RE: About those
I just had to reply--for what it's worth. I know many people who do this and it works great for them. It's definitely worth trying. If it works for you, then it sounds like a good way to go.
I tried it and gained weight like crazy. I have a horrible reaction to sugar and refined foods. I get cravings like crazy, feel awful, and gain 5 pounds (overnight) each time I indulge. Most of the extra weight came off during the week following the "cheat" day, but not enough to keep it from creeping up. I gained 15lbs this way. I got it off, but decided that this method wasn't for me.
I've been trying calorie staggering for the past 6 weeks. I've lost 15 lbs and broken through the point that I could NEVER get below. But the best thing is that the weight is coming off in the right places--unlike whenever I've tried restricting calories before.
I have one day that is an overfeed day, and I use it to stock up on nutrition-dense food that I love--such as nuts, whole grains, natural peanut butter, soy and dairy products, fruits, etc. I also enjoy a cup of ice cream made with Splenda (I've found that splenda doesn't give me the headaches, cravings, and yucky feelings that sugar or other artificial sweeteners do). I've found that sticking with 'clean' foods and having a calorie cap on my 'pseudo' free day that I've done really well. I think it is very beneficial to have something to look forward to each week. It makes the low calorie days worth it.
It's been fun treating the calorie thing like a bank account. Some days I really have to save, but then I get a day to splurge. I only wish that my real bank account could replenish itself like the calorie one--I'd really be in "CatheOrderingInsanity" heaven!
Hope this helps,
Carol F