Eating late at night? Y/N? Why?
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methadoneugly
Posts: 4
A couple of hours before bed, around 12 am, I will very often get pangs of genuine hunger. My question is, would it be more damaging to ignore the pangs and not eat until morning than it would be to eat so late at night?
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Replies
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Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.0
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if you look at my diary, you will see that every night - especially on workout nights - I eat between 500 to 1200 calories after dinner. Have done this for 2 and a half years and it has not affected my weight loss. If you have the calories, eat them. If you don't, go to bed.
I am just a night owl, so I my body doesn't really get going until after lunch most days (I'm awake... just not really functional!) so I eat very small breakfast and lunches typically.0 -
Thanks guys, appreciate it0
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Iwas lead to believe you should try and have your last meal 3 hours before going to sleep as you dont burn off the calories and your body will store the fat. im not sure how true this is but i use this method. try eating more earlier in the evening then you
should avoid getting hunger pangs later on0 -
Timing has nothing to do with weight loss. Unless if impacts your motivation/discipline or your quality of sleep, I wouln't worry about it.0
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Iwas lead to believe you should try and have your last meal 3 hours before going to sleep as you dont burn off the calories and your body will store the fat. im not sure how true this is but i use this method. try eating more earlier in the evening then you
should avoid getting hunger pangs later on
your body just doesn't work that way. Your body can "even out" the energy flow (food intake) on a daily basis without you trying to worry about it. It is all about overall intake versus expenditure. It is more of a preference about when you want to eat.0 -
Iwas lead to believe you should try and have your last meal 3 hours before going to sleep as you dont burn off the calories and your body will store the fat. im not sure how true this is but i use this method. try eating more earlier in the evening then you
should avoid getting hunger pangs later on
Your body doesn't stop functioning at night. In fact, while you sleep is when the bulk of your recovery happens. You'll still burn the cals, I assure you.0 -
Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
I completely disagree with this statement. Every person's body composition is different, and the way our bodies breakdown calories is different. Also, depending on WHAT you eat before going to bed (and how often you do it) can be problematic.
I generally try to stop ALL eating/snacking at 9:00 p.m., regardless of the time I go to bed. The only exception is if I'm skating on a particular night (the session is from 9p-1a).
But if you're STARVING, then I suggest having some sort of protein, or a piece of fruit. Stay away from starches and foods that are high in fat and sodium.0 -
If I'm hungry I will get up and eat a protein snack just to curb it enough to fall asleep. Usually a babybel cheese or something. I do try and stay away from carbs at night but I don't avoid eating altogether if I'm hungry and I need it.0
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Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
^^^ this -- I've lost 34 lbs and am usually eating a bag of popcorn right before bed while I'm journaling. Hasn't hurt me since. I know people who eat a meal before bed due to shifts at work and it doesn't seem to bother their weight loss. A meal wouldn't work for me because then I couldn't sleep...but a light snack like popcorn, nuts, fruit works for me0 -
Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
I completely disagree with this statement. Every person's body composition is different, and the way our bodies breakdown calories is different. Also, depending on WHAT you eat before going to bed (and how often you do it) can be problematic.
You can disagree, but medical conditions aside we are all very similar in the biological processes that happen. We all gain weight from energy surpluses and we all need a deficit to lose weight because thermodynamics.
We certainly have different preferences so in that regard you might feel a certain way about when you eat, but simply put: you don't gain weight from eating at a specific time if you're eating in a calorie deficit.0 -
Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
this ^^^^^ and even if u have no calories left have something small , or even hot skimmed milk , always does the rick for me0 -
As a general rule I won't eat after 6pm, it seems my body stores it and I always gain weight...but that is me, and it may just be my perception, I don't really know, but I stick with my rule as best I can.0
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Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
I completely disagree with this statement. Every person's body composition is different, and the way our bodies breakdown calories is different. Also, depending on WHAT you eat before going to bed (and how often you do it) can be problematic.
I generally try to stop ALL eating/snacking at 9:00 p.m., regardless of the time I go to bed. The only exception is if I'm skating on a particular night (the session is from 9p-1a).
But if you're STARVING, then I suggest having some sort of protein, or a piece of fruit. Stay away from starches and foods that are high in fat and sodium.
i mostly disagree with this statement.
my favorite time to eat is 9pm0 -
As a general rule I won't eat after 6pm, it seems my body stores it and I always gain weight...but that is me, and it may just be my perception, I don't really know, but I stick with my rule as best I can.
It is your perception or its food weight in your stomach. You do not gain extra fat strictly due to night time eating. It's not how things work.0 -
If you are hungry, then eat. I don't think there is much scientific backing for the whole "do not eat so many hours before bed basis".
Might give you indigestion though!0 -
and to add that many nights I don't even eat dinner till 9pm. So far I've never seen it have any effect. Again, I stay away from carbs at night and limit them to breakfast and lunch. I find the protein much more filling.0
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Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
This ^^
We eat dinner late because that's what fits our schedule. Usually around 9:00 - 9:30, which might not be late for some, but us old folks typically turn in around 10:30.0 -
Time of day has nothing to do with it. If you have calories left, eat if you're hungry.
I completely disagree with this statement. Every person's body composition is different, and the way our bodies breakdown calories is different. Also, depending on WHAT you eat before going to bed (and how often you do it) can be problematic.
I generally try to stop ALL eating/snacking at 9:00 p.m., regardless of the time I go to bed. The only exception is if I'm skating on a particular night (the session is from 9p-1a).
But if you're STARVING, then I suggest having some sort of protein, or a piece of fruit. Stay away from starches and foods that are high in fat and sodium.
I completely disagree with this statement.0 -
Yes, because I'm hungry.0
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