How do I stay full?

I’m trying to lose some weight and I’ve worked out I need to cut 500 calories each day. Does anyone know any good foods I can eat to stay full longer?

Replies

  • Chadwick_J
    Chadwick_J Posts: 14 Member
    1/2 kg each week over 20 weeks. I think your strat is wise. It’s prob better to ease into it so my body gets used to less food slowly.
  • Chadwick_J
    Chadwick_J Posts: 14 Member
    Lol! Never expected two cat lovers to give me advice 😂 much appreciated - thank you.
  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    Cats are wise. Yes.
  • goal06082021
    goal06082021 Posts: 2,130 Member
    Drink more water. Sometimes it's hard to distinguish between hunger and thirst, so if it's not quite time for the next full meal and you're thinking you should grab a snack, have a glass of water first and then see how you feel.
  • Chadwick_J
    Chadwick_J Posts: 14 Member
    Drink more water. Sometimes it's hard to distinguish between hunger and thirst, so if it's not quite time for the next full meal and you're thinking you should grab a snack, have a glass of water first and then see how you feel.

    Got it thanks for the advice.
  • Chadwick_J
    Chadwick_J Posts: 14 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Without intending to counter the excellent advice above: Some of satiation is individual and idiosyncratic. Pay attention to how you feel, and think about how it relates to what you eat.

    Some people feel more satiated with relatively more protein, some with more fats, some with lots of fiber-rich foods, other via high-volume eating (of low-calorie-density things - there's a huge thread about this over in the Food & Nutrition part of the Community). Timing can matter, too. People do everything from one big meal a day (OMAD) to all-day grazing, and everything in between. Some people find skipping breakfast easy and painless, while other are ready to eat the furniture before lunchtime if they try. There can also be specific food choices that are filling, but that's individual, too. Research on satiating foods puts plain cooked white potatoes at the top of the list of filling foods. For other people, it might be oatmeal, or who knows what.

    Personally, I need a good bit of protein at breakfast (and I *do* need breakfast!), and protein through the day. At some point daily, I need some volume foods (usually it's veggies, and plenty of 'em). Oatmeal is filling, and if I get hungry when a meal isn't coming up soon, I'm better off eating a small protein-rich snack, so that I don't risk over-eating at the next meal. You will be different from that, I'm just using myself as an applied example of the kinds of things that might matter.

    So, definitely try the strategies others have mentioned, but be attentive to the results, and experiment along the way.

    Thanks for the advice bro. Food is my weakness. I hope I’ll be more discipline this time and I’ll experiment with eating different foods as you’ve pointed out to get a better understanding of hunger levels in my body. I like potatoes, so I’ll do some reading on that. I usually eat what I want to eat, so I don’t have anyone to blame, or I skip meals because of work and end up binging on anything I can find that is quick, usually crap. I appreciate your reply.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,118 Member
    edited January 2021
    Chadwick_J wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Without intending to counter the excellent advice above: Some of satiation is individual and idiosyncratic. Pay attention to how you feel, and think about how it relates to what you eat.

    Some people feel more satiated with relatively more protein, some with more fats, some with lots of fiber-rich foods, other via high-volume eating (of low-calorie-density things - there's a huge thread about this over in the Food & Nutrition part of the Community). Timing can matter, too. People do everything from one big meal a day (OMAD) to all-day grazing, and everything in between. Some people find skipping breakfast easy and painless, while other are ready to eat the furniture before lunchtime if they try. There can also be specific food choices that are filling, but that's individual, too. Research on satiating foods puts plain cooked white potatoes at the top of the list of filling foods. For other people, it might be oatmeal, or who knows what.

    Personally, I need a good bit of protein at breakfast (and I *do* need breakfast!), and protein through the day. At some point daily, I need some volume foods (usually it's veggies, and plenty of 'em). Oatmeal is filling, and if I get hungry when a meal isn't coming up soon, I'm better off eating a small protein-rich snack, so that I don't risk over-eating at the next meal. You will be different from that, I'm just using myself as an applied example of the kinds of things that might matter.

    So, definitely try the strategies others have mentioned, but be attentive to the results, and experiment along the way.

    Thanks for the advice bro. Food is my weakness. I hope I’ll be more discipline this time and I’ll experiment with eating different foods as you’ve pointed out to get a better understanding of hunger levels in my body. I like potatoes, so I’ll do some reading on that. I usually eat what I want to eat, so I don’t have anyone to blame, or I skip meals because of work and end up binging on anything I can find that is quick, usually crap. I appreciate your reply.

    Bro? Just for the record, I'm a li'l ol' lady, age 65. 😆 (Yes, that's me in my profile photo, though around age 60.) But you can call me "bro" if you like, I guess.

    Consider this:

    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/b3cf/3b7d71a7485e6355e49b2e4c86db54b25046.pdf

    When I was losing, I kept shelf-stable protein snacks in my car, in case hunger hit while I was out and about. Had I not already been retired then, I would've kept some in my desk at work, too. (Consider options that are nutritious, pleasant enough to eat, but not profoundly tempting. Dry-roasted soybeans are one that worked for me, for example.)
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Chadwick_J wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Without intending to counter the excellent advice above: Some of satiation is individual and idiosyncratic. Pay attention to how you feel, and think about how it relates to what you eat.

    Some people feel more satiated with relatively more protein, some with more fats, some with lots of fiber-rich foods, other via high-volume eating (of low-calorie-density things - there's a huge thread about this over in the Food & Nutrition part of the Community). Timing can matter, too. People do everything from one big meal a day (OMAD) to all-day grazing, and everything in between. Some people find skipping breakfast easy and painless, while other are ready to eat the furniture before lunchtime if they try. There can also be specific food choices that are filling, but that's individual, too. Research on satiating foods puts plain cooked white potatoes at the top of the list of filling foods. For other people, it might be oatmeal, or who knows what.

    Personally, I need a good bit of protein at breakfast (and I *do* need breakfast!), and protein through the day. At some point daily, I need some volume foods (usually it's veggies, and plenty of 'em). Oatmeal is filling, and if I get hungry when a meal isn't coming up soon, I'm better off eating a small protein-rich snack, so that I don't risk over-eating at the next meal. You will be different from that, I'm just using myself as an applied example of the kinds of things that might matter.

    So, definitely try the strategies others have mentioned, but be attentive to the results, and experiment along the way.

    Thanks for the advice bro. Food is my weakness. I hope I’ll be more discipline this time and I’ll experiment with eating different foods as you’ve pointed out to get a better understanding of hunger levels in my body. I like potatoes, so I’ll do some reading on that. I usually eat what I want to eat, so I don’t have anyone to blame, or I skip meals because of work and end up binging on anything I can find that is quick, usually crap. I appreciate your reply.

    Bro? Just for the record, I'm a li'l ol' lady, age 65. 😆 (Yes, that's me in my profile photo, though around age 60.) But you can call me "bro" if you like, I guess.

    Consider this:

    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/b3cf/3b7d71a7485e6355e49b2e4c86db54b25046.pdf

    When I was losing, I kept shelf-stable protein snacks in my car, in case hunger hit while I was out and about. Had I not already been retired then, I would've kept some in my desk at work, too. (Consider options that are nutritious, pleasant enough to eat, but not profoundly tempting. Dry-roasted soybeans are one that worked for me, for example.)

    Bro! :laugh:
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,118 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Chadwick_J wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Without intending to counter the excellent advice above: Some of satiation is individual and idiosyncratic. Pay attention to how you feel, and think about how it relates to what you eat.

    Some people feel more satiated with relatively more protein, some with more fats, some with lots of fiber-rich foods, other via high-volume eating (of low-calorie-density things - there's a huge thread about this over in the Food & Nutrition part of the Community). Timing can matter, too. People do everything from one big meal a day (OMAD) to all-day grazing, and everything in between. Some people find skipping breakfast easy and painless, while other are ready to eat the furniture before lunchtime if they try. There can also be specific food choices that are filling, but that's individual, too. Research on satiating foods puts plain cooked white potatoes at the top of the list of filling foods. For other people, it might be oatmeal, or who knows what.

    Personally, I need a good bit of protein at breakfast (and I *do* need breakfast!), and protein through the day. At some point daily, I need some volume foods (usually it's veggies, and plenty of 'em). Oatmeal is filling, and if I get hungry when a meal isn't coming up soon, I'm better off eating a small protein-rich snack, so that I don't risk over-eating at the next meal. You will be different from that, I'm just using myself as an applied example of the kinds of things that might matter.

    So, definitely try the strategies others have mentioned, but be attentive to the results, and experiment along the way.

    Thanks for the advice bro. Food is my weakness. I hope I’ll be more discipline this time and I’ll experiment with eating different foods as you’ve pointed out to get a better understanding of hunger levels in my body. I like potatoes, so I’ll do some reading on that. I usually eat what I want to eat, so I don’t have anyone to blame, or I skip meals because of work and end up binging on anything I can find that is quick, usually crap. I appreciate your reply.

    Bro? Just for the record, I'm a li'l ol' lady, age 65. 😆 (Yes, that's me in my profile photo, though around age 60.) But you can call me "bro" if you like, I guess.

    Consider this:

    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/b3cf/3b7d71a7485e6355e49b2e4c86db54b25046.pdf

    When I was losing, I kept shelf-stable protein snacks in my car, in case hunger hit while I was out and about. Had I not already been retired then, I would've kept some in my desk at work, too. (Consider options that are nutritious, pleasant enough to eat, but not profoundly tempting. Dry-roasted soybeans are one that worked for me, for example.)

    Bro! :laugh:

    ToldJa.
  • Chadwick_J
    Chadwick_J Posts: 14 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Chadwick_J wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Without intending to counter the excellent advice above: Some of satiation is individual and idiosyncratic. Pay attention to how you feel, and think about how it relates to what you eat.

    Some people feel more satiated with relatively more protein, some with more fats, some with lots of fiber-rich foods, other via high-volume eating (of low-calorie-density things - there's a huge thread about this over in the Food & Nutrition part of the Community). Timing can matter, too. People do everything from one big meal a day (OMAD) to all-day grazing, and everything in between. Some people find skipping breakfast easy and painless, while other are ready to eat the furniture before lunchtime if they try. There can also be specific food choices that are filling, but that's individual, too. Research on satiating foods puts plain cooked white potatoes at the top of the list of filling foods. For other people, it might be oatmeal, or who knows what.

    Personally, I need a good bit of protein at breakfast (and I *do* need breakfast!), and protein through the day. At some point daily, I need some volume foods (usually it's veggies, and plenty of 'em). Oatmeal is filling, and if I get hungry when a meal isn't coming up soon, I'm better off eating a small protein-rich snack, so that I don't risk over-eating at the next meal. You will be different from that, I'm just using myself as an applied example of the kinds of things that might matter.

    So, definitely try the strategies others have mentioned, but be attentive to the results, and experiment along the way.

    Thanks for the advice bro. Food is my weakness. I hope I’ll be more discipline this time and I’ll experiment with eating different foods as you’ve pointed out to get a better understanding of hunger levels in my body. I like potatoes, so I’ll do some reading on that. I usually eat what I want to eat, so I don’t have anyone to blame, or I skip meals because of work and end up binging on anything I can find that is quick, usually crap. I appreciate your reply.

    Bro? Just for the record, I'm a li'l ol' lady, age 65. 😆 (Yes, that's me in my profile photo, though around age 60.) But you can call me "bro" if you like, I guess.

    Consider this:

    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/b3cf/3b7d71a7485e6355e49b2e4c86db54b25046.pdf

    When I was losing, I kept shelf-stable protein snacks in my car, in case hunger hit while I was out and about. Had I not already been retired then, I would've kept some in my desk at work, too. (Consider options that are nutritious, pleasant enough to eat, but not profoundly tempting. Dry-roasted soybeans are one that worked for me, for example.)

    Hahaha, best laugh of the day. So sorry, no disrespect.

    I’ve just had a turkey salad sandwich, but still hungry. I think I’ll pop into the grocery store to get some fruit and lean meats for the coming week.
  • yirara
    yirara Posts: 9,912 Member
    Sorry, not a cat. I just chimed in because there's lots of laughter here, and to say that all above is right.
    Find food that makes you feel full and happy. Feeling full is important when losing weight of course. But feeling happy is as well so that you make it to the finish line. There's no need to punish yourself. All foods are allowed (provided no medical conditions).
  • ac7ssm
    ac7ssm Posts: 14 Member
    In my experience, "Fullness" is dependent on what you have eaten. Sugar triggers hunger for me, If I avoid sugar, I can feel fuller longer.
    YMMV
  • shadowfax_c11
    shadowfax_c11 Posts: 1,942 Member
    Big glass of water with some Metamucil (psyllium powder) will make you feel full. But please be sure your calorie goal is realistic and healthy.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,118 Member
    BTW, thinking it may not have been clear, because of laugh-y context. This link that I suggested above (with the totally nonspecific URL) . . . .

    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/b3cf/3b7d71a7485e6355e49b2e4c86db54b25046.pdf

    . . . is a list of foods from a research study, indicating the "satiation index" (fullness-invoking value) of a number of specific common foods, as rated by the research subjects. The findings won't be universal, but could suggest some useful things to experiment with.

    Also, there's been some research suggesting that some compound in leafy dark greens helps with satiation. I can't put my fingers on the link right now, but heck, a nice big mixed-greens salad, or a goodly portion of lightly-sauteed greens with flavorful vinaigrette or miso or something . . . that's enjoyable/useful for other reasons, too, so why not eat some? 🙂
  • sportygal1971
    sportygal1971 Posts: 62 Member
    Healthy fat & protein fill me up. I eat under 125 to 150g carbs a day because they just want me to eat more most days I'm under 100.
    Fat is not the bad guy and I don't feel I've been sacrificing much w my nutrition eating eggs, avocado, olive oil etc to satisfy me.
    Celery, asparagus, cauliflower are my go to carbs since they are low on glycemic index.
  • rosebarnalice
    rosebarnalice Posts: 3,488 Member
    I'm big on veggie-based soups and filling up on lots of veggies at every meal (I average about 40-50 grams of fiber a day- mostly from veggies)
  • Noreenmarie1234
    Noreenmarie1234 Posts: 7,492 Member
    It depends. What do you normally eat? There are easy ways to cut calories without noticing like switching to 0 calorie drinks, swapping caloric sauces for ones without calories, not using condiments, bulking up meals with veggies, subbing pasta for low calorie alternatives, etc.