Fasting...Is there anything wrong with waiting till dinner?
PLAID1977
Posts: 70 Member
I was so busy on Saturday that I skipped both breakfast and lunch. I have been skipping breakfast fairly regularly as I noticed it actually making me hungrier once I ate it. But skipping lunch was not typical. I was then able to eat some foods I would typically have refused and still stayed within my goals. I'm wondering if there is any true detriment to fasting/eating this way, particularly on occasion, so that I can indulge on the weekends. I can't imagine doing it during the week at work but the weekends...definitely!
Is there much truth behind the "breakfast is the most important meal" thing? Or "eat every few hours"? Or is that only if you need help regulating blood sugar levels and if cravings are an issue?
Is there much truth behind the "breakfast is the most important meal" thing? Or "eat every few hours"? Or is that only if you need help regulating blood sugar levels and if cravings are an issue?
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Replies
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If you exercise I think it may be hard to have the energy without eating at all. I personally get headaches if I skip meals, but if you feel ok I think it's fine0
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Unless you have a medical issue that says otherwise, there's nothing wrong with this. Breakfast being the most important meal has been completely debunked as well as the eat every few hours myth. Eat when you want. I know lots of people who eat 1 meal a day and look amazing.0
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it is fine, a lot of people do intermittent fasting because it makes eating a deficit easier, I personally only eat 2 meals a day in the evening and find it MUCH easier to stick to my diet than eating 6 tiny unsatisfying meals spread out, breakfast being the most important meal is archaic broscience that was debunked years ago0
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I typically exercise first thing in the morning , on an empty stomach anyway. So that's not an issue. My occasional afternoon workouts might be but I guess I'll see how I feel. When I lift, that's in the evenings so I would have eaten something by then. Glad to hear from some that this might be my ticket to success!0
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What matter is that your intake is consistent with your goals. If you are looking to lose, your intake must be less than what you burn. When you consume those calories doesn't at all matter. AT ALL.
Do what works for you. If you prefer one huge meal that contains all of your calories and macros, then do it. If you prefer 5-6 meals that add up to all of your calories and macros, then do it
I train fasted every morning. I perform better that way. Many people can't do that, but it works for ME.
So no worries about your one off day of no breakfast and lunch...and no worries about not wanting to eat breakfast. As long as you stay within your calorie goal, you are fine :flowerforyou:0 -
That makes me feel better because I have made myself start eating breakfast "in order to lose weight" and now am wondering if it is actually being counterproductive... Hmmm... back to the drawingboard?0
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What matter is that your intake is consistent with your goals. If you are looking to lose, your intake must be less than what you burn. When you consume those calories doesn't at all matter. AT ALL.
Do what works for you. If you prefer one huge meal that contains all of your calories and macros, then do it. If you prefer 5-6 meals that add up to all of your calories and macros, then do it
I train fasted every morning. I perform better that way. Many people can't do that, but it works for ME.
So no worries about your one off day of no breakfast and lunch...and no worries about not wanting to eat breakfast. As long as you stay within your calorie goal, you are fine :flowerforyou:0 -
Sorry hit post too quickly above!
Thanks! That's what I've been thinking/hoping to hear.
Thanks for everyone's help!0 -
I do intermittent fasting everyday, eating from 11 am to 10 pm. If you begin this protocol, be sure to check and see how you're feeling after a few weeks. As a woman, too long an extended period of fasting for more than 14 hours/day, day after day, can start to mess with your hormones. I used to do a 16:8 window and had issues until I moved it to 13:11.
Here's a good read: www.leangains.com0 -
When I'm at home I'm not normally hungry until at least 2pm. I skip breakfast almost every work day but have 'lunch' early at around 11am, and that usually sets me up nicely until dinnertime with a snack or two in-between.
I just go with how I feel for the day, bearing in mind my daily calorie limit. Some days I'll eat three healthy meals, other days I'll skip breakfast and lunch and have a pizza. As long as I'm under calorie goal and not starving myself to the point of raiding the snack cupboard and eating everything in sight I don't see any harm.0 -
This is a cut and paste from the Eat, Train, Progress group.
Lyle McDonald has some great information on it here:
http://www.bodyrecomposition.com/research-review/meal-frequency-and-energy-balance-research-review.html
The take home from Lyle's article, in terms of practicality and application, would probably be this quote, this is Lyle here:
* If eating more frequently makes it easier to control/reduce calories, it will help you to lose weight/fat.
* If eating more frequently makes it harder to control/reduce calories, or makes you eat more, you will gain weight.
* If eating less frequently makes it harder for you to control/reduce calories (because you get hungry and binge), it will hurt your efforts to lose weight/fat.
* If eating less frequently makes it easier for you to control/reduce calories (for any number of reasons), then that will help your efforts to lose weight/fat
Or in other words, personal preference.
Some peer reviewed studies:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9155494
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19943985
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17483007
And it would be wrong of me to exclude Alan Aragon from this list. Here's a good read:
http://www.leangains.com/2011/04/critique-of-issn-position-stand-on-meal.html
Sourced from full page found here: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/820577-meal-frequency-rev-up-that-furnace-lol
Much thanks to the ETP group for creating the thread.
Anybody who has not joined the group I highly recommend it: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/home/10118-eat-train-progress
Also a great page for a lot of excellent and useful information: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/833026-important-posts-to-read0 -
That makes me feel better because I have made myself start eating breakfast "in order to lose weight" and now am wondering if it is actually being counterproductive... Hmmm... back to the drawingboard?
I will say that when I started out 2.5 years ago, I did get into a habit of having a shake in the morning, first thing actually. The reason why is that my relationship with food was so awful. I needed to really be able to get a handle on nutrition and get out of the many bad habits that I had developed (mostly that was not eating anything at all until 3 or 4pm and then stuffing my face with anything and everything I could find until I went to bed). It really did help me and as I educated myself on proper nutrition and veered away from the "fads" I was able to eventually get to a point where I could alter my habits to what worked for me. I have done 5-6 meals per day, intermittent fasting, high protein/lower carbs (not low carb), etc etc. Because I feel confident in my knowledge and the changes that I have made in my habits to do so
So again....do what works for you....and it might change, it will probably change, as you progress towards your goals :flowerforyou:0 -
I was so busy on Saturday that I skipped both breakfast and lunch. I have been skipping breakfast fairly regularly as I noticed it actually making me hungrier once I ate it. But skipping lunch was not typical. I was then able to eat some foods I would typically have refused and still stayed within my goals. I'm wondering if there is any true detriment to fasting/eating this way, particularly on occasion, so that I can indulge on the weekends. I can't imagine doing it during the week at work but the weekends...definitely!
Is there much truth behind the "breakfast is the most important meal" thing? Or "eat every few hours"? Or is that only if you need help regulating blood sugar levels and if cravings are an issue?
No truth at all behind the breakfast is most important or the eat ever few hours thing.
I have been fasting for 6 weeks now. I fast M-W-F and eat at maintain on the other 4 days.
My plan is a 24 hour cycle of fasting, and not a calender day meaning each day I get to have a nice meal. Some fasting plans talk about 500 calories during your 24 hour fast, but mine talks of as close to 0 during the fast.
Has been working great for me, and to be honest, incredibly easy.0 -
I think you've already had that ticket with your weight loss, so far!!! Way to go and GREAT question. I sometimes skip meals, too and I tend to freak out thinking I'm in the dreaded "starvation" mode.0
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Intermittent fasting. You can schedule your intake accordingly depending on when you work out. You have a window of when you need to eat to sustain energy for your work out and a window of fasting. Pretty tough but can be done if you have strong will power.0
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I've spoken to many Registered Dieticians and Nutritionists as well as taking many courses for both Nutrition and Health - EVERYONE says the same thing. Breakfast IS the most important meal of the day, as well as starting the day with 16-20 oz of water. It gets your metabolism started. Not eating breakfast will slow down your metabolism a lot and by lunch time you are working against yourself.
Good luck.I was so busy on Saturday that I skipped both breakfast and lunch. I have been skipping breakfast fairly regularly as I noticed it actually making me hungrier once I ate it. But skipping lunch was not typical. I was then able to eat some foods I would typically have refused and still stayed within my goals. I'm wondering if there is any true detriment to fasting/eating this way, particularly on occasion, so that I can indulge on the weekends. I can't imagine doing it during the week at work but the weekends...definitely!
Is there much truth behind the "breakfast is the most important meal" thing? Or "eat every few hours"? Or is that only if you need help regulating blood sugar levels and if cravings are an issue?0 -
Fasting is fine. There is an intermittent fasting group on here if you want more focused discussion about it: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/forums/show/66-intermittent-fasting
I would, however, caution people about using it only at certain times to permit themselves to eat more (or to compensate for eating too much the day before). This is a lot like doing a ton of cardio after a binge. If it is always a spur-of-the-moment thing rather than a deliberate, planned practice, it can turn into various disordered eating behaviors.0 -
According to my A&P instructor that has also been a physician that reviews medical schools, writes questions on the MCAT, gives consultations on new surgeries...
Fasting for a meal or two once a month or two is good for you. It gives your digestive system a little break. OTOH doing it regularly (like skipping breakfast daily) makes you prone to ulcers. You produce enzymes to digest proteins no matter what, and if there are no proteins to digest it will eat away at your organs. Hence, ulcers.
So basically if it happens here and there, no big deal and it can even be good for you. Doing it all the time, not so much. But I am not convinced it has a huge impact on metabolism one way or the other.0 -
i skip breakfast, as whether i eat it or not, i am hungry by 11 am anyways. like you said, sometimes i even felt that eating breakfast actually makes me hungrier. it could be due to the fact that simple carbohydrates in mouth and stomach is a strong stimulant for increased insulin production in our body, and sets off a cascade of hormonal and chemical messengers and digestive juices and gastric acid production. i read in some studies recently that "breakfast is the most important meal of the day" thing is a myth, and there is no harm in skipping it as long as you feel okey, and do not overcompensate in the next meal.
if you feel fine, i don't think there is any harm in skipping meals, but you should tread the water cautiously. the line between dieting for weight loss and eating disorders and body image issues is blurry and you do not want to take yourself there. bottom line is as long as you are well nourished and happy, it does not seem to be a problem.0 -
What matters the most in weight loss is total calories at the end of the day. How one gets there doesn't matter much. If one isn't suffering from diabetes or any other health issue that requires continuous monitoring of blood sugar levels, then eating just one meal a day is fine if one can tolerate that.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Fasting for a meal or two once a month or two is good for you. It gives your digestive system a little break. OTOH doing it regularly (like skipping breakfast daily) makes you prone to ulcers. You produce enzymes to digest proteins no matter what, and if there are no proteins to digest it will eat away at your organs. Hence, ulcers.0
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What matters the most in weight loss is total calories at the end of the day. How one gets there doesn't matter much. If one isn't suffering from diabetes or any other health issue that requires continuous monitoring of blood sugar levels, then eating just one meal a day is fine if one can tolerate that.
Also one may have to consider if you are incorporating exercise into your daily life, as exercising on an empty stomach (empty tank) can affect gym performance.
Nutritional timing is often taken into consideration by people that lift and many other forms of exercise.
I don't think you have to obsess over nutritional timing just that as practical application exercising with low energy reserves could result in a negative impact on performance.
It is a bit lengthy but here is a link: http://www.jissn.com/content/pdf/1550-2783-10-5.pdf.0 -
There is nothing wrong with it unless you have medical issues that would make it harmful. If you are diabetic/pre-diabetic or have cortisol issues you should stay away. It would make your blood sugar too high/low throughout the day then you get a huge spike after the huge evening meal.
Other than that it could be a way to regulate your intake, if it works for you.0 -
There's nothing wrong with eating all your calories for a day at once, medical issues withstanding. If it works for you, do it.0
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Fasting for a meal or two once a month or two is good for you. It gives your digestive system a little break. OTOH doing it regularly (like skipping breakfast daily) makes you prone to ulcers. You produce enzymes to digest proteins no matter what, and if there are no proteins to digest it will eat away at your organs. Hence, ulcers.
Meh. It increases risk, it's not a guarantee. No one would deny that smoking is bad for you, yet there are people that smoke like a chimney and live to be unusually old. So there are other factors for sure, but just because it isn't a guaranteed death sentence doesn't make it okay for everybody.0 -
I've spoken to many Registered Dieticians and Nutritionists as well as taking many courses for both Nutrition and Health - EVERYONE says the same thing. Breakfast IS the most important meal of the day, as well as starting the day with 16-20 oz of water. It gets your metabolism started. Not eating breakfast will slow down your metabolism a lot and by lunch time you are working against yourself.
Good luck.I was so busy on Saturday that I skipped both breakfast and lunch. I have been skipping breakfast fairly regularly as I noticed it actually making me hungrier once I ate it. But skipping lunch was not typical. I was then able to eat some foods I would typically have refused and still stayed within my goals. I'm wondering if there is any true detriment to fasting/eating this way, particularly on occasion, so that I can indulge on the weekends. I can't imagine doing it during the week at work but the weekends...definitely!
Is there much truth behind the "breakfast is the most important meal" thing? Or "eat every few hours"? Or is that only if you need help regulating blood sugar levels and if cravings are an issue?
Wrong. EVERYONE does NOT say breakfast is the most important meal of the day.
It will not slow down your metabolism.
Look up the research and studies.
For every one "expert" who says it is you can easily find one that says it is not.0 -
I would see no problem with skipping meals as long as you aren't feeling hungry and are staying hydrated. (Refusing to eat while your stomach is trying to leap out of your body to find its own damn meal would be bad.) I would carry a meal replacement bar as a "just in case" so if you're out and about and you suddenly realize you are hungry NOW you don't make poor choices (vending machine, fast food, etc.).
I don't do "breakfast" in the morning in the traditional sense. I do have a protein shake that is 200 calories and then a coffee at my desk. If I tried to have actual food I'd feel sick.0 -
Intermittent fasting can be a GREAT way to control/manage your daily calorie intake. I tried doing this and did pretty well on it but it required more self-control and motivation than I could muster up long term, unfortunately.0
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I've spoken to many Registered Dieticians and Nutritionists as well as taking many courses for both Nutrition and Health - EVERYONE says the same thing. Breakfast IS the most important meal of the day, as well as starting the day with 16-20 oz of water. It gets your metabolism started. Not eating breakfast will slow down your metabolism a lot and by lunch time you are working against yourself.
Good luck.
Guess what, I don't believe you talked to all those people and that ALL of them told you that. This is an idea that was debunked some time ago. Only professionals that don't rely on current information would spout that misinformation. Do you know why? Your metabolism never stops. It doesn't go to sleep when you do. The metabolism does not slow down just because food has not passed through the system in 12, 16, 18 or 24 hours.
Please never post this misinformation again.0 -
If you can get all your work done, if you can maintain a smile, if you can get along with your colleagues, friends and family and so on then there is nothing wrong with waiting until dinner to eat. Recently, I have been skipping breakfast and lunch - only have a few hundred calories - and have the majority of my calories for dinner. As long as you get enough protein and you are lifting progressively heavy weight or weight that is heavy enough to stimulate growth or maintain muscle and strength then eat whatever and however you like.0
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