only if you keep track of how much protein is going in your body and also keep working out every day to build muscle.”
This didn’t last all that long.
At least the working out consistently didn’t last all that long. The eating like garbage lasted much longer.
Anyhow, I dug through some of the ancient files I have on a thumb drive and found some of my ‘Food Logs’ from those days.
Looking back through these logs, it’s pretty simple to see why my weight loss attempts were so disastrous.
Take the month of September 2022 for example.
As you can see, there are a lot of cheat days in there.
Even worse, all those days where I didn’t log anything, those were days I really went off the rails. Those were fast food for both lunch and dinner days, followed by cookies and carrot cake and cokes and chips as snacks.
But here’s the interesting thing, I would start out great on the vast majority of days.
My routine was a protein shake for breakfast, a relatively healthy lunch, but then after lunch I would completely collapse.
Check out this day: June 21st, 2022.
I actually had an entire carton of Walmart Chocolate Chunk cookies for dinner.
That was it.
That was all I had for dinner that day.
Just an entire package of Walmart Chocolate Chunk Cookies and two 20-ounce cokes.
I was always trying shortcuts and meal hacks like this.
I was always trying to be sneaky and smart. Always trying to discover a way where I could eat cookies and drink cokes and still lose weight and get back in great shape.
I wanted to keep my calories down while still feeding my evil little food addictions.
This cookie and coke diet didn’t work in case you are wondering. My TDEE at the time was 2,441 calories and I had eaten 2,700 calories, which means I had eaten more than my body could burn.
But what if I had fasted for both breakfast and lunch and then had an entire package of Walmart Chocolate Chunk Cookies and two 20-ounce cokes for dinner?
In theory wouldn’t that lead to weight loss? If the goal is to eat less calories than my body burns and I decided to simply skip breakfast and lunch and eat nothing but cookies and cokes for dinner, wouldn’t that cause the calories going into my mouth to be less than the calories my body burned?
Actually, it would. Surprisingly, I could have lost weight doing something like that.
With my body burning 2,441 calories but only receiving 2,160 calories, I would have been in a calorie deficient of 281 calories.
So I would have actually lost weight! By eating freaking Walmart Chocolate Chunk Cookies and two cokes!
There’s no magic to this weight loss game. There’s only math.
It doesn’t matter if you eat sugar or carbs or fats or whatever. All that matters is whether your body is getting more calories than it can burn or if it is receiving less calories than it can burn.
If you take air out of a balloon, the balloon gets smaller. Same concept with our bodies. But the big difference between a balloon and our bodies is that a balloon does not have muscles.
However, you and I do.
And in order for you to either increase or maintain your muscles, you need protein.
Think of protein as food for your muscles. Without protein, your muscles shrivel and shrink.
So if I were to continue with ‘The Amazing Chocolate Chunk Cookie Diet’ then I would eventually look like a Chocolate Chunk Cookie.
I’d be flabby and soft.
I’d be the dough boy.
I’d be skinny fat.
And being fat in any way, shape, or form was certainly NOT my goal.
My goal was to be toned and strong. My goal was to be in good shape, to have more energy, to be proud of myself.
So the question becomes:
How much protein do your muscles need?
The simplest, safest, easiest answer is that you should be striving to eat one gram of protein for each pound of your body weight.
When I started my weight loss journey, I weighted about 170 pounds (I’m 5’7″), so I was striving to eat 170 grams of protein everyday so I would not lose muscle.
To summarize, I needed to eat less than my TDEE of 2,441 calories in order to lose weight, and I needed to eat roughly 170 grams of protein everyday so that I would not lose muscle.
TDEE and protein are two crucial pieces in what I call ‘The Three-Piece Puzzle of Nutrition.’
All that is left, the third and final piece, is your Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR).
You already know that your body needs energy to function and that you get this energy from calories.
If you consistently give your body too many calories then you gain weight, but if you consistently give your body too few calories then you’re begging for health complications.
Calories provide the necessary energy so your body can properly function. If you consistently provide your body with less energy than it requires, then it will not be able to keep all functions of your body working, which includes your muscles, organs, and brain.
Our goal is to lose weight safely rather than losing weight with the Emergency Room diet.
To lose weight safely, you must eat (at least) the minimum amount of calories needed to keep you alive and healthy.
In order to do this, you should be focusing on consistently maintaining your calories at a level that is higher than your RMR.
You’ll find your RMR on the same calorie calculator you used to calculate your TDEE. Mine at the time was 1,627 calories, which meant I should focus on eating more than 1,627 daily calories so that my body would have enough energy to keep all systems functioning properly.
Now let’s put all this gobbly-goop together because it’s simpler than it all sounds.
Based on my RMR and TDEE, I was focused on eating between 1,627 and 2,441 calories every day to ensure weight loss. Because I weighed 170 pounds, I was focused on eating as close to 170 grams of protein so I would not lose muscle.
Seems pretty straight forward, but here’s a roadblock I kept running into:
When you are in weight-loss mode and eating less calories that your body burns, eating one gram of protein per pound of body weight feels like it is damn near impossible.
When I was focused on losing weight, I could never really hit my protein goal.
Not consistently.
Depending on where you’re starting and how much weight you want to lose, you may run into this same issue.
Here’s my best advice if you have problems meeting your protein goal while losing weight:
Don’t fret over it.
Yes, protein matters. Yes, you want to lose fat and not muscle.
But there are no hard and fast rules saying you must eat one gram of protein per pound of body weight to maintain muscle. Some studies show you should eat .4 grams of protein per pound of body weight. Other show .8, some say 1, some 1.2, some 1.4.
I only use a multiple of one because I’m lazy and terrible at math. I find using a multiple of one to be the quickest and easiest to calculate in my head.
The main point is that if you skip meals and only eat high calorie, low protein foods (like cookies, cokes, and chips) then your body will break down your muscles and use them as stored energy when the goal is to have your body break down stored fat and use that instead.
Basically, if you don’t use your muscles and don’t feed your muscles, then your body will decide it does not need those muscles.
And then you turn into a scrawny flabby marshmellowey human.
And that is not the weird we are trying to create!
Moving on…now that we know how many calories our body burns, and how many calories (and protein) we must eat to safely lose weight while retaining our muscles, the primary question still remains:
How Do You Create Enough Willpower To Consistently Eat In A Way That Guarantees Weight Loss?
Knowing how much you can eat is not enough. To lose weight and live inside a body you love rather than inside a body you are ashamed of, you must build up your willpower to a level where you can consistently stop overeating.
To do this, the first step is to figure out what you are overeating.
You must define the enemy.
For me, my enemy was snacking. More specifically, it was cokes, chips, Publix Carrot Cake, Publix M&M Cookies, King Size Almond Snicker Bars.
Yes, I also ate a good bit of fast food, but I could (and still can) meet my goal of eating less than my TDEE while still getting a sufficient amount of protein by eating fast food.
I just have to make sacrifices of what else I eat during the day, and what specifically I eat from the fast-food menu.
But no matter what I did, I could not meet my TDEE and protein goals by eating and drinking cokes, cookies, carrot cake, and chips every day.
Trust me I tried.
It seems strange and comical now but not being able to make those foods work within my TDEE and protein goals was extremely disheartening. Those were the foods I looked forward to every day. They were the foods I really loved to eat. Unfortunately, they were also the foods keeping me overweight and miserable.
I had to make a choice.
And so will you.
Because you have your own kryptonite foods and devilish habits keeping you from reaching your weight loss and fitness goals.
Maybe they’re not soda, and cake, and cookies, and chips, but if you’re struggling with weight loss and fitness then there’s a catalyst somewhere that’s causing the calories that go into your mouth to exceed the calories your body is able to burn.
For you, it may be alcohol. It may be specific foods you are eating at every meal. It may be ice cream. It may be dining out with friends and family.
Maybe it is something small but steady that has compounded over a long period of time.
Maybe your solution is as simple as switching to a lower calorie ketchup or substituting a high calorie drink for a zero-calorie option.
Or maybe you have an issue similar to mine, where you are an Olympic snacker and a professional binger.
Regardless of your own weaknesses, the first actionable step to reaching your weight loss and fitness goals is to pinpoint these extracurricular calories. What are they? Where are they coming from? When do they most frequently appear? How can you control or eliminate them?
How To Pinpoint Those Soul Crushing, Mouth Watering Extra-Curricular Calories That Are Causing 80 Percent Of Your Fat, Frustration, And Misery?
When most normies think of losing weight and getting in better shape they always think of what they need to do. Things like which workouts to focus on, which exercises to conduct, what gym to join, what diet to start, what supplements to take, which protein shakes to drink, what shoes to wear, what music to listen to, and on and on and on…
Very few, however, concentrate on what they need to give up.
And if you’re looking for the secret to weight loss and fitness…for the one absolute truth that is guaranteed to lead to your success, then it is this:
What you do is not nearly as important as what you avoid.
I made this mistake for years and years, and there’s no reason for you to do the same.
For me, I was trying to find workout routines and diet tricks that would allow me to lose weight and get in ‘Fight Club’ Brad Pitt shape all while eating cookies and drinking sodas every day.
Fun fact: There are no workout routines or diet tricks that will allow me (or anyone else) to lose weight and get in ‘Fight Club’ Brad Pitt shape while eating cookies and drinking sodas every day.
It’s not going to happen.
I have a friend who is constantly trying to out-cardio his beer calories by exhausting himself on the treadmill and the elliptical machine and the stationary bike.
But here’s the thing: no one can out cardio calories.
We were both, me and my friend, starting at the wrong freaking spot, with the wrong information, and with the wrong expectations.
At some point, if you are serious about seeing results, you must accept reality.
I had to accept that I could not continue to eat as I was eating and still achieve my goals.
My friend (as much as he wants to) will never lose a significant amount of fat until he accepts that he’ll either have to slow down or find a lower calorie substitute for his beer drinking habits.
Somewhere, somehow, there are foods and calories going into your mouth that are preventing you from obtaining your own weight loss and fitness goals.
Does that mean you have to completely give up any foods or drinks entirely?
No, it doesn’t.
What foods or habits you give up or change completely depends on you.
It depends on your goals.
It depends on how you want to look and feel, and what you are willing to sacrifice in order to look and feel that way.
However, what I am saying is that if you don’t make any sacrifices, then you will not get any results.
Many of you, like me, already know your kryptonite foods. Maybe they’re lurking inside a cookie carton. Maybe they’re in a Coca-Cola bottle. Maybe they’re at Outback on Saturday night when you meet up with your closest friends. Regardless, wherever they are, we will soon discuss how to go about defeating them, but for those who are baffled as to where these menacing little calories are hiding, our first step is to locate them.
This step is extremely important in achieving your goals because if you cannot define the foods, meals, or habits causing your weight gain, then you have little chance of creating a long-term effective weight loss solution.
So first, if you have not done so already, you must determine your TDEE.
If you do not know where your weight gain is coming from, then this step is crucial. Because it’s impossible to determine how many calories are being stored on your body as fat if you don’t first determine how many calories your body actually needs as energy.
As an example (and for simplicity with numbers), let’s say that your TDEE is 2,000 calories.
Armed with your TDEE of 2,000 calories, the fat-killing question now becomes ‘What foods, snacks, or drinks are consistently going into your body that are consistently causing a calorie surplus of more than 2,000 calories?’
Again, many of you already know which foods are causing you the most damage.
For those who don’t, pay attention to any high calorie, low protein foods, drinks, snacks, or meals.
Keep in mind that these ‘extracurricular calories’ could actually be coming from foods you perceive as being healthy. They could be coming from the protein drink you normally drink with breakfast, or the avocado you have as a snack, or the egg salad you have as an appetizer at dinner.
Many people will happily eat or drink these items thinking they are being healthy, but, in reality, it is the very food or drink that is pushing their calorie intake over their TDEE.
Sometimes, these so-called healthy foods are the actual foods causing your weight gain.
If you have eaten 2,000 calories for the day (your TDEE), but you then eat one single apple after dinner, then the 95 calories from that ‘healthy’ apple will be the very thing that causes you to gain weight.
Your body will have burned 2,000 calories for the day, but you will have provided it with 2, 095 calories.
Your body doesn’t care whether the excess calories came from an apple, an oreo, or a chicken breast.
Calories are calories, and eating too many calories (no matter the source) will cause you to gain weight.
To find out where your excess calories are coming from, we have to seek and destroy.
To do this, we must first get a relatively accurate count of how many calories you are consistently eating on a day-to-day basis.
Continuing to try to lose weight without first accomplishing this step is like having a water leak that is flooding your house but refusing to search for the leak.
You must locate all the extra calories that are overflowing as fat into your thighs, stomach, arms, neck, etc.
Normal people play guessing games with this, not taking it serious at all.
They’ll assume.
They’ll guesstimate.
They’ll cheat themselves.
Meh, a banana is okay, they’ll think. They’ll say things like, I don’t need to pay attention to a few eggs, or this salad is definitely low calorie, or this drink is only 30 calories.
Normies are historically terrible at this game of gathering the pieces of their nutritional puzzle.
If guesstimating calories were a professional sport, normies would be the Carolina Panthers.
They are terrible.
In all honesty, most people just don’t take this seriously.
They try for shortcuts instead of focusing on details.
They would rather fudge numbers and cut corners to make themselves feel better about their eating habits rather than being completely honest and actually moving towards the accomplishment of their goals.
Look…I can rant about this forever, but the truth is that you can guesstimate if you want. No one is going to stop you. But if you want to create a body you are proud of rather than a body you merely accept, then you are much better off just sucking it up and going Sherlock Holmes on your calorie numbers.
In my experience, sometimes it’s just faster and easier to do things the right way.
This is one of those times.
This doesn’t mean you have to turn into a calorie Nazi. You don’t have to chase down and interrogate the waiters or waitresses at restaurants.
Some foods and some meals simply won’t have nutritional values attached to them.
And this is okay.
Just do your best.
So here’s a homework assignment for those who are actually serious about losing weight. For the next 5-10 days, do your absolute best to log every single calorie that goes into your body, no matter how small or how inconsequential it may seem.
Having a cup of coffee with your bagel? Jot the coffee calories down on a napkin. Jot down the calories for the bagel as well. Jot down the calories for the cream cheese you slathered inside the bagel too.
Do the same for snacks, drinks, lunch, dinner, and desserts. Do it for everything that goes into your mouth. For 5-10 days, be religious about it. Be weird about it. Make others roll their eyes.
Is this necessary?
Yes.
Will this be a bit weird?
Yes.
Will this be a bit inconvenient? Yes. Will it be a bit of a pain in the butt? Yes. Wouldn’t it just be easier to hop on the elliptical for a cool thirty minutes?
Yes, yes, and yes.
But doing this is what makes all the difference between creating a version of yourself that is self-discipled, healthy, and happy versus continuing to live with a version of yourself that slogs through life everyday wishing they could somehow look, be, and feel healthier and more energetic.
As The Mandalorian would say: “This is the way.”
This is what ‘Being Different’ looks like.
This is what everyone else, all the Normies, are not doing.
It is what you have not done.
This is the difference maker.
This is what it takes.
So for the next 5-10 days, do whatever you need to do to track every single calorie that goes into your mouth. Use a food scale. Weight raw food before you cook it. Punch numbers into your phone’s calculator. Check nutrition labels. Pay attention to any calories listed on restaurant menus (many will have them, although some will not.) Do your best.
Like everything, at first this will seem janky and messy and confusing.
But if you just try, you will figure it out. You’ll get use to it. It will become easy.
Just try.
Just do your absolute best.
If you come across a meal, food, or restaurant that neither you nor Google knows the calories for, then simply label that meal, or snack, or drink as ‘Unknown.’
Don’t fret about it, just label it as such and move on.
At a minimum, you really need 2-3 complete days of tracking. So at least 2-3 days where you know the exact number of calories that went into your body for the entire day.
For the record, I’m not asking you to get on MyFitnessPal or any other website or app. I’m not asking you to get all fancy. Sure, if that’s easier for you then do that, but I still track the vast majority of my calories and I still log them on a very crude word doc.
Here’s an example of my simple method.
You do whatever works easiest for you. Use crayons if you want. Write on the walls. Write on the mirrors. Write on yourself. Do whatever works. We’re trying to create your perfect physique, not a perfect calorie tracking spreadsheet.
Once you have a minimum of 2-3 days of your calorie data, add up the calories for each day and determine whether the daily total number of calories going into your mouth exceeds your TDEE.
Go through your calories in detail and take a very close look at your eating habits.
Do your daily calories exceed your TDEE on each day you were able to track your calories? If so, why? Is there a trend? Are you snacking at roughly the same time every day? Are sodas cutting into your daily allowable calories. Is coffee? Is alcohol? Are you having appetizers with meals? How many meals are you eating per day? Two? Three? Four? Why were you not able to track your calories on certain days or for certain meals? Was it because you were dining out with friends, family, or coworkers? How often did you dine out? Was there a day or two where you binged on fast food or donuts or candy? Do you eat great big monster meals or small meals? Do you snack when watching TV? How about when at work? How about when you’re bored?
This may seem tedious but if we don’t know the enemy then it is impossible to defeat it, and in this case the enemy is excess calories.
Your job at this point is to find those extra calories that are causing you to take in more than your body can burn.
They’re hiding somewhere, now you just have to find them.
If you’re searching and searching, but are still having issues figuring out where your troublesome calories are coming from then please shoot me an email at [email protected].
It’s imperative that we figure this out and I want to help you in any way that I can.
Please contact me if you are having issues.
Otherwise, you should have discovered something, either a certain food, a certain time of day or night, certain social events, or certain situations that are causing you to consistently take in more calories than your body is able to burn.
Our next step is to build up our willpower so we can defeat these fat causing extracurricular calories.
The Battle Against Cookies, Coke, and Crystal Meth!
“Hey, my name’s Josh. And I’m an addict. I’m a Coca-Cola addict. A chocolate-chip cookie addict. A Snickers bar addict. A Publix Carrot Cake addict. A Tostitos Chips addict.”
You may think I’m being a bit dramatic with the above statements but before you label them as completely ridiculous let’s dig a bit deeper into addiction.
According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary this is the definition:
Addiction: noun 1: a compulsive, chronic, physiological or psychological need for a habit-forming substance, behavior, or activity having harmful physical, psychological, or social effects. 2: a strong inclination to do, use, or indulge in something repeatedly
Back when I was a chubby-cheeked Normie, there’s no question I had a mental and psychological need for the way I was eating. The cokes, the cookies, the carrot cake, the chips, the candy bars. All the quick meals as I rolled through the Burger King, Arby’s, Wendy’s, Taco Bell drive-through and brought the grease soaked bag home and sat in front of my TV tearing into cheesy curly fries and sloppy Baconators.
These had become habits I was inclined to repeatedly do, and the behavior was definitely causing me both physical and psychological harm.
I was fat and tired all the time.
I was depressed and frustrated.
I had low self confidence.
I hated being out of shape.
It was tormenting.
The fact that I wanted to be and live a different way, but was unable to achieve that life was absolutely draining.
Both physically and mentally.
I had a problem.
I was addicted.
I was an addict.
And I wanted desperately to change but didn’t know how. Everything I had tried didn’t work. I was unable to stick with any diet or workout routine.
It seemed impossible to break out of the cycle I was in. I thought it was me. That I was just born with low self disciple. That I simply didn’t have enough willpower. That maybe there was nothing I could do about this. I thought that maybe this was simply who I was destined to be.
Every evening it was like I was living in an afterschool special where I knew I shouldn’t go to the corner and buy drugs, but I just couldn’t stop myself.
But unlike crack cocaine or heroin, the drugs causing me the most pain were advertised on television and billboards. They were socially acceptable, socially endorsed, and socially encouraged by the vast majority of my friends, coworkers, and family.
Now I’m not going radical and saying everyone should stop eating fast food, Coca-Cola’s, chocolate-chip cookies, candy bars, carrot cake, and Tostitos chips.
That would be crazy.
But what I am telling you is that I had developed a problem with those foods. I had developed a physical, emotional, and psychological dependency.
For me, those were my kryptonite calories.
They were my crack cocaine. My heroin. They were the things causing my frustration and suffering. By eating them at the rate I was eating them, I could not obtain the body I wanted or be content and happy with myself or my life.
If I wanted to change, I had a decision to make. The way I saw it, these were my options:
Option One: I could have done nothing, which in the immediate instant gratification moment would have been the easiest thing to do. With this option, I would have just kept eating how I was eating, getting fatter and fatter, while continuing to lie to myself about how I would do this-or-that at some point in the future that would completely change my life. I would be hiding from change by living with hope. Doing this would have required no effort on my part. No additional discomfort. No additional sacrifice. However, I would have stayed miserable and kept on being ashamed and hating myself. I had done this for so long that it wasn’t really an option anymore. I was at a point where I recognized my own lies and once you realize you are lying to yourself the shame and self-hate become even more pronounced. This had ceased being an option for me. I was fed up. I had to do something different.
Option Two: I could always just devise a plan where I have scheduled cheat days, which would limit my consumption of the foods/ snacks causing me the most harm. On paper, this sounds like a viable option. I could limit fast food, cokes, and snacks to only once a week. Or I could limit myself to one coke per day. Or I could do intermittent fasting where I limit my eating to a specific time window. Maybe I only eat between 6AM and noon. Or maybe I could limit myself to having only a small snack after dinner. Three cookies maybe, or one candy bar. All things in moderation, isn’t that what everyone says?
Look…this may work for you. You may be the type of person who can rattle ten chips into a bowl, put the chips away and not touch them again until next week. Maybe you can eat only three cookies and then ignore them until the next day. Me, I’ve failed at this game more times than I can count. The bag of chips does not get put away. Three cookies turns to six, then nine, then the entire carton. Calculated snacking turns into mindless munching, and then mindless munching would become a full fledged binge fest.
But you are not me, so a cheat day, cheat meal, cheat snack, intermittent fasting, or some other planned eating may be just the thing you need. Just be mindful that in order to lose weight, you must still eat less calories than your body burns. Whether your body is burning more calories on a daily basis, a weekly basis, a monthly basis – a calorie deficient must take place to lose weight.
If you eat great all week but then pig out on Saturday night by drinking beer and Mountain Dew while eating half of a triple cheese pizza then there’s a very good chance all your hard work and sacrifice throughout the week has been negated.
Math is still math.
If your body burns 2,000 calories everyday, then you’ve burned 14,000 calories in a week. If you eat 1,800 calories consistently for six days of the week but then you go full Fat Albert on one cheat day and you take in 4,000 calories – then you have eaten 14,800 for the week while your body has only burned 14,000.
If you consistently do this each and every week then your pants are steadily getting tighter and tighter. In a month you would have gained a little over a pound of fat. In a year you’re twelve pounds fatter.
This is a common pattern that tricks up even the most seasoned Normies. They can’t understand that one meal or one cheat day can overpower an entire week of self-disciple and sacrifice.
However, cheat days and cheat meals can work.
If you’re self-disciplined enough to control your cheat days then they can be a good way to get the best of both worlds. As for me, I’ve discovered I am not that person.
After literally hundreds of failed ‘cheat day’ attempts I realize that my personality is simply not compatible with this approach.
I’m the guy that can’t control himself. I could literally take in over 10,000 calories in a single day if I’m let loose.
But you are you. And you know yourself just as I know myself.
I was not able to make cheat days work.
The way I see it, a recovering heroin addict does not limit themselves to a once a week heroin cheat day. A recovering alcoholic is not recovering if he or she boozes their face off every Friday night.
I was an addict.
My eating habits were negatively affecting both my mental and physical life.
So rather than kidding myself and having full blown cheat days, I decided to devise an eating plan that I love but that didn’t include the foods that were primarily causing me harm.
That brings us to my third option.
Option Three: I could stop eating the things that were hurting me.
This option now seems like an extremely logical and obvious conclusion but at the time it was anything but obvious and logical. It seemed absurd. It seemed about as reasonable as if I were planning to stop breathing air.
There was absolutely no way I could just stop drinking Coca-Cola’s. I couldn’t just stop eating chocolate-chip cookies, candy bars, carrot cake, and Tostitos chips.
Not forever.
I could probably quit for a 30 day challenge, maybe 90 days, but not forever.
During this time period, I found that ‘forever’ is one of the biggest resistors against giving something up (or at least it was one of my biggest resistors).
No one wants to forever lose something that they enjoy.
This is why dieting is such an acceptable challenge. You and I can both rationalize and accept the concept of giving up our most beloved and devilish foods if we are only giving them up for a thirty-day challenge or only until we reach our goal of losing a certain amount of weight. This goes back to your logical mind clashing with your biological brain. Your logical mind knows you should cut ties with the foods that are causing you to gain weight, but your biological brain knows these foods bring you pleasure. It’s like wanting to pull an all-nighter as a kid, but as it gets later and later, your biological brain consistently pulls you towards sleep.
Again, you can not win if you are fighting against yourself.
So how do we solve for this? How do we come to a peace treaty between what our brain wants but our weight loss goals require?
First, and you are going to think this is one of those obvious statements that every person on the planet already knows, but you must start with One Battle. One War. One Fight.
Choose one food, snack, or habit that you know must be changed in order for you to move closer to consistently eating less than your body burns.
ONE.
Not two, not three, not four.
ONE.
During my continued failures at weight loss and fitness I had so many projects and goals tugging at my thoughts, each snatching its own little piece from my reservoir of willpower and self-disciple. I was miserable in my role at my job and was searching for a way out, either by finding something better or by starting or buying my own business. I was worried about finances. I was worried about furnishing the condo I had recently purchased. I was worried about certain relationships. I was worried about losing weight and looking better and trying to fit into my clothes. I had so many things taking up so much space in my brain that I couldn’t properly fight any one thing.
Finally, I decided I was going to prioritize weight loss and fitness. Doing so was going to be the first hurdle I would conquer. It was the one situation I could fully control, and it would have a ripple effect on all other avenues in my life. If I could lose weight and get my body to a point where I was proud, then other areas of my life would most likely improve as well.
I would have more self-respect for myself which would change my thoughts, actions, and relationships. I would look better which would make me feel better. I would have more self-confidence which would increase my chances of finding a better career situation.
Weight loss and fitness were the hinges that would allow other doors in my life to open.
This didn’t mean I quit thinking, worrying, or even pursuing my other problems and goals.
I still hated my position at work. My financial issues remained. My relationship problems were still causing me misery. My condo was still not furnished.
These items still needed to be resolved.
But weight loss and fitness came first.
I had to pick one fight. One single problem to untangle. And so I prioritized health over all those other issues in my life.
I accepted that weight loss and fitness were the most important thing to focus on.
Right now, you may be thinking this is gibberish and a waste of time because you’ve already tried prioritizing your problems. But here’s the thing. Me too! I had tried prioritizing my problems as well but I was always prioritizing the war rather than prioritizing one specific battle.
And that makes all the difference.
Most people will commit to losing weight or getting back in shape, but then they do the exact same thing they’ve always done.
They try to completely kill their fat with one mighty swing from the sword.
They’ll change their eating and exercise habits all at once.
For me, I would always fall into the habit of prioritizing weight loss and fitness and then the very next day I would focus on not drinking any cokes, and not eating any cookies, cake, candy, snacks, or fast food at all. I’d eat only chicken and fish. I’d count all my calories. I’d hit the gym hard, lifting weights and burning my lungs with cardio.
I was starting at the wrong spot.
I was still (unknowingly) prioritizing the wrong things.
I was trying to kill the fat king with one brazen attack rather than consistently destroying tiny little chunks of his flabby army.
Instead of doing that again, this time I took a slower, weirder, more strategic approach.
All I prioritized were cokes. That was my battle. That was my one thing.
Calories from Coca-Cola’s were the enemy.
Everything else (the fast food, the cookies, the cake, the chips, the candy) were all actively on my future kill list, but they were relatively safe for now.
So if I went a day where I ate a carton of cookies, some carrot cake, a Burger King number five meal with large fries, and had a king-sized snicker bar before bed, but I did not have one single coke for the entire day THEN THAT DAY WAS A WIN!!!
I had achieved my goal.
It is so much easier to strike a deal with your biological brain when the battle goes from ‘I can not eat ANY cookies, cake, fast food, candy, cokes, chips, or anything unhealthy at all.’
to
‘I can eat cookies, cake, fast food, candy, chips, and any of the things I normally eat, but just no cokes.’
By focusing on one thing and one thing only, the battle becomes easier. Compromising with your biological brain becomes easier.
The key when doing this is to not allow any new unhealthy habits to replace the thing you are focused on eliminating. If I would have focused on absolutely no cokes, and then began to drink copious amount of Mountain Dew instead, then I am making zero progress.
The goal is to advance forward. It is to slowly eliminate the foods, meals, snacks causing you to eat more than your TDEE. You can’t do that if you kill one enemy and immediately replace it with another.
Now before we get into anything else, why did I choose cokes as my public enemy number one?
Why cokes first? Why not eliminate cookies first? Or chips? Or cake? Or fast food? Or candy?
Was it because cokes are so high in calories and low in protein? Was it because cokes were causing me the most damage? Was it because cutting cokes would get me the quickest results?
Not necessarily.
Actually, the primary reason was because I perceived cokes as being the easiest target to eliminate.
And when you start with easy you are finally beginning to start at the correct spot.
Instead of drinking a normal calorie filled Coca-Cola, I could drink a diet coke or a coke zero instead. Both Diet Coke and Coke Zero are zero calorie substitutions that I could switch to instead of continuing to drink regular calorie cokes.
By doing this, every single day I was cutting 700 – 1,100 calories that had otherwise been going into my body.
This was substantial.
And all I had done was switched my normal calorie cokes with diet coke or coke zero.
For some (those looking to lose only five to ten pounds) this process of simply finding a lower calorie substitute will be enough to lower your calorie intake to a level where you are eating less than your TDEE.
The problem is that Normies will do this, lose five to ten pounds, and then start eating or drinking the very same item that caused them to gain weight in the first place.
This is the equivalent of an alcoholic going to rehab and getting sober only to celebrate the first thirty-day chip with a glass of whiskey.
We’ll jump more into this phenomenon a little later but for now just know that once you find something that is working…KEEP DOING THAT THING THAT IS WORKING!
The goal is to get healthy and stay healthy, and you won’t stay healthy if you’re riding the Fatboy Rollercoaster.
If you are able to find lower calories substitutions for the foods, meals, snacks, or habits that are causing your weight gain then congratulations, you are on your way to obtaining your goals.
However, unfortunately not all of us will be lucky enough to discover quick and easy calorie substitutions for the foods, snacks, meals, or habits that are causing us harm.
For those of us that can’t, the war wages on…
What If You Cannot Find Any Lower Calorie Substitutions?
Quick recap…
At this point you have calculated your TDEE number, and you know that in order to lose weight you must eat less calories than your TDEE.
You gotta be in a calorie deficient.
There’s no way around this. There are no hidden secrets, no special hacks.
Armed with this info, you go full Sherlock Holmes on your meals, snacks, and eating habits to pinpoint which specific foods, meals, snacks, or habits have been causing you to eat more calories than your TDEE.
After doing this, you now know your devil foods, your demon meals, your specific habits that are causing all the extra-curricular calories to get stored throughout your body as fat.
You did some soul searching and have tried to figure out answers to the following questions:
How many calories do you need to eliminate to get safely (roughly 10-15%) under your TDEE? Which foods or habits will you need to weaken or eliminate in order to consistently eat roughly that number of calories?
Which are the absolute easiest foods, meals, snacks, or habits to cut back on? Is there a lower calorie or a zero-calorie substitute for these foods, meals, or snacks?
You searched far and wide but not even the great Sherlock Holmes himself could have found such a calorie substitute.
This happens. Sometimes there are simply no viable lower calorie substitutions for certain foods, meals, drinks, snacks.
I ran into this same problem myself.
I’ll tell you straight up, there are no great low-calorie substitutes for cookies. At least none that worked for me. I’ve looked and looked but have still found nothing.
I’ve tried quite a few of them. If my goal was to maintain my current weight or to bulk up and build muscle, then these cookie substitutes may be a valid option, but for losing weight they all had too many calories for me.
I was not able to eat less calories than my body burned if I incorporated any of these ‘healthy’ cookie substitutes into my eating habits.
So I eliminated cookies.
Completely.
I banned them from my life.
I now treat cookies as if they’re chocolate chunks of heroin, as if eating one single cookie will cause me to overdose and die.
This may seem extreme, but this is where the real Weirdo earns his or her sweatband.
The reality of my situation is that cokes, chips, cookies, carrot cake, and candy were the primary foods causing me to hate my body, myself, and my life, so the most logical solution was to remove these foods from my life.
Easier said than done, I know.
But it’s also easier than you think.
Here’s the primary problem you are most likely facing.
Right now, most people reading this will not accept the option of eliminating a food, meal, snack, or habit as a realistic long-term possibility. You are most likely a part of this group where you are not mentally able to accept a reality where you completely banish the foods that are causing you long-term pain.
You like eating the things you eat: donuts, chips, appetizers, candy, snacks.
Your brain is probably imagining all the awkward social aspects of quitting these foods as well.
How weird would it be if you went to Dunkin Donuts with your friend Charlie and she ordered a dozen glazed and you simply watched quietly as she awkwardly ate them.
Nope.
Can’t let that happen.
If only there were a magic pill instead.
Ozempic, Wegovy, or Mounjaro.
But here’s the thing about these ‘magic’ weight loss pills.
There’s no magic.
They do not magically allow you to eat all the foods you want and still lose weight. Instead, these pills work by sending signals to your brain that trick your brain into believing that you are not hungry, which then (hopefully) causes you to eat less.
Whether you take these weight loss pills or not, the only way you lose weight is if you eat less.
For these pills to be effective, you still can’t snack at will.
You still can’t carelessly stress eat.
You still can’t eat donut after donut at Dunkin with your friend Charlie.
You still can’t eat whatever you want, whenever you want.
To lose weight, you must be in a calorie deficit. This is true regardless of whether you take magic pills, do every single secret Instagram hack, or stick to the newest fad diet: you must eat less calories than your body burns.
And you cannot eat less than your body burns if you keep eating the same foods, meals, and snacks that have caused you to gain weight.
You must find a way to eliminate these extra-curricular calories.
With that said, let’s just rip the bandage right off.
If you (like I was) are eating foods, meals, snacks, drinks that have more control over you than you have over them, then it is time to completely banish those foods.
No mercy here.
These foods need to be killed, weighed down, heaved off a boat into the middle of the Mariana Trench.
They need to go.
Here are the three techniques I used to completely eliminate the foods, meals, and snacks that were causing me to eat more than my body could burn.
1.) Only One Thing.
As we discussed earlier, choose one specific food, meal, snack, drink, or habit that is consistently causing you to eat more calories than your daily TDEE or your weekly TDEE.
Again, choose only ONE. If you think you can handle cutting two or three items at this point then stop thinking that.
ONE.
Pick only one.
Focus on only one.
ONE!
Only ONE!
2.) Concentrate on the easy.
Concentrate on eliminating the easiest item you can possibly eliminate. What food, snack, meal, or habit seems like it would be almost too easy to eliminate?
Start with that one.
It may seem fairly easy to start by focusing on eliminating the easiest item first, but it is not. It’s actually very difficult because you will want to start as you have always started. You will want to try to change every single thing at once. You’ll want to go hardcore right now, today. You’ll be tempted to completely change your diet, cutting out all your bad habits. You’ll be tempted to start doing two-a-days at the gym, and you’ll be tempted to do these things because you think it will get you to your goal faster.
But if it has not worked before then why would it work this time?
This time, be different. Worry more about obtaining your weight loss and fitness goals for certain, rather than attempting to obtain them as quickly as possible. Because when you try to obtain your weight loss and fitness goals as soon as possible you only end up quitting and achieving nothing.
Don’t fall into that trap this time.
This time, start at the right spot.
When starting from the right spot, the goal is not necessarily to lose weight or gain muscle in any way, shape, or form. Right now, the primary goal is to begin building up your self-disciple and willpower rather than changing your physique.
You may be shaking your head and thinking, But I need to lose weight NOW!
Everyone thinks this way.
I thought this way too. For years and years.
And it is this very desire for immediate results that blinds us into starting at the wrong spot and then leads to endless frustration and a life of never achieving our goals.
First you must strengthen your self-discipline and willpower.
Normies think they were born with low self-disciple and low willpower but they’re wrong. Neither you nor I was genetically born with weak self-discipline or low willpower. Rather, it is only weak because you have not yet made it strong.
You have unknowingly always been starting in the wrong spot. You have been relying on willpower but never taking the actions to ensure your willpower was strong enough to lift you to your goals.
Today we begin to change all that.
Starting by eliminating only one easy simple little food, meal, snack, drink, or habit.
This is the process of strengthening your self-discipline and willpower. By building them up just as you would strengthen any other muscle.
Quick question: would you ever even think of going into a gym on your very first day of ever exercising and starting your workout by grabbing a nine-hundred-pound barbell off the squat rack.
Of course not.
Instead, you’d start with easy. With just a weightless barbell, and then you would progress, and progress, and progress a little more, and then a little more, and over time you would get stronger and stronger.
The same process applies for building up your self-disciple and willpower.
This is important. Because you need your self-discipline and willpower to be stronger, otherwise, you will end up where you have always ended up. You will end up allowing your biological brain to convince you into eventually quitting.
But this time is different.
This time you are starting from the right spot.
Easier.
As easy as possible.
3.) Track your streaks.
Any worthwhile task done consistently for a long period of time will create a desire to continue with that consistent action. Think of a basketball team that wins fifty games in a row. That team will become consumed with keeping their streak alive. A writer who has written one hundred words a day for the past twenty years will be driven to write one hundred words again today. An alcoholic who has gone nine hundred days with no alcohol is determined to never reset the counter.
Today is seven hundred and six days in a row that I have went without drinking a normal calorie Coca-Cola. It has also been seven hundred and six days since I have eaten any sweets or chips.
Streaks matter.
And they matter more than you think.
There is magic in momentum, and this is why I highly encourage you to track your streaks in some form or fashion. Whatever you decide is your easiest food, snack, drink, meal, or habit to eliminate, set up a method to track your success.
I simply purchased a cheap whiteboard poster from Amazon and scotch taped it to my kitchen wall.
Fancy, I know!
But the goal here is not style, it’s convenience. The easier your streaks are to track, the better. The more you’re able to view your streaks, the better.
This is where prioritizing your one thing over all other things will take form in committed and required actions. If there is one thing you absolutely do every single day, make your streak counter be that thing.
If tomorrow you fail at achieving your ONE goal of eliminating your ONE easiest thing, then mark a big zero on your streak counter. You will have zero days of successfully accomplishing your ONE goal of eliminating your ONE easiest thing.
And zero is okay.
Maybe you have ten days in a row where you mark a big fat zero on your streak counter… again, that is okay.
It’s how you start and it’s the first step you must take. It’s like the first level of a video game and there is no point in moving past this level until you achieve success at this first obstacle.
Look…it is going to be challenging.
You will be tempted. Your friends are not going to understand. They may beg, plead, and pressure you. Your biological brain will make every attempt to remind you of why you should eat or drink that one thing you’re focused on eliminating for this one special occasion or because you’re stressed, or because you’ve had a tough day. It will sing a song of how you can always just start again tomorrow. It will swear that caving in ‘just this one time’ will not much matter.
But it does matter.
Caving in has never worked for you in the past and it will not work for you now.
Change is hard.
And this is the sole reason why it is so important to start by eliminating only ONE item and to make that ONE item as easy as possible.
I do not care what else you eat, swallow, or do; just do not eat, swallow, or do that one easy thing you have committed to eliminate, and do not eat, swallow, or do any new unhealthy habits as a way of replacing the one you are currently destroying.
Otherwise, make any deal with your biological brain that you want. When I was working to eliminate chips and sweets, I would barter with my biological brain by agreeing to eat the greasiest tastiest fast-food meal for dinner under the condition of absolutely no chips or sweets for the day.
Your one thing you have committed to is far more important than anything else.
Once you begin to develop a streak of consecutive days, do whatever you must do to keep your streak counter from resetting.
And that leads us into the question of how long should you continue with this weirdness.
4.) The Weirdo Rule of 1,000.
There is a season for everything.
There was once a season when you and I were children, and there will one day be a season when you and I are old geezers. There’s a season spent worrying about money and work, and a season spent wondering why we worried so much about money and work.
One day, I imagine there will be a season when I am no longer as concerned about staying in top physical shape. There will be a season when the desire to eat like Fat Albert overtakes the desire to fit comfortably into my pants.
A season where my foot eases off the gas.
A season where I compromise. Where I eat a few cookies here; drink a few calorie cokes there.
A season where I accept a few flabby fat rolls. A season when I decide to trade a certain level of health for a few pieces of carrot cake, chips, and snickers bars.
When this season comes, I want it to be at my decision.
It will not come as a surprise, or from peer pressure, or stress, or boredom, or from any of the sneaky little tricks devised by my own biological brain.
Instead, it will only come when I consciously decide that I am no longer willing to make the sacrifices required to look and feel the way I currently look and feel.
That season has not yet come.
It is years and years ahead of me.
I know this because I have already scheduled that season. When I waged war on fat and began focusing on my easy little streaks, I made a definitive decision as to how long I was willing to continue this fight for my health and happiness.
Rather than casting my goals in concrete and vowing to never, ever, ever again eat the foods, snacks, meals, or drinks that were causing the bulk of my problems, instead I set a specifically defined duration of commitment.
I did this because let’s be real, I honestly have no desire to go all the rest of my days without ever eating a chip again, or without ever having any sweets again, or without ever fulfilling my lifelong dream of challenging the cookie monster to a cookie eating contest.
I will probably eat these foods again. And even if I never do, I certainly want to give myself the option to do so.
From my experience, any change will be nearly impossible to accept if you are requiring yourself to do the thing forever. Forever is too confining.
Your biological brain will revolt.
You won’t take it seriously, and, most likely, you won’t believe yourself anyways.
I found it easier to be specific with a pre-calculated time frame.
Because no season last forever.
This goes back to why the lure of dieting is so attractive. Dieting is not forever. It is short term. It is always within arm’s length. You can see it. You can accept it. It is for a short enough duration so you believe you can do it, but, unfortunately, it is also not a long enough duration to actually get you to your long-term goals.
Instead of being a long-term eating habit, dieting is “I’m trying to cut back on cookies.” Or Normies will diet until they lose five or ten pounds. Or until their pants fit again. Or until their wedding is over, or until the last song from their high school reunion has ended, and then they cut the food spigot right back on.
They sacrifice and work hard only to find themselves right back where they started. Why work for the goal if you give yourself no time to actually enjoy it? Why make all these short-term sacrifices only to be fat and frustrated again in a few weeks?
It makes no logical sense.
So instead of looping myself through that familiar cycle again, this time I fully committed to defeating my one easy thing by making a long-term commitment.
“I am not eating any cookies for the next ten years.”
Normies look at me like I’m wearing a pair of blood-soaked coveralls and waving a butcher knife when I make this statement. They perceive such a statement as impossible. It’s as though I just claimed I could fly and then proceeded to leap off the Empire State Building.
It’s the same look I imagine seasoned alcoholics giving to their friends who have decided to get clean. The look a hardcore heroin addict would give a counselor who recommends making a long-term commitment to sobriety.
You may think I’m exaggerating.
You may think it unfair to lump foods, drugs, and alcohol into the same conversation. But whether you believe this or not, I know this for certain: cokes, chips, and sweets were hurting me.
By eating them, I was accepting long term pain for short term pleasure. Like a drug addict, I was trading a thirty-minute high for a life of self-hate, self-disgust, shame, and discontent for myself and my body.
Now I’m not saying you must go ten years with or without anything. You do what you want, and, again, if you’re the type of person who can properly and responsible handle cheat days, or cheat meals, or intermittent fasting, then that option may work beautifully for you.
Because the ultimate goal is to put foods in your mouth that (1) you like, and (2) that properly complete your Three Piece Puzzle of Nutrition, which is comprised of eating less calories than your TDEE (if your goal is to lose weight), eating roughly one gram of protein per pound of body weight (so you don’t lose muscle), and eating more calories than your RMR (so your body has enough calories to keep all systems properly functioning).
If you can snack or cheat while still eating in a way that works for your own Three-Piece Puzzle of Nutrition, then do that.
For me, time and experience have proven that I am not that type of person.
I could not control myself when I allowed certain foods into my eating habits.
Therefore, it was much easier for me to kill my devil foods completely than it was to continuously fight them each and every day.
It was easier for me to accept that I was not letting these specific foods out of the grave for at least ten years.
And after ten years…I may or may not eat those foods again. At that time, I’ll reevaluate my life and my goals, but for now there is no ambiguity.
There is very little wiggle room for my biological brain to conjure schemes and justifications of how I can have just one cookie, or only one coke, or how I can allow myself to cheat for this one specific special occasion.
The message leaves no ‘buts’, no ‘what ifs’.
‘I am not eating any sweets or chips for ten years’ means ‘I am not eating any sweets or chips for ten years.’
None.
Not even a crumb.
I don’t eat ice cream and cake to celebrate birthdays.
I don’t eat pies or cookies on Thanksgiving, or on Christmas, or on New Year’s.
I don’t eat chips when at a Mexican restaurant with friends.
I do not eat them at all.
Is this a bit weird?
To others, Yes!
Normies do not understand this at all.
But I do not need Normies to understand. My goal was never to appease the Normies, my goal was to lose weight, to get back in shape, to have more energy, to have less back pain, and to have self-respect and pride in myself again.
And a sure fire, guaranteed way to accomplish these things was to completely eliminate the things causing me the most harm.
Once I made this a long-term commitment, both my conscious mind and my biological brain accepted that none of the foods, snacks, or drinks that were hurting me will go into my mouth until at least ten years.
For me, deciding to fully commit to this long-term goal was very freeing but maybe ten years is a bit too extreme for you. Maybe you can’t accept that as reality. Maybe you need to choose a different time duration that works better for you.
If that is the case, then do that. However, I would caution you on creating a time frame that is too short.
Short term is a diet. And rather than creating another diet, as Weirdos we are focused on creating long term healthy eating habits, and the longer time frame you definitively decide upon the less your biological brain will nag you.
Creating a short-term diet is like continuously taking a child to a toy store but being determined to purchase nothing. The child will whine and cry and beg and plead and make deals of how he or she will do this or that if only they can have a toy now. The child will wear you down. You will lose. Maybe not the first time, maybe not the second time, but eventually, you will lose.
Technically, you had probably lost that battle before you even started. Your plan would have been horrendous. Torturous even.
The same principle applies with short term dieting. Subconsciously, your biological brain will do the same thing. It will wear you down. It will worm a hole through your willpower and wiggle into your thoughts until you believe all its tricky little lies are actually good and logical ideas. Maybe you really can only have this one single cookie. Maybe only one is not that big of a deal. Maybe you do deserve it. Maybe only one drink. Maybe only one hit of heroin. Maybe just a little crack cocaine.
A little now equals a lot of misery later.
Why risk it?
Instead, stop with the short-term goals. They are nothing but entry tickets to the Fatboy Roller Coaster.
The longer time frame you definitively decide upon, the less your biological brain will try to nag you.
I chose ten years.
I will not drink a normal calorie coke until ten years from now.
I will not eat any chips or sweets until ten years from now. (Although you could say I tiptoe the line on this – more details later).
Whatever time duration you choose, I would make it no less than 1,000 days.
Anything less and you’re still playing in the kiddie pool with the Normies.
It’s time to take this serious. It’s time to jump in the deep end with all the Weirdos.
Things are certainly more fun over here and everyone looks much, much better in their bathing suits!
Quick Action Recap:
I know it seems like we’ve covered a lot but after all my jibber jabbering there’s only six easy actionable steps to go from ‘starting in the wrong spot’ to ‘starting to lose weight.’
Let’s go over them step-by-step because simply reading these words will not burn enough calories to make any meaningful difference to your pant size.
2.) Next, subtract 10-15 percent from your TDEE. This number will now be the maximum number of calories you can put in your mouth everyday if you are going to lose weight. This ensures you are giving your body less calories than it burns every day. Still no need to get off the toilet! Write this number down. Memorize it. Tattoo it on your forehead.
3.) Now just eat normal. (Well, this step seems pretty simple!) But here’s the catch, eat what you normally eat but do your absolute best to count all the calories from all the foods, meals, drinks, and snacks that go into your mouth. Do this until you can pinpoint which foods, meals, drinks, snacks, or habits (if any) are consistently causing you to consume more calories than your TDEE.
4.) Next, make a hit list. List out these devil foods, the demon meals, the satanic drinks, the addictive snacks, the harmful habits causing you to consistently consume more than your body can burn. Which ONE is the easiest to eliminate? Can you find a lower calorie substitute for ONE of these items? Only choose one. No more. It’s much easier to fight off one bully at a time than it is to fight multiple assailants at the same time. ONE!
5.) Fully commit to the complete annihilation of this one food, meal, drink, snack, or habit that has been causing you to gain weight and endure long term pain. Drop a nuclear bomb on this ONE food, meal, drink, snack, or habit. Go full Game of Thrones on it. Commit to keeping it dead until at least 1,000 days. Preferably longer. Preferably much longer. Think decades, not days. You need to fully commit to this. Tell yourself out loud. “I am not eating (whatever your enemy food) for (the time duration you select). I started with: “I am not drinking another calorie coke for the next ten years.” Do not be embarrassed about this. Do not hide from it. Tell your friends. Tell your family. Tell your priest, your doctor, your dentist!
5.) Create a streak counter and put it in a place where you will most often see it. This does not need to be a work of art. Worry about making it functionable, not fashionable. I still use a tacky white board poster scotch taped to my wall. Keep track of the number of consecutive days you have successfully gone without the ONE food, meal, drink, snack, or habit that you committed to eliminate from your eating habit. I structure mine like this:
Religiously update your streak counter. No matter if the day was a success or a failure, update it everyday. Doing something everyday is what commitment looks like. If you’re going out of town, bring your streak counter with you. If your house catches on fire, grab your streak counter first. If you don’t have one minute of time to fill out your streak counter, then make time. Commit. Every single day. Do not attempt to eliminate another food, meal, drink, snack, or habit until you have successfully gone a minimum of ten days without consuming the first food you committed to destroying. Remember, start with the easiest food, meal, drink, snack, or habit that you will be able to eliminate. Don’t give up. Don’t get overwhelmed. Little by little change will come. Day by day. Pound by pound. You’ll get there. But first you have to start.
This concludes the first phase of the ‘The Stupid Simple Easy Weirdo Guide To Eating For Fat Loss!’ In the next phase we will piece together your Three-Piece Nutritional Puzzle, but before we get to that…
Have you completed the six steps of this first phase?
If not, then there is honestly no point moving forward until you complete the six steps of phase one. If you can’t complete level one, then you will not be able to win the game. You’ll just be wasting your time. And time is too short to spend on reading about how to accomplish your goals when you have zero intentions of actually accomplishing your goals.
Don’t lie to yourself and say you will come back and take action after you read the rest of this guide.
You won’t.
Something else will snag your attention.
Reading and learning without taking any action is only fooling yourself into thinking you are doing something productive.
But you’re not moving forward until you start taking action.
Any kind of action.
Look, you don’t need to do anything groundbreaking. You don’t need to do anything overly difficult. You don’t need to spend hours in the gym. You don’t need to go on a severely restrictive diet.
You just need to do something easy.
And then you need to do that thing over and over and over.
That’s it!
That’s the secret to weight loss and fitness.
You have a choice right now.
You can either begin knocking out the first six steps of this first phase and begin marching towards a life where you’re proud of your body, or you can read the rest of this guide and never take any action at all and just keep hiding behind the hope that eventually a magic little fitness fairy will sprinkle you with magic fitness dust.
Either way, you get to choose.
You get to choose your life.
You get to choose how you will look.
You get to choose whether you will be a Weirdo of discipline or a Normie just like everyone else.
Hopefully you choose to live a life that makes you happy!
That in itself would make you different. And the world needs different.
It needs more Weirdos!
Hey Weirdo!
Have you waged war against your devil foods and pledged a commitment to eliminate them?