Recognising your body's need for fuel.

wildon883r
wildon883r Posts: 429 Member
edited September 29 in Health and Weight Loss
I had a bowl of wheat cereal and milk for breakfast with some coffee. I went out and mowed the lawn (rider&push) which takes an hour. Then i got the garden pick out and proceeded to dig weeds out for about 90 minutes. About an hour in to that job i start feeling not like i'm hungry but that i need to give my body energy and it wants it right now. Had i ate a higher then 250ish cal breakfast that was full of carbs (not protien). Chances are i could of went till lunch before getting hungry.

You see there is a major difference between hunger and your body letting you know it needs energy to continue the task at hand. So you ask why didn't it just draw from body fat. It doesn't work that way. Your body manages your fat use and not you. Otherwise we could just work out at full energy until we had 10% or less body fat. Energy provided by fat stores is not enough to get you through physical demands.

I ate a protein bar after my workout because my body needed a fuel refill. Depending on meal size before a work out, more then likely i wouldn't have needed the bar. With that being said exercise in itself does not give reason to eat just because you performed physical activity. Some people eat/drink a protein substance for no reason other then they think they need it after a work out. Some think its ok to eat exercise calories just for the sake that somebody said they can or even advised them to.

We should eat balanced sustainance meals and snacks to remain in a given caloric intake window for what we desire. Generally speaking if you consume a good amount of calories pre-workout you wont need to eat after your workout or more at days end. Endurance athletes have to preload carbs at extreme levels to per say go distance in a marathon or triathalon. They usually have less then 5% body fat. They coudn't finish the event without eating per say an entire pound of spagetti pre-race, Michael Phelps consumed 10-12000 calories a day during the Olympics. He had to eat that much so his energy level was unquestioned. I doubt on that caloric level he felt hunger at all yet his body demanded that energy for him to be able to be the best swimmer in the world.

The point in all this ? If you understand your body and how to listen to it, It will tell you when it needs extra fuel above and beyond your daily meals and snacks. There is no reason whatsoever to just eat more because you exercised unless your body demands it.but you do need to fuel it if your body starts crying out for energy to continue.

Replies

  • campi_mama
    campi_mama Posts: 350 Member
    I couldn't agree more!
  • Well said!
  • kitinboots
    kitinboots Posts: 589 Member
    This makes perfect sense. I've noticed recently that if I ate early, then sometime in the beginning of my work (which is walking around town for 5 hours) I will feel lethargic and less focused, but a quick snack even though I'm not hungry gives me the energy to march on and not only walk for the set amount if time, but pick up the pace and get as much exercise out of the time too.
  • harleyfever
    harleyfever Posts: 12 Member
    Thanks. That is some food for thought.
  • TXHunny84
    TXHunny84 Posts: 503 Member
    Awesome post!! Exactly what I NEEDED to hear! Maybe that's why I gain when I eat back my exercise calories :-/
    This makes a lot of sense!

    BUMP!!
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