Anyone work overnight?
lee112780
Posts: 419 Member
Hey guys,
I have been working the night shift for a couple years now, and Im finding it really hard to NOT eat before bed. I think it's stress in general, but when I get home at 6am, I eat a ton of calories and go straight to bed. It's like, I don't even care. I'm always hungry when I get home, and feel like I can eat what I want to reward myself for getting through my shift. Its really detering my weight loss. Any suggestions? thanks!
I have been working the night shift for a couple years now, and Im finding it really hard to NOT eat before bed. I think it's stress in general, but when I get home at 6am, I eat a ton of calories and go straight to bed. It's like, I don't even care. I'm always hungry when I get home, and feel like I can eat what I want to reward myself for getting through my shift. Its really detering my weight loss. Any suggestions? thanks!
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Replies
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I was on night shift for 5.5 years:
- Ate Dinner/breakfast when I got home.
- Ate a meal when I got up.
- Ate something before I went to work.
- Ate "Lunch" at work.
Actually, this would have been fine, if I had stuck to a reasonable # of calories!
I do not feel it matters WHEN one eats--I have been eating right before bed forever, even on this 'life-changing' program, and as long as I eat the 1200 calories minimum, I have continued to lose weight.
The tricks are:
- control the sodium
- drink lots of liquids (water, plain tea, black coffee with artificial sweetners?, non-sodium drinks)
- stay within the calories
My suggestion is bring your lunch so you can control the fat and sodium calories.
Have fun with the night shift (mine was 11p-7a at a local hospital, a registrar clerk). :drinker:0 -
Addendum: We all mess up and will continue to mess up. The trick is to say, Get back on the horse (or wagon, or whatever your favorite phrase is and get back to the right amount of calories, carbs, veggies, protiens, and fats (with the saturated, or bad fats, kept to about 10g or so).
You can do this! You are a tough, hard-working night worker. Night workers Rule!
:drinker:0 -
Are you on a consistent schedule? I work steady midnights 11-7. I am in bed at 8am. I dont eat after my break which is at 3. Even if you are hungry you need to get into the habit of not eating until you wake up. It will be difficult but once you get into the routine its not an issue anymore. Its just like any day time worker who is hungry before he goes to bed, it just takes discipline.
I dont know what you do to deserve a reward at the end of a shift, its psychological food isnt a reward its nourishment for the body. Thats the mindset you need to get into.
If you are hungry to the point of pain, make something healthy. Eating before you go to sleep is the worst time to eat.
A little something I looked up for you:
When is the absolute worst time to overeat, metabolically speaking? Many experts agree that it's nighttime, when our bodies have the lowest need for calories.
Yet "in America, we eat more during dinner than any other meal," says U.S. Department of Agriculture researcher Shanthy Bowman, PhD.
This is especially true for those of us who are overweight, according to a recent national USDA survey. It found that overweight adults tended to eat significantly more calories than normal-weight adults at dinnertime (while eating just a few more calories at breakfast and lunch).
Dinner isn't the only problem, either. While afternoon is the most popular time to snack, evening snacks are in the No. 2 position. According to a recent study from the University of Texas at El Paso, snacking at night makes it all too easy to overeat. That's because eating late in the day may be less satisfying than eating the same amount of food earlier in the day.
"Intake in the late night lacks satiating value and can result in greater overall daily intake" of calories, says the study's lead researcher, John de Castro, PhD, chairman of the psychology department at the University of Texas at El Paso.
Facts About Evening Eating
Over the years, De Castro's research into meal sizes, meal patterns, and calorie distribution has turned up some other findings about evening eating:
* Meal size tends to increase over the day, with peaks at lunch and dinner. One study showed that participants ate 42% of their total daily calories during and after dinner.
* Our evening food intake tends to be relatively high in fat, compared to that at earlier meals.
* The longer the gap between dinner and the previous meal or snack, the larger the dinner. Interestingly, the gap between meals is a significant predictor of meal size for dinner only.
* People who eat lightly at night end up eating fewer calories and grams of fat overall than people who eat big dinners and nighttime snacks. According to the results of one study, people who had a light snack at night ate 9.3% fewer total calories and 10% less fat overall than those who ate larger nighttime snacks.
Obesity expert Edward Saltzman, MD, thinks the real problem is not so much that we burn fewer calories at night, but that nighttime eating tends to result from unhealthy meal patterns. The three types of meal-pattern problems Saltzman sees most often are:
* People don't eat during the day and then become ravenous and overeat at night. "If people wonder why they aren't hungry in the morning, it could be because they ate too much the night before," explains Saltzman, an energy metabolism scientist with the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University.
* Food is used for all sorts of emotional reasons at the end of a workday (as a relaxant, as entertainment, as a distraction, etc.)
* Eating becomes associated with sedentary behavior, like watching television. In other words, we get into a pattern of eating while we watch TV or use a computer -- activities many of us tend to do in the evening.
Why We Eat at Night
There are many reasons why so many of our total calories tend to be eaten during and after dinner, including physiological, emotional, cultural, and possibly evolutionary influences. They include:
* It's part of our culture to eat a large dinner. It's also customary in many homes to enjoy a large dessert after dinner.
* Some people, especially women, skip meals or undereat during the day. It can take quite a lot of food to satisfy the body's hunger after a day of undereating.
* Overeating at dinner or late at night may help to calm people from stresses that build during the day.
* Studies show that meals eaten with others are, on average, 44% larger than meals eaten alone. Since dinner tends to be the meal that is more often shared, this may partially explain why it's also most likely to be the largest meal.
* From an evolutionary perspective, nighttime used to represent the longest time period without food and activity. In modern times; however, artificial light allows people to remain awake and continue to eat, perhaps, contributing to obesity.0 -
I work 7p-7a shift 4 nites/wk. I usually have a slimfast shake on the way home from work, or weight control oatmeal w water. It works for me.0
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thanks everyone! Bjberry, I have lost too eating before bed. The problem is that I do not pay attention to calories as much. My head isnt in the game at this time. I guess it might be best to just stop the behavor. Ive been doing it for so long though, it's gonna be really really hard!!0
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I work 12 hour overnight shifts and I always have my cherrios before I go to bed. Still losing so I will keep doing it. I eat around 0100 at work, 0800 at home and then again at 1800 before work. On my work weeks I don't get any snacks in, too busy. So I think it is what you eat that might count0
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