Hi Caballero
I agree with others in our community. Also, from my own experience, you do go through cravings when changing from one plan to another of food. And the cravings also come when you change activity level at the same time that you change your food plan. Absolutely, don’t starve yourself. Do you know, approximately, how many calories you were consuming before you started losing weight? Usually, if you cut a total of 500 calories (from the combination of more activity and less food), you will see slow, but permanent results. This, for some people, reduces the pangs.
When you talk about the type of foods that “seem to be allowed” on your plan, I see veggies and salads, but no mention of other types of carbs. Is yours a plan that eliminates carbs, or gives you low carbs? When was the last time that you mixed-up the type of veggies and the content of your salads? If your choices of complex carbs are primarily “low” glycemic, and you are not used to such a regime, you will feel the difference from the previous eating style.
If you can shake off the cravings in the first 14 - 21 days, you will find that the attention-getting cravings will dissipate, and you can get on with your food plan with less anxiety.