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When I was in my twenties, I was a big fan of ‘cheat days’. Every Sunday my roommate and I would order twin large ‘meat lovers’ pizzas, and eat them while watching hockey.We’d follow this up with ice cream and those amazing Homestyle two-bite brownies that come in that brown paper package, all while drinking two chocolate Myoplex protein shakes.At first, eating this amount of food was VERY difficult, but after a couple of months we became used to it, and eventually we added in a foot long subway sandwich with extra meat as our ‘premeal’.Truthfully, this was a lot of food for me to eat in one day. I know there are true big eaters out there who probably scoff at the fact that we SPLIT Twin large pizzas, (since they could probably eat both on their own) but that’s the point I’m getting at…I am NOT a big eater – not by any means.

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My college 'Cheat-day' Stories | Brad Pilon's 'Eat Blog Eat'

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As you’ve probably guessed this is another post in my “fat as debt” series.A topic I’ve probably written about ad nauseum  However, just because I’m beating a dead horse doesn’t mean the message is any less important.The EXACT same things that are making us fat are also making us deeply in debt and Vice Versa.In fact, we (at least North America) largely live in a debt-based society, and it shows in the way we approach both food and money.Long gone are the days of saving for something you want – These days you simply check to see if you have enough room on your credit card, then you buy it.Typically this is done after some self talk about ‘deserving it’ or how ‘good of a deal it is’, then promising to yourself that you’ll pay it back as soon as possible.This exact same mentality is apparent in how we eat.It’s perfectly acceptable to diet AFTER a big celebration of eating, but it is not acceptable to diet before, in anticipation of a big eating celebration.Even though Advent, the 3-4 week period for before Christmas, was originally a fast to PREPARE for the feast, essentially doing the food equivalent of saving up FIRST before buying something we really want.Instead we approach food like we do our expenses… We convince ourselves that we deserve it or need it, and that we will simply pay it off (*burn it off) later.But in reality there is nothing wrong with saving up first, just as there is nothing wrong with preparing when you know there will be a feast.Somehow we’ve been taught that this is the wrong approach.Prepare for big purchases… Whether it’s a new couch, or a Super Bowl Feast.BPTagged as: dieting after a feast, fasting after feasting, Feasting

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More fat, more debt | Brad Pilon's 'Eat Blog Eat'

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