Fact or Myth? Big meals in evening bad?
zealey77
Posts: 104
Hi, does anyone know the truth about whether it's bad to have a big meal in the evening as we can't burn it off due to sleeping? At the moment I have a reasonable breakfast (poached eggs or Bran Flakes), very small lunch, then use up the rest of my calorie allowance on a filling evening meal. But it makes sense to me that when I do my exercise round midday I'm only burning off my breakfast calories. And when I eat my evening meal, the calories just sit on my stomach while I sit on the sofa.
Is this idea a myth, or does it all balance out over time with weight loss?
Is this idea a myth, or does it all balance out over time with weight loss?
0
Replies
-
You burn the same calories every day just living.
Meal timing doesn't matter, calories do.
If you stick to your calorie goal, you will lose weight, even if you eat all your calories in the evening.0 -
Myth. The Only thing a big meal in the evening could do is give you a tummy ache trying to sleep. I eat like 500+ calories less than an hour before bed most nights and I've been steadily losing weight, no problem. It's all about total calories for the day/week.0
-
I remember seeing a couple of study's where 1 group had a moderate breakfast, big lunch, little dinner vs. a group who had moderate breakfast, little lunch, big dinner - same types of food were eaten.
Those with the big dinner either stayed the same or gained, while the group with the big lunch lost. I don't remember if the amount lost was very significant, but the idea behind it was if you have a bigger lunch, you have longer in the day to "work it off".
I'm sure that under certain circumstances depending on what you eat when you can probably find a study to support whatever way you want.0 -
I eat most of my calories during dinner and I'm still consistently losing. I think all that matters for me is staying within my calorie intake for the day.0
-
Myth!0
-
But it makes sense to me that when I do my exercise round midday I'm only burning off my breakfast calories. And when I eat my evening meal, the calories just sit on my stomach while I sit on the sofa.
Is this idea a myth, or does it all balance out over time with weight loss?
Myth. This isn't the way the body works. Total calories in vs. total calories out is what matters. And not even on a daily basis. You can go over some days and under other days and still lose if it all averages out to a calorie deficit.0 -
OK great. Thanks, that's put my mind at ease.0
-
Myth!
This.0 -
I like eating larger dinners in the evening. Both my boyfriend and I love to cook, so we usually spend a lot of time together preparing our meal and enjoying it together. I tend to eat smaller breakfasts, lunches, and snacks to accommodate this within my daily calories.
According to my ticker, it seems to be working!0 -
Myth.
I just don't like going to bed too soon after eating too much because I'm prone to acid reflux and I don't like the feeling of going to bed stuffed. It's more of a personal preference. Also, my mom swears by it, so I've kind of grown up with not eating late.
ETA: I used to binge in the evening, so leaving calories for snacks after a small dinner has helped me tremendously (as in, I haven't done binged in over a month)!0 -
Hi, does anyone know the truth about whether it's bad to have a big meal in the evening as we can't burn it off due to sleeping? At the moment I have a reasonable breakfast (poached eggs or Bran Flakes), very small lunch, then use up the rest of my calorie allowance on a filling evening meal. But it makes sense to me that when I do my exercise round midday I'm only burning off my breakfast calories. And when I eat my evening meal, the calories just sit on my stomach while I sit on the sofa.
Is this idea a myth, or does it all balance out over time with weight loss?
MYTH.
Excess calories get turned to fat for later use. Whether you eat them at breakfast, lunch or dinner.
The key is, over the course of a day or a week, to use more calories that you take in.
Even if you eat 1500 calories at dinner. You'll use a bunch of that (500-1,000 depending on your metabolic rate) just being alive - breathing, staying warm, tossing and turning in your sleep... the rest will be stored, yes. BUT, over the course of the next 24 hours, as long as you remain in an overall deficit, you are going to need those calories to carry on breathing and moving and stuff. It's not like the body is going to say "Hey - I just put that there, you can't use it yet!". It doesn't become permanent fat just because you ate too close to bed time - your body doesn't work like that.
So eat when it is convenient/comfortable for you.0 -
Myth. The Only thing a big meal in the evening could do is give you a tummy ache trying to sleep.
also bad dreams...0 -
After dinner I never get hungry for some reason...0
-
This content has been removed.
-
I think this is one of those myths that got started by correlation: most mediterranean countries eat their big meals in the middle of the day and they are sooooo slim and healthy. Correlation is NOT causation.0
-
its a mythes what matters is the overal macro nutrients and calories0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 423 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions