If you're still hungry, can you really be overeating?

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If I ate healthily all day one day, and had pretty close to my calories, but am still very hungry, if I eat over the calories it tells me to, can I really be overeating for my body, because it's telling me to eat more?
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  • grawrrrr
    grawrrrr Posts: 336
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    It would help to know what your calories are, what your activity level is, etc.
  • EvanKeel
    EvanKeel Posts: 1,904 Member
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    Perceived hunger is a little tricky. So the short answer to your question is, yes you could potentially be eating more than you need. Even if I'm eating "healthy" foods that everyone swears up and down will keep me sated, I don't feel sated unless I'm 300-400 calories over my maintenance in a day. Who knows? Maybe that's changed since the last time I tried that.

    It would be a mistake to assume that your body will just tell you to stop eating once you've hit enough calories to maintain your activity level.
  • stonel94
    stonel94 Posts: 550 Member
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    Okay, well i'm allowed... 1650 (1 lb a week loss and only trying to lose a couple pounds, I'm not techincally overweight, just not happy with my body) and i put lightly active because since i'm on break I'm just chilling and shopping and then exercising most days. I put down 5 45 min workouts, but I workout at least 6 days a week and sometimes for an hour. I eat healthy usually, I just have to have something sweet but I try to do it well like a 90 calorie cookie or 1/2 the fat ice cream or just 1 130 cal ice cream bar stuff like that.
    usually i'm not hungry, but sometimes i am...
  • Natihilator
    Natihilator Posts: 1,778 Member
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    Do you drink enough water to stay properly hydrated? Sometimes hunger signals can really by thirst signals.
  • stonel94
    stonel94 Posts: 550 Member
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    Yeah I drink tons of water, like way over 8 cups a day, usually at least 10 cups, more usually
  • BarackMeLikeAHurricane
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    Eat more protein and fiber. Both will fill you up quickly and keep you full longer.
  • bathsheba_c
    bathsheba_c Posts: 1,873 Member
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    What do you mean when you say that you're not happy with your body? Some possibilities, depending on what the answer is:

    1. You only started losing weight, and your stomach is still getting used to less food, in which case you should eat more protein and fiber and wait for it to pass in a week or two.
    2. You are close enough to healthy weight that you should be aiming for 1/2 lb instead of 1 lb each week.
    3. You don't actually need to lose weight; you just need to incorporate strength training to get the kind of figure you want.
  • Dave198lbs
    Dave198lbs Posts: 8,810 Member
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    If I ate healthily all day one day, and had pretty close to my calories, but am still very hungry, if I eat over the calories it tells me to, can I really be overeating for my body, because it's telling me to eat more?

    if the number of calories you are eating is indeed "healthily" as in enough, hunger does not mean you must eat and it is not always your body telling you to eat more. A feeling of Hunger is a response to more than your body needing additional nourishment.

    you can train your hunger and it can be managed but first, your base calorie number must be correct.
  • AllTehBeers
    AllTehBeers Posts: 5,030 Member
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    Okay, well i'm allowed... 1650 (1 lb a week loss and only trying to lose a couple pounds, I'm not techincally overweight, just not happy with my body) and i put lightly active because since i'm on break I'm just chilling and shopping and then exercising most days. I put down 5 45 min workouts, but I workout at least 6 days a week and sometimes for an hour. I eat healthy usually, I just have to have something sweet but I try to do it well like a 90 calorie cookie or 1/2 the fat ice cream or just 1 130 cal ice cream bar stuff like that.
    usually i'm not hungry, but sometimes i am...

    This sounds more then "lightly active." Even if it's just an hour of jogging a day, that could be close to 300 extra calories you're burning. I would try putting your setting at "active" and see how that goes. If you are truly feeling hungry at the end of the day, it is possible you're not giving your body enough.

    You could also change to a 250 calorie deficit. That would give you enough for an extra meal.
  • omnisis
    omnisis Posts: 85 Member
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    There's pyschological hunger and legitimate hunger. It can be very hard to tell the difference between the two sometimes. Generally I only ever get hungry at night and for this reason I try to have a light protein heavy snack about an hour before bed. Also if you aren't trying to lose you can just eat more and monitor your weight/measurements weekly and adjust accordingly. MFP is pretty good with their TDEE calculations but in the end it's based on equations that are just "models" and your individual metabolism may be slightly different.

    Here's a simple truism: If you aren't gaining or losing week over week then you are at your maintenance intake. If you are gaining your are over. If you are losing you are under. I trust feedback from my own body more than I trust generic calculations.
  • tuckerrj
    tuckerrj Posts: 1,453 Member
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    I'm sorry my dear. I can't know for sure about your situation. You're so young and resilient. I only know that in my life, I can no longer "trust" my hunger pangs. I've spend DECADES overeating. My body seems to have no idea when I've had enough to eat. My only hope is that after months (or years) of eating a reasonable amount of healthier food, I may one day be able to trust my body's hunger messages. Until then, I'll use my calorie count on MFP as my surrogate "you've had enough" trigger.

    I know that eating unprocessed food that isn't so calorie dense (like fresh fruits and vegetables) tends to fill me faster and with less calories. So I try to focus on them. Hang in there and do you're very best, and oh yeah Merry Christmas!!!
  • divacat80
    divacat80 Posts: 299 Member
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    Overeating one day and giving in to your hunger feeling shouldn't stall your weightloss. But, you might be burning more calories than you think and your body might need more calories than those you eat. Maybe getting a heart rate monitor (or fitbit) would help you a lot in knowing your true daily expenditure and that would help you design a better daily meal plan.
    However, sometimes not even the best hrm are good at stating the exact amount of calories you burn or what your resting heart rate is.

    Also, remember that MFP gives you the amount of calories you HAVE TO EAT, with the calorie deficit already substracted. It took me a long time to actually believe this, follow it and realise that I was still losing weight.
    And, let me point out that MFP is not always good at estimating the calories you burn per exercise/activity, since this depends on a lot of different factors, it's not the same for everyone in every situation. It doesn't have in mind your heart rate so it can't calculate the burnt calories with accuracy. That's why I suggest getting a heart rate monitor :)

    Best of luck!
  • barbaramitchell101
    barbaramitchell101 Posts: 360 Member
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    I found that when I ate foods more DENSE IN NUTRIENTS and added a high protein shake, I don't get the sugar/carb cravings, and it has curbed my appetite...I can now ignore it when peeps bring donuts into the office, where before I culdn't resist having 2 or 3...I stay pretty close to the 1200 alloted to me...oh, and I have a desk job so I really don't get much exercise....
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
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    Okay, well i'm allowed... 1650 (1 lb a week loss and only trying to lose a couple pounds, I'm not techincally overweight, just not happy with my body) and i put lightly active because since i'm on break I'm just chilling and shopping and then exercising most days. I put down 5 45 min workouts, but I workout at least 6 days a week and sometimes for an hour. I eat healthy usually, I just have to have something sweet but I try to do it well like a 90 calorie cookie or 1/2 the fat ice cream or just 1 130 cal ice cream bar stuff like that.
    usually i'm not hungry, but sometimes i am...

    Be aware that all that exercise related stuff was merely goals - it is NOT used in any calculations for your eating level.

    That is why when you log exercise, you are given credit to eat back - so that you maintain the deficit to have 1 lb weekly loss goal.

    And yes, if it's not boredom eating, or a problem with eating straight carbs giving you low blood sugar later and making you feel hungry, it many times is real hunger because of under-eating.

    Also be aware that there is a deficit between your eating goal and your supposed maintenance level (without exercise involved at all).
    You can eat over your goal, and not above your real maintenance (if it's real), and still be at a deficit.

    If you have very little to lose, then you have a small deficit you should take. Your body will have a much smaller window for a deficit before it decides it's going to fight weight or fat loss.

    I'd say use the 1/2 lb weekly goal if already at healthy weight.

    Or even better, Maintenance, and then good strength training 3 x weekly to improve muscles while burning fat.
    Contrary to the way MFP works by eating back exercise calories, don't eat back the lifting calories if you eat at maintenance, they are so small of a burn during the workout. The MFP estimate is usually very close, it sounds small, and it is.
    But cardio if you have time to do any, log and eat back to stay at maintenance.
  • arcticfox04
    arcticfox04 Posts: 1,011 Member
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    If your eating to your goal calories and still hungry eat more protein. Always eat back your exercise calories.
  • Yes. it takes about twenty minutes for your stomach to signal to your brain that it's full. Plus, if you've just started eating smaller portions, your stomach is a bit enlarged, and so it has to shrink to suit your smaller portion sizes.
  • spiregrain
    spiregrain Posts: 254 Member
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    I noticed I was having a lot of physical hunger (as opposed to solely psychological desire to eat, which I have also experienced) even at maintenance. I think for me, it is because I have terrible sleep patterns (lifelong broken internal clock, night bird forced to get up early, + a baby) so sometimes I sleep 6 hours (a lot for me) or 3 hours (not enough for me) and however much it is its never consecutive. I think that the poor sleep schedule is causing me to have problems regulating ghrelin and leptin (sp? on both) which regulate your body's signals relating to fullness and hunger. Maybe something to look into if you have any questions at all about your sleep patterns. I think also people who wake up feeling exhausted might want to check with their doctor and investigate sleep apnea as a possibility, since that can also cause an unrested sleep (and I think messes up the hunger hormones as well).

    In my case, there is almost nothing that I can do to get more sleep -- I already get a ton of help with the baby at night, and sleeping pills don't help me sleep -- but knowing that the message to eat is a message that is being sent due to a mistake in my body helps me to accept that my numbers are my numbers and I'm not secretly burning an extra 700 calories which urgently needs to be made up for in brioche and ice cream. :)

    There is a great article on WebMD about this subject:

    http://www.webmd.com/diet/features/lose-weight-while-sleeping

    (Excuse the terrible title, this article is actually based on real science and not some guy's wacky moon theory.)
  • goodhunger
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    I've been where you are - obsessed. don't switch anything except exercise - try a sport for pleasure. You could be getting bored and allowing your perfection desire to kick in. Don't. You'll loose the focus and gain lots of weight - from size 8 to size 12. Enjoy, stop worrying, live in the now of health.
  • Dave198lbs
    Dave198lbs Posts: 8,810 Member
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    Yes. it takes about twenty minutes for your stomach to signal to your brain that it's full. Plus, if you've just started eating smaller portions, your stomach is a bit enlarged, and so it has to shrink to suit your smaller portion sizes.

    That 20min thing is a myth.

    I know if I stop eating while I am still hungry and wait 20 minutes, my hunger often stops or lessens and if I dont stop I could have easily chowed down 500 more calories so I dont know if its a myth or not but it works quite often for me
  • goodhunger
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    Sleep is difficult for me when i eat late and isn't that many fat folks problem? A friend told me to follow my breath and try to count to ten. So much psychological stuff. like eating to stay up. a hot bath works well. I know that decaf is starting to keep me up, if I don't meditate. Mediation three times a day is what I need now! Wish me luck.