Of course you try your very best to stick to a relatively
healthy diet and exercise plan. But some days, you're bound to go
overboard—after all, you're only human. Perhaps it’s that time of the
month and you just can’t stop munching; perhaps you had one too many
margs at happy hour and find yourself housing enough tacos at dinner to
win an eating contest; or perhaps you’re so overtired that you double up
on breakfast because your stomach feels like a bottomless pit. Point
is, everyone overindulges on occasion. But while it’s easy to freak out
and think you "blew your diet," don’t—because you didn’t. We asked
Samantha Cassetty, R.D., M.S., nutrition director at Luvo,
just how much weight you can realistically gain in one terrible,
horrible, no good, very bad (eating) day. And it turns out, you’d have
to take in a ridiculous amount of food to gain even just a pound in one day.
It’s virtually impossible to gain weight overnight, even if
you really blew it on bar food. “The reason comes down
to calorie math. Though it’s not 100 percent precise, the basic
principle stands true: In order to gain weight, you’d have to eat 3,500 more
calories than you typically eat and burn off to maintain your figure."
So let’s say you eat 2,000 calories per day on a normal day. You’d have
to eat 3,500 additional calories, totaling 5,500 calories, to gain a single pound. And that's not even taking any physical activity into account
What does 3,500 calories look like, exactly? “To get 3,500
more calories, you could eat your regular diet and then also have three
glasses of wine (370 calories), two chicken wings (110 calories), some
onion rings (340 calories), a portion of chips and queso (290 calories),
one burger with the works (860 calories), and a slice of chocolate cake
(795 calories). That’s a lot of food—and you haven’t even hit the mark
yet!”
There’s even more scientific evidence that it’s pretty hard
to gain real weight after one day of overeating: Although people
typically say they gain five to 10 pounds over the six-week holiday
period, the best study to date, published in the New England Journal of Medicine,
found that, on average, most people gained just one.
"Fewer than 10 percent of the study participants actually gained more
than five pounds between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day."
Of course, a bad diet day could leave you feeling incredibly
bloated and just “ugh” the next day. But as long as you course correct
the next day—i.e., you eat responsibly and get back to your fitness routine—you’ll
keep the real pounds from piling on. So as you go into
the holiday season, remember: It’s okay if you love your mom’s cooking
so much that you eat a lot of it. Just don’t make a habit of it, and be
sure to stay consistent with your gym routine.
Thanks for Reading........
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