Hello.. Day 1 of the 5:2

This topic contains 12 replies, has 7 voices, and was last updated by  simcoeluv 10 years, 8 months ago.

Viewing 13 posts - 1 through 13 (of 13 total)

  • Hello, so I’m nearly at the end of my first day of the 5:2 diet. I must say that it hasn’t been as challenging as I expected it so be. I have found lots of really useful information and recipes online which have really helped.
    Today I have had the following: No breakfast; Lunch: A yogurt with grapes, satsuma; Dinner: tin of tomatoes with courgette and chicken, grapes. Drinks wise I have had herbal tea and water. Calorie total = 506.
    I’m feeling really positive today, what has helped has been reading through the forum before I ‘signed up’. I’m not really one for forums but from the posts I’ve read so far it is really motivating.
    It would be great to hear from anyone else out there with experience, am I doing things right etc.. are my food choices good ones etc..
    If I understand this right, I shouldn’t eat again until 9am tomorrow morning? I hadn’t eaten anything from 9pm on Sunday evening.
    I look forward to chatting to you.
    Regards
    W4Foodie

    That’s right. The next meal is breakfast tomorrow. You can do this without starving. You consumed 500 calories today. Yesterday and tomorrow with be the normal number of calories you eat.

    Hi and welcome:

    You did just fine. The key when you start is to do your two diet days correctly – that is, eat 500 or fewer calories each day. Focus on that for the first month or so. There are no required or prohibited foods with 5:2, so eat what you want to eat.

    Here are some starting tips if you have not run into them already: http://thefastdiet.co.uk/forums/topic/warnings-to-newbies/

    Good Luck!

    Hi, W4Foodie! I also just had my first fast day yesterday, everything went ok, I even went to the gym for an hour but this morning, even if I had a very nice breakfast (porridge, banana, coffee with milk and a full glass of orange juice) I felt dizzy in the morning, and my vision was a little blurry. After my lunch, everything went back to normal. But I was really concerned this morning, because nobody else talked about dizziness on a feast day! Hope this was the only incident. Have a nice evening

    Hi Amy C and Simcoeluv,
    Thank you for your comments. Good to know I’m on track!
    Simcoeluv – thank you for the link suggestion.
    Stayhealthycely – nice to meet a fellow newbie to this. Good luck with your fasting. Maybe the dizziness was down to the caffeine?
    Thanks all
    W4Foodie

    Hello again,
    So this morning I thought I’d wake up feeling mega hungry but I haven’t.
    I have used the calculators on this site to work out my BMI and TDEE. So I am right in thinking I shouldn’t eat over the TDEE calorie amount on non fasting days?
    Thanks W4Foodie

    hi w4 foodie no non fasting days you stick to your tdee- thats my ideal then on fasting days you aim for 1/4 of tdee-this is easy early on coz its about mind control- later it is about hunger management-having hun ger crunchers that make you FEEL full but are high gl/low gi foods do you know what gi/gl are?

    Hi Davidrob, thank you for your advice. So is it quite normal to find this easier early on and then harder the longer you do it?
    No I’m not sure what you mean by gl.gi foods. Thanks W4Foodie

    hi im new to this and starting today, had just coffee and herbal teas so far. just wondering if I eat under my daily recommended on feast days would I lose more weight? it does seem quite high but I am quite overweight x
    thanks xx

    hi gi foods/low gl foods refer to foods with a glyceamic indesx count which is high. the gycaemic index determines how well your whole meatbolic process manages the digestion of the food. so (e.g) sugary foods have a very high gycaemic index/low glyceamic load- they pass through the body very quickly and your insulin level rockets
    whilst (e.g.)veg has a very high glycaemic load/low glaecymic index and gives the metabolic system and your cells retained energy that wont be laid down as fat due to high insulin and it will go through your body very slowly and gently rather than straight through, so alot more vitamins and minerals can be absorbed.

    i learnt about it from weightwatchers first and then recently from books by dr Patrick holford.

    Kellyweb78:

    There seems to be lots of confusion on how much to eat on the non fast days. First of all, it will be a feast compared to the fast day, but a controlled feast.

    You have the two numbers of the BMR and TDEE. The low number would be the fewest calories to eat and the TDEE represents the number of calories you would eat to maintain your weight. In my experience, it is best to have a number 300-400 calories lower than the TDEE to lose weight. Going down to the BMR is challenging to maintain.

    Hello davidrob –
    I am very confused by your explanations of glycaenic index and glycaemic load. I have done the Patrick Holford diet quite successfully a few years ago.

    As you say it is all to do with how much a food will raise insulin level compared with how much table sugar will raise it. This gives the GI. Surprisingly even wholemeal bread will raise the level higher than an equivalent weight of sugar, so if you do the diet you will find yourself substituting oat cakes and pumpernickel for ordinary breads. And some fruits like bananas and grapes ate much higher than others,like berries and pears. And most vegetables are lower than fruits.

    Where GL comes in is taking GI and looking at portion sizes. Carrots are quite high GI but you are not likely to eat even a whole one in a meal, so that makes them more acceptable than say potatoes.

    It is a fascinating subject and well worth looking into if you suspect carbohydrates are contributing to your weight issues but don’t want to go onto a low carb regime

    Kelly:

    ‘just wondering if I eat under my daily recommended on feast days would I lose more weight?’

    Yes.

    It is a matter of opinion (not science) about how much less you should eat on your non-diet days. Some feel you can eat less than your TDEE but should not eat less than your BMR (both defined in ‘HOW’, above). As I understand it they feel by eating less than your BMR you will be more hungry and less likely to stick to the diet.

    But I am not aware of any health reason for not eating less than your BMR on any given day. With 5:2, you eat less than your BMR at least twice a week, with 4:3 about 3 times a week and with ADF every other day – all without any health problems being identified. ‘Standard’ low calorie diets will usually have you eating below your BMR 7 days a week.

    Generally, the fewer calories you eat, the faster you will lose weight (example: eating nothing at all will cause the most rapid weight loss over time). As the popular saying goes, whatever works for you!

    Good Luck!

Viewing 13 posts - 1 through 13 (of 13 total)

You must be logged in to reply.