I don't have any experience with that service, but for that kind of price, I would learn to cook. My wife and I eat out maybe once or twice a month, and including that we spend less than $100 a week combined on food. We buy in bulk and freeze most of what we buy when it gets home.
The other part of this is what dlish brought up because it is fundamentally the most important truth of 'diets'. Any temporary changes are a waste of time. Any temporary changes are a waste of time. (That was not a typo, I was simply reiterating that any temporary changes are a waste of time. Ok you probably got it now, moving on...)
Unless you're planning on doing this forever, you might want to look into what your going to do after you quit. That is where you're going to end up anyway, so you may be able to save yourself some time and money by just skipping the whole meal delivery bit and going straight to that.
Well, now that I think about it, if you start this you could use it to wean yourself into cooking. For example, prepare the other two days worth of meals yourself, or maybe 1 meal a day for the week, something. After a few weeks bump it to 3 days of cooking or to 10 meals a week - however. That way you when you screw up a few meals you won't be starving because of it. The important thing to note is that you're using this as a temporary crutch to assist you into making a permanent change. It isn't a solution, it's a means to a solution.
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The advantage law is the best law in rugby, because it lets you ignore all the others for the good of the game.
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