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Fitness Trainer Reveals 6 "Healthy" Foods She Cut to Lose 45 Pounds

Simple changes that made a big difference in her weight loss journey.

Most of us have tried multiple approaches to lose weight, only to find ourselves stuck in an endless cycle of disappointing results. Fitness trainer Katie Dunlop founded Love Sweat Fitness after losing 45 pounds herself through sustainable changes. With over a million social media followers, she shares workouts and nutrition advice based on her transformation from 165 to 128 pounds. Discover the everyday foods she eliminated that were secretly sabotaging her weight loss goals.

​Coffee Creamer: Hidden Sugar Bomb

That morning coffee might be derailing your diet before the day even begins. "I used to add four or five tablespoons of French vanilla coffee creamer every single day," Katie admits in her post. "That's about 25 to 30 grams of added sugar—not a healthy way to start my day." She eventually switched to natural zero-calorie sweeteners like stevia and monk fruit, avoiding artificial options that gave her headaches. "I was a big Splenda girl, the Sucralose. That was what was in the creamers though, and I was getting headaches all the time," Katie explains. She gradually transitioned to healthier alternatives by cutting back quantity first, then experimenting with different options.

​Cereal: Not a Healthy Meal Replacement

That colorful box in your pantry isn't doing your waistline any favors. "I used to snack on cereal all the time thinking it was a healthy option, but most cereals out there are nothing but carbs and added sugars," Katie shares. Her former favorite, Special K Vanilla Almond, lists sugar as its second ingredient with 11 grams per serving. "They still market it as healthy. They still put 'protein' on the label like that makes it magically better," she points out. Katie warns that excess carbs and sugars that aren't used for energy get stored as fat, advising to look for cereals with at least 10 grams of protein and less than 6 grams of sugar.

​The Special K Diet Trap

Fad diets often promise quick results but deliver long-term disappointment. "Does anyone remember the Special K diet? They've removed all of this from their website," Katie recalls. "It was basically the idea that you were to swap two meals a day with Special K cereal, claiming you could lose six pounds and a pant size in two weeks." She discovered this approach only led to yo-yo dieting patterns. "I'd go so restrictive, I'd see some results and be like 'oh my gosh, well my two weeks are over, now I just go back to my normal eating.' Nothing about it was good," Katie emphasizes.

​Protein and Fiber Bars: Processed Problems

Those convenient snack bars aren't the nutritional powerhouses their packaging suggests. "I used to eat fiber bars or protein bars every single day as meal replacements thinking that was healthy," Katie explains. She discovered these bars often contain unnecessary additives, sugar alcohols causing digestive issues, and ingredients that triggered more sweet cravings. "I wasn't losing weight because I was craving more sweets, craving more sugars. I wasn't getting enough protein, or I was getting protein but my body wasn't breaking it down in the right way," she notes. Katie also shares an embarrassing moment when excessive fiber consumption left her uncomfortably bloated during an important work meeting.

​Veggie Chips: Colorful Imposters

Don't be fooled by the word "veggie" on the package. "I was duped into thinking veggie chips were so much healthier than potato chips," Katie confesses. "Wrong, wrong, wrong. It took me so long to realize that they were not at all healthier." The processing removes most nutrients, leaving essentially a vegetable-colored potato chip with similar calories, fat, and carbs. "Your girl would eat these. Sprouts had this plastic tub of these veggie chips and they were so good and lightly salted, and I would just nosh on those all day thinking I was kind of eating vegetables," she admits with regret.

​Portion Control Challenges

Sometimes the problem isn't just what you eat but how much. "The biggest thing I did for myself was really cut myself off so I stopped craving those," Katie shares about her chip addiction. She implemented strict portion control after initially going "cold turkey" to reset her cravings. "A single portion of most chips is only like 15 chips. Again, who only eats 15 chips? But that's a healthy portion of them," she explains. Katie had to deliberately portion out servings to enjoy treats without going overboard.

​Frozen Yogurt: The Dessert Trap

That "healthy" dessert alternative might be sabotaging your progress. "In college, we had a yogurt place down the street and we ended up going almost every single night because we could walk to it," Katie remembers. What seemed like a better choice than ice cream actually contained around 25 grams of sugar per serving—before toppings. "I felt like it was a gateway drug. I don't know how to describe it. Then you're like 'oh a little graham cracker, a little granola that's healthy, oh a little coconut spread.' You just start adding and adding, and all of a sudden you have 500 extra calories a day that I didn't need," she confesses. Katie now opts for plain Greek yogurt with a natural sweetener when cravings hit.

​Late Night Snacking: The Mindless Calories

Setting a cutoff time for eating can make a dramatic difference. "I stopped eating after 9 p.m. Not because there's a magical number when you should stop eating to lose weight, but I realized I wasn't eating anything good for me after that time," Katie explains. She established a two-hour buffer between her last bite and bedtime, helping eliminate hundreds of excess calories each week. "The reason why I had to give myself a time at night to stop eating was because I would just keep going. Those cravings would hit mentally or physically and I didn't really know how to control it," she admits. Katie found increasing protein throughout the day helped control evening hunger.

​Finding Healthier Alternatives

Substituting better options for your favorite foods can make a sustainable difference. "Now if I have those sweet cravings at night instead of doing frozen yogurt I like to do just some plain Greek yogurt. Add a scoop of like either my wing woman or Miss Congeniality or you could use a little maple syrup or something to sweeten it up," Katie suggests. She emphasizes the importance of protein: "Adding protein also is going to help because that's going to actually make you feel full. And the more protein you have the more muscle you build and the more fat you're able to burn."

​Managing Sugar Cravings

Eliminating excessive sugar can transform your results. "I used to be way more of a sweets girl. I would have crazy cravings like every single night," Katie reveals. She discovered many "healthy" alternatives weren't actually better nutritionally. "In my head I just kept justifying that it was healthy, it was a healthy dessert. There was nothing healthy about it. And I wasn't losing any weight. In fact I was gaining weight," she shares candidly. Katie recommends keeping busy during typical craving times: "I just had to keep myself really busy. So when I was used to going and grabbing snacks after 9 p.m., I just like, nope, I'm going to pick up a book, I'm going to do 20 crunches."

​Small Changes, Big Results

Sustainable weight loss comes from identifying your personal food pitfalls. "When I cut out the creamers with all the sugars and fake stuff, when I stopped eating all these fiber bars and cereals and all these little things I thought were healthy, I actually started getting results," Katie shares. She emphasizes that even with modest exercise—starting with just 10 minutes daily—these dietary changes made the critical difference. "Yes, I was moving my body, but I wasn't doing anything crazy. It's those little tiny things that add up," Katie encourages. "You know your lifestyle, you know what makes sense for you. But if you're doing any of these six, it's time to start cutting them out." And if you enjoyed this article, take advantage of these 15 Quick Ways to Lose Body Fat Percentage in a Week.

Christopher Roback
Professional Health and Wellness Editor and Writer Read more