Not eating enough calories

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Does anyone else ever have a problem with not getting enough calories in a day? Most days I am under my 1200cal limit, which I know isn't good and sets me at the "starvation" mode. But since I'm trying to eat healthy I have this mental block and as soon as I see food that has a moderate calorie count I step away. So my day is mostly made up of lots of food with small amounts of calories. And then I'm full. Or the days that I eat things that have larger calories (like a 500 calorie lunch, for example), that keeps me full for the rest of the day and I can't eat dinner. On a normal day I will either have a proper lunch OR dinner, and the one I don't have will just be a little snack or something. Plus I go to university and have 13 hour days some days.

I have really never been a big eater and have always had a small appetite. I gained my weight, not because I ate a lot, but because of what I ate (basically freshman fifteen :P)

Some days I'm really close to 1200 and I just say that it's 1200 because everything is an estimate and I probably eat more calories than MFP or I actually thinks I do.. But some days I'm like 300-400 calories under, and that's BEFORE exercise.

I don't even really know what my question is here... Does anyone else have this problem? Any suggestions on what to eat? :/
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Replies

  • iwbsme
    iwbsme Posts: 16 Member
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    I used to have this problem too. My advice is to start lifting weight or exercise, it will up your appetite. Also, eat calorie dense foods like nuts, a small handful is almost 200 cal. Things like peanut butter, almond butter etc are also healthy and high in calories.
  • pinkraynedropjacki
    pinkraynedropjacki Posts: 3,027 Member
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    I'm on about 1680 a day & still can't reach 1200. I am like you, if it's higher or even mod in cals I put it down. I think I've become scared of food.... not a good thing. It's so easy to develop a disorder when you are constantly counting. It's like you feel if you eat more than you should or go near your limit then you will put all the weight back on the next day. I'm at the stage where I'll have no breakfast, small lunch (if at all depending on my run for the day) and then a dinner that is over 500cal but still not enough to keep it going for what I've missed out on all day. So I'll eat till a time (9pm) and then stop & go hungry for the rest of the time.

    Not good. Get out of that low cal mentality while you can. Get out of the scared of food life as well.
  • Rottiegirl06
    Rottiegirl06 Posts: 4 Member
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    HI!! Yes, I can relate to your problem. You should try to eat 5 - 6 small "meals/snacks" a day. If you having 6, then you could keep them around 200 calories each which may make you feel better about them (emotionally/mentally). Always make sure you have a good breakfast as this starts your metabolism going - oatmeal or scrambled eggs/egg whites w/turkey bacon are both great options. If you are eating salads or sandwiches, try adding some avocado - this adds your needed calories and also good, healthy fats. You could also use the 100 calorie snack packs of almonds or almonds/walnuts. Again, adds some needed calories and good fats. These are easy to throw in your backpack/bookbag so that you have them with you all the time. You could also pack protein bars. Pure Protein has some good ones. The pack in about 20g of protein and run about 200 calories. Great for a meal/snack on the run and they are pretty filling. Make sure you drink a full glass / bottle of water with it. I keep a "snack" bag in my car (I have kids and am always running them from one place to another). In it, I keep the 100 calorie nut packs, granola bars, trail mix and these breakfast on the go packs.
    I hope this helps!
  • ttknowles01
    ttknowles01 Posts: 255 Member
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    I'm on 1500 cals a day, and I struggle to hit 1200 sometimes. I eat 3 meals a day plus snacks, and I hate to eat when I'm not hungry just to hit the 1200 cal mark :-/
  • saraann4
    saraann4 Posts: 1,312 Member
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    I struggled with this starting out. Just try gradually upping your calories.
  • MsBookandTea
    MsBookandTea Posts: 39 Member
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    Yes, and honestly I'm not worried about it. :bigsmile:
  • beccamorty
    beccamorty Posts: 29 Member
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    Thank you guys, those are all great suggestions! I eat peanut butter so much, but I will try to keep some nuts and protein bars on me and hopefully be able to get them down! It's weird - after I exercise I actually feel less hungry :/

    I'm new on my diet/losing weight regime, so I guess I'll see how it goes for the next couple weeks and if nothing happens with my weight loss I will try to up my calories and see if that helps!
  • love4fitnesslove4food_wechange
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    nope--ate 1200 calories for breakfast today.
  • jmariscal3
    jmariscal3 Posts: 57 Member
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    I am in the same boat as you! I am not used to eating 1,200 calories a day, usually skip breakfast. I, like you, do not eat a lot but let myself get into fast food and eating bad foods so I gained weight over the past year. I am hoping to lose 27 pounds and have lost 5 of those so far, but that is in 3 months. :( I know I went into starvation mode most of that time because I skipped meals and did not hit the 1200 mark too much, now I have changed it up and am trying to eat more. My fear is that I will gain weight and not lose it. I am choosing healthier foods and not junk now, and am exercising 4-5 times a week. I am also lifting weights now and taking protein shakes after workouts. I am hoping to lose weight this time around and get my metabolism to speed up. I have also upped my water intake. I don't know if any of this will help you, but I am in the same boat as you and you are not alone! I am frustrated, too, but refuse to give up this time. Try to get in all of your calories and make them clean choices. Drink lots of water and keep up the workouts. If this does not work for me I am going to find a trainer or nutritionist to try to fix this. I am hoping that I can do it myself, though.
  • love4fitnesslove4food_wechange
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    suggestions on what to eat:

    whole eggs
    dairy--2% or whole milk products
    avocado
    fatty fish--like salmon, arctic char, mackerel, or tuna packed in oil
    peanut butter
    nuts
    seeds
    avocado
    tahini
    hummus
    beans/potatoes/sweet potatoes
    olive oil
    olives
  • paleirishmother
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    I definitely don't have a problem with eating 1200 calories a day. If I did, I probably wouldn't be on MFP trying to lose weight :(
  • kenazfehu
    kenazfehu Posts: 1,188 Member
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    If you know how many meals you are going to have, try to divide your calories evenly. For example, if you want 1200 calories per day and eat 3 meals, then each meal should be about 400 calories.
  • soonerman4life
    soonerman4life Posts: 8 Member
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    suggestions on what to eat:

    whole eggs
    dairy--2% or whole milk products
    avocado
    fatty fish--like salmon, arctic char, mackerel, or tuna packed in oil
    peanut butter
    nuts
    seeds
    avocado
    tahini
    hummus
    beans/potatoes/sweet potatoes
    olive oil
    olives

    This is the best suggestion so far.
  • Lift_hard_eat_big
    Lift_hard_eat_big Posts: 2,278 Member
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    It's hard to get my calories in right now that I'm sick. I've got no appetite and my throat is raw from coughing. But when I'm healthy I have no problem getting in over 3,500 kcal/day. Sometimes I get nearly that much in one meal.
  • freddykid
    freddykid Posts: 265 Member
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    I did for a while before I started MFP, I literally halved all my meals and my body got used to the the smaller calorie intake. Then I was eating a small breakfast salad and tuna for lunch and a light meal for dinner. I slowly added exercise. Once I added exercise 3-4 times a week my urge for calories came easier.
  • Welshcakes
    Welshcakes Posts: 19 Member
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    I definitely don't have a problem with eating 1200 calories a day. If I did, I probably wouldn't be on MFP trying to lose weight :(

    That's because you're accepting all those ice creams! DARNIT FORREST.
  • CkepiJinx
    CkepiJinx Posts: 613 Member
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    Not eating enough is just as unhealthy as eating too much. Say it with me and repeat it to yourself!
  • mgobluetx12
    mgobluetx12 Posts: 1,326 Member
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    suggestions on what to eat:

    whole eggs
    dairy--2% or whole milk products
    avocado
    fatty fish--like salmon, arctic char, mackerel, or tuna packed in oil
    peanut butter
    nuts
    seeds
    avocado
    tahini
    hummus
    beans/potatoes/sweet potatoes
    olive oil
    olives

    This is the best suggestion so far.

    I agree! Slowly add some of those foods into your diet and you'll be hitting 1200 in no time. Also, don't FORCE yourself to eat. Starvation mode is for people who are around 10% body fat, so if you're above that, you don't have to worry about starving yourself.
  • tannyasawyer
    tannyasawyer Posts: 106 Member
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    suggestions on what to eat:

    whole eggs
    dairy--2% or whole milk products
    avocado
    fatty fish--like salmon, arctic char, mackerel, or tuna packed in oil
    peanut butter
    nuts
    seeds
    avocado
    tahini
    hummus
    beans/potatoes/sweet potatoes
    olive oil
    olives

    This is the best suggestion so far.

    Agreed - when I have days when I think it'll be a bit of a struggle, I have a piece of cheese. A very small amount holds a good few calories and is nutritious and tasty.
  • californiagirl2012
    californiagirl2012 Posts: 2,625 Member
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    I liked the advice about weight lifting and exercise.

    Everyone is different.

    1200 is such a stupid number to get stuck on. What you need to eat for a deficit is relative to your RMR. If you are short you really don't have much room for up compared to the 1200. If you are taller you will have a higher RMR and can go up or down and still be in a deficit (way above 1200) so you can lose no matter what. All that matters is a calorie deficit.

    To tell everyone eat more is wrong.

    To tell everyone to eat less is wrong.

    To find the exact amount of calories for you to be in a sustainable calorie deficit is correct. Some people can handle a deeper calorie deficit than others. Some people have emotional eating disorders and it comes into play. Even a small deficit puts your body in a state of flux with hormones and such and everyone is different.

    You just need to find the correct calories for YOU to be healthy and sustainable and still lose weight. It might require some experimentation and tremendous patience. You can always notch up and down by 100 until you find what is sustainable and still allows you to lose weight.

    If you have emotional eating issues than you are not going to be able to handle such a deep deficit and if you eat to low it will backfire. A better strategy is to eat at a shallower deficit, and sometimes give yourself a break from the deficit and eat at maintenance. This is not going backwards, but eating to low and then binging because you can't sustain it is going backwards. It's better to stay forwards even if it is slower. The tortoise wins this race in the end.

    There is no mystery to weight loss, everyone thinks something is wrong, their metabolism is broken, they have low thyroid, they have menopause or whatever issue, they are as unique as a snowflake, whatever. I thought a lot of these things once too but once the doctor helped resolve the health issues for me I learned there is still no magic pill. Most people eat more than they need to and are not at good at estimating calories as they think they are. Most people have a lower BMR than they think they do. The only way to know for sure is to go to a lab and have it tested. It doesn't seem fair to have to eat less and feel a little hunger. It's hard to face the truth of it, very hard. It's not fun. It's drudgery at times. But if you learn to enjoy your smaller amounts of food (necessary to lose weight, since the reason we got fat in the first place was eating too much whether we knew it or not), and rejoice in your victories it can be done.

    All I can do is share what worked for me. I achieved my goal at age 50 after beating my head against the wall for 15 years. Yeah anyone can do it, but I can tell you that you are up against a lot when you are older and I believe females have some unique issue to face with hormones and such. The sooner you can get a handle on it the better. DO NOT GIVE UP. As I got older and the weight piled on (and I didn't feel I was eating too much!) everyone kept telling me to give up, this is what happens when you get older. I'm small, and I didn't realize how small I was until I lost the weight. Everyone said I had big bones. I looked hefty because I worked out. Once I lost the weight I realized how small I really was and that small people don't need to eat as much as big people. HINT: If you are short you are probably small.

    Your body loses weight in chunks, not linear. I have found that you can do everything right and your weight loss seems to plateau but if you are patient and keep exercising and eating at a deficit (however slight) you will lose it, it will suddenly "whoosh". There are so many variables for the scale; water retention, digestion, hormones, allergies, sodium, carbs, water intake, DOMS, inflammation, the list goes on. People mistakenly think they lose or gain weight when they eat more or less because of these fluctuations.

    Losing weight requires tremendous patience. You will not lose it when you want it or where you want it. The body does its thing. Some apparent plateaus can last a month or so. You cannot make it happen faster. You must focus on two things; calories and exercise. Nothing else matters. Scales and metrics don't matter. The day in and day out grind of exercise and calories are all that matters. It is not very exciting until things fall into place. You get your victories and you ride one victory to the next.

    The scale is a trend tool. The scale is good but put it away and only check once a week and only use it as a trend tool. It will fluctuate, it does not matter. Take front side and back progress pictures at least once a month. You will see differences that the metrics won't tell you and it's that little bit of NSV that will keep you going until the next victory.

    All that matters is calories. A healthy balanced diet within a calorie budget for a deficit that is right for YOU is all that matters for weight loss. Don't make it complicated.


    Also people play mental accounting games with calories just like with finances. Make steps to make sure you are making accurate measurements. Packaged foods can have MORE than they say but not less (they get in trouble if less so they would rather error with MORE).

    If you typically intake sodium at a certain rate your body adjusts, but if you make a sudden change then you will see a spike.

    Exercise is for making your lean body mass pretty (especially lifting weights) for when the fat is gone. Losing fat with no muscle is ugly and cardio alone will not make you pretty. You cannot out exercise too many calories.

    It really is about calories. I tell people this all the time and they say "Well if calories are all that matter why do you eat so clean???!!" Well, because it makes me feel better, sleep better, and perform better at my sports.

    Too many changes at once can be hard on some people. I've always eaten healthy so it easy for me to simply eat less. Eating at a calorie deficit is hard on people; even a small deficit puts your body in a state of flux with hormones and such. Everyone is different. Some people can handle a deeper calorie deficit than others, this is not right or wrong, it just is. Stress in your life affects your hunger hormones; lack of sleep, fatigue, job stress, family stress, financial stress, etc. Add in emotional eating issues and it gets even more complicated. Most people can only handle so much change/stress at once, they try to do too much and fail. Sometimes it might be a better strategy to eat at maintenance and make some small changes first, it really depends on how much stress you are taking in at the moment.
    What is the exact number of calories for you?

    We’ve been trying to figure out an exact NUMBER of calories that everyone should be eating, without recognizing that everyone is slightly different. In truth, the calories aren’t the end game. Your body is. So the EXACT amount of Calories that are right for you is the EXACT amount that will allow you to maintain your ideal bodyweight no matter what some calculator or chart says.

    In other words, an online calculator might tell you that you need to eat 2,500 calories
    per day to maintain your ideal bodyweight. But the only way to know for sure if this is
    the right amount for you is to test it out. If you gain weight or can’t lose weight eating
    that much, then you know you need to eat less to lose weight no matter how many
    calculators and text books say otherwise.

    This doesn’t mean your metabolism is broken, it just means the estimate of your needs
    was just a bit off.

    -John Barban (The Body Centric Calorie Guide from the Venus Index and Adonis Index Manuals)


    The good thing is you don't have to worry about the starvation mode myth if you are fat. Only skinny people have to worry about starvation mode. It does not mean you have the capability to eat at a large calorie deficit if you have emotional eating disorders or other issues going on, but at least you don't have to be afraid of it anymore.

    The Theory of Fat Availability:
    •There is a set amount of fat that can be released from a fat cell.
    •The more fat you have, the more fat can be used as a fuel when dieting.
    •The less fat you have, the less fat can be used as a fuel when dieting.
    •Towards the end of a transformation, when body fat is extremely low you
    may not have enough fat to handle a large caloric deficit anymore.

    At the extreme low end, when your body fat cannot ‘keep up’ with the energy deficit
    you've imposed on your body, the energy MUST come from SOMEWHERE. This is
    when you are at risk of losing lean body mass during dieting (commonly referred to
    as ‘starvation mode’). This happens at extremely low levels of body fat, under 6% in
    men and 12% in women [Friedl K.E. J Appl Phsiol, 1994].

    -Brad Pilon and John Barban (from The Reverse Taper Diet in The Adonis Index and Venus Index manuals)

    Lifting weights is KEY. I recently had my DXA scan done and at 51.5 years of age I have the bone density of a super athletic 30 year old. That is a direct result of lifting for over 30 years. Now if that is not scientific proof that lifting weights keeps you younger I don't know what is! Also I believe it is why most people think I look much younger than I really am.

    Start lifting now, lift heavy and change it up often, find a lot of weight routines with free weights, make it fun, embrace it, make it part of your life. Only 3 days a week is all it would take. Crank up your tunes and learn to love it, because your body will love it and it will make your quality of life better in many ways, especially when you get older like me.

    Because of this I don't have to worry about osteoporosis. If you wait until you are older and your bones start to deteriorate it's a bit too late, you can't get back what you lost, and you can only start a resistance routine that will prevent further damage.

    If you are female you don't have the hormones to get big naturally. I lift heavy and I'm still really tiny. My lean body mass is only 104 lbs and that is fairly heavy for a 5'1" female, and quite a bit of this is due to my having very dense bones from 30 years of lifting, not all muscle, and I'm still quite tiny.

    My muscles really are not that big, but they show a lot of definition because I'm quite lean. If I gained some fat then I would have a softer more toned look (which is OKAY too!). Then if I gained more fat I would look bulky and hefty like I did most of my life until last year. YOU CAN HAVE WHATEVER YOU WANT. Lean and ripped, soft and toned, or hefty, it all depends on how much fat you leave on your body. Calories are the only thing that changes fat. Exercise is for changing or maintaining your lean body mass only. Lifting weights will give you the best bang for your buck for shaping your body. I finally changed my shape by putting lifting first and cardio 2nd. You cannot out exercise too many calories.

    There is nothing easy about this journey. Don't give up. Keep your eye on the prize. You do not have to be perfect to do this. You just have to have more good days than not. A bad day is not the end of the world. Tomorrow is a new day. Just pick it right up again. Be kind to yourself at all times and never beat yourself up.

    Being on a calorie deficit is hard. You can't do this journey on will power alone. You must set up your environment for success. Have a team around you in your real life, not just online. Get trigger foods out of the house. It will take some sacrifice and it's not easy. You might have to say no to some social events sometimes.

    For me it's all about a calorie budget. I had less of a budget available when I was losing weight, more to spend now that I'm maintaining and all the tools I used for weight loss come into play for the rest of my life maintaining.

    When you have accumulated excess fat, you have accumulated a debt. It is hard to pay off the debt (you have less calories to spend). If you are sitting next to someone your same gender and height and they are not overweight and you are, they get to eat more than you (have more calories to spend) because they are debt free. You have less calories to spend because you are paying off your debt.

    Wishing you the best! -Bobbie