Why You Need to Stop Counting Calories (And What to Do Instead)
- Gillian Scerri

- 11 minutes ago
- 4 min read
If you’ve been told that counting calories is the only way to lose weight, this is for you!
For years, women have been taught that weight loss is just “calories in vs calories out.” That if you track, weigh, log, and restrict enough, you’ll finally feel in control of your body.
But here’s the truth:
Calorie counting works against your body, your metabolism, and your relationship with food.
And for busy women juggling work, children, stress, and mental load? It can quietly make things worse.
Let’s talk about why, and what actually works instead.
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Why Calorie Counting Backfires
1. Restriction Puts Your Body Into Survival Mode
When you consistently restrict calories, your body doesn’t think:
“Oh great, we’re losing weight.”
It thinks:
“There isn’t enough food.”
Research shows that prolonged calorie restriction can:
Increase cortisol (your stress hormone)
Slow metabolic rate
Encourage fat storage as a protective mechanism
Your body is designed to keep you alive, not help you fit into smaller jeans.
In fact, studies consistently show that 80–95% of diets fail long term. Not because women lack discipline, but because restriction works against your biology.
2. You Lose Nutrients — And It Shows
When calories become the focus, food quality often drops.
Undereating can lead to low intake of:
Protein
Healthy fats
Iron
Zinc
Antioxidants
And that affects:
Energy and focus
Skin elasticity and collagen production
Hair and nail strength
Hormone balance
What’s the point of being “lighter” if you feel exhausted, your skin looks dull, and you don’t feel good in your body?
Weight loss should improve vitality, not deplete it.
3. It Damages Your Relationship With Food
Calorie counting turns food into numbers.
It creates “good” and “bad” foods. It creates fear. It creates control.
Over time, this disconnects you from hunger and fullness cues.
And if you have children, they absorb this. The way you eat teaches your children how to eat.
When food feels stressful or controlled, they learn that. When food feels nourishing and safe, they learn that too.
Food should be enjoyed. Not feared.
4. Busy Women Often Need More Fuel — Not Less
If you’re juggling work, kids, responsibilities, and constant mental load, your body needs consistent fuel.
Long gaps between meals and under-eating can cause blood sugar swings, which trigger:
Cravings
Fatigue
Irritability
Anxiety around food
When blood sugar drops, cortisol rises. And cortisol drives appetite and fat storage.
When women stop under-eating and start fueling properly, they often notice:
✔ Better energy
✔ Fewer cravings
✔ A calmer appetite
✔ Less obsession around food
Eating enough doesn’t cause weight gain.
Chronic stress and restriction often do.
5. Guilt → Binge Cycles
Miss your calorie target? You feel frustrated, then guilty, then angry with yourself.
Those emotions are known binge triggers.
Restriction increases urges. Guilt reinforces them.
It becomes a predictable cycle: Restrict → Crave → Overeat → Guilt → Restrict again.
This isn’t lack of willpower.
It’s biology and psychology working together.
6. It’s a Huge Time Waster
Tracking, weighing, logging, checking apps…
That’s time you could spend:
Enjoying meals
Being present with your family
Moving your body
Resting
Your health shouldn’t feel like a second job.
What To Do Instead
If not calorie counting, then what?
Here’s what I teach my clients.
1. Tune Back Into Your Body
Before you eat, pause.
Ask yourself: Am I truly hungry? Or do I need rest, connection, movement, or a break?
This one pause can interrupt emotional eating patterns and rebuild trust with your body.
Weight loss becomes sustainable when you learn to respond, not react to hunger.
2. Slow Down When You Eat
Satiety hormones take about 15–20 minutes to signal fullness.
When you eat quickly, distracted, or standing up, you bypass those signals completely.
Slowing down:
Improves digestion
Reduces overeating
Increases satisfaction
You don’t need smaller portions.You need presence.
3. When You’re Hungry — Nourish Properly
If you’re hungry, eat.
But build meals around:
Protein
Healthy fats
Fibre-rich carbohydrates
This stabilises blood sugar, supports hormones, and reduces cravings naturally.
This is how healthy weight loss happens. Not through control.Through nourishment.
Healing Your Relationship With Food
Weight loss isn’t about discipline. It’s about safety.
When your body feels safe, fueled, and regulated — it lets go of excess weight far more easily.
When your mind feels safe around food — obsession fades.
You don’t need to count every calorie. You need to rebuild trust.
Sustainable weight loss for women starts with:
Consistent nourishment
Balanced blood sugar
Nervous system regulation
A healthier relationship with food
Not another tracking app.
Ready to take control of your health? Learn more about my online health and nutrition consultation services via the link below and see how we can work together to help you feel your best, inside and out!
Book a Free Discovery Call today to see how we can customise a plan for your unique needs.
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