Why Can't I Skip Breakfast?
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I only eat breakfast because I don't want my stomach talking to my patients while I clean teeth all day.
I wish I didn't have to
I hate eating when I wake up!!!!!0 -
Yes, even in a calorie deficit. Your body doesn't operate on a "24-hour diet clock" that magically resets at midnight. Enzymes and hormones are produced throughout the day in response to what you are eating or not eating, it doesn't just total everything up at midnight and reset for the next day. If you put your body in a constant "famine-then-feast" situation, it will adapt and begin to simply store the calories you ate for dinner as fat if you don't need them right away. Your body doesn't just let all those absorbed calories float around in your blood all night, insulin is produced and what you don't utilize is converted to fat and stored. She asked if it mattered, and research says it does.
But if you don't agree with me that is fine too. I look at research, I have a degree in Human Nutrition and am obtaining my Masters in Obesity Prevention and Management, but what the heck do I know? Quoting Fargo "I'm not gonna debate you Jerry...."
Intermittent faster here with a 6-8 hour window. Have done with successfully with both cutting and bulking. There's a handful out there with MUCH more impressive physiques and lower body fat than myself, even at my peak condition
Left Pic: 230 lbs, Right Pic: Mid 170's
Closing in on end of cut low 170's
Upper 160's
End of cut at 166 low
In4science
plzresponse0 -
Yes, even in a calorie deficit. Your body doesn't operate on a "24-hour diet clock" that magically resets at midnight. Enzymes and hormones are produced throughout the day in response to what you are eating or not eating, it doesn't just total everything up at midnight and reset for the next day. If you put your body in a constant "famine-then-feast" situation, it will adapt and begin to simply store the calories you ate for dinner as fat if you don't need them right away. Your body doesn't just let all those absorbed calories float around in your blood all night, insulin is produced and what you don't utilize is converted to fat and stored. She asked if it mattered, and research says it does.
But if you don't agree with me that is fine too. I look at research, I have a degree in Human Nutrition and am obtaining my Masters in Obesity Prevention and Management, but what the heck do I know? Quoting Fargo "I'm not gonna debate you Jerry...."
What research shows that you gain fat over 24 hours in a caloric deficit?0 -
Generally the benefit is that it keeps your metabolism active throughout the day. This is why they recommend that you have 5 meals a day. I used to never eat breakfast because I was always stayed up late and woke up minutes before school. Now that I graduated college and can make my own schedule I've found that eating in the morning even when I am not hungry limits my hunger urges later in the day. If I didn't have breakfast I would normally have a large lunch because I would fell hungry. We're all different and it may not apply to you, but for me it is a lot easier to make a healthy choice when I don't feel hungry.0
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I’ll go out on a limb and say breakfast is completely unnecessary. However, I’m sure endless college studies will keep the debate alive long after I’m gone.
Be your own experiment. People can cite all the studies they want. I suspect most are just giving opinions on what they think they know. Regardless, it’s hard to argue against what works for you.
Document everything (food, mood, attitude, etc…). Look at the trends. If you are achieving your goals and feel good while you’re doing it; claim victory!0 -
OP: so long as you're not experiencing excessive hunger that's causing you to snack more and making it harder for you to meet your calorie goal, you can skip breakfast. It sounds like for you, skipping breakfast makes things easier for you, so go for it. There's nothing magical about meal timing. Choose the meal timing that suits you best in terms of what you're going to stick to long term. Personally, if I don't eat breakfast, I get hungrier later on and that makes it harder for me to stay within my calories. But it's about whatever suits you in terms of meal timing.0
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Generally the benefit is that it keeps your metabolism active throughout the day. This is why they recommend that you have 5 meals a day. I used to never eat breakfast because I was always stayed up late and woke up minutes before school. Now that I graduated college and can make my own schedule I've found that eating in the morning even when I am not hungry limits my hunger urges later in the day. If I didn't have breakfast I would normally have a large lunch because I would fell hungry. We're all different and it may not apply to you, but for me it is a lot easier to make a healthy choice when I don't feel hungry.
if your metabolism wasn't active you'd be dead.
there's no evidence that eating breakfast or skipping it has any effect on the metabolism
there are some studies that show a correlation between skipping breakfast and being fatter (correlation =/= causation) - these studies were done on joe public, i.e. not on people who were eating a calorie controlled diet........ it includes all the people who skip breakfast because they're disorganised and always running late, who then get hungry around 10am and are now at work and their lunch break is not until 12 or 1 so they snack on crisps and chocolate to keep them going... then eat a normal sized lunch... or are so hungry by lunch time that they overeat at lunch time. Well, I'm sure there are other similar scenarios as well, not just that one. But the point is that skipping breakfast, for a lot of people who are not counting calories, may lead to increased hunger (and therefore overeating) later in the day, or it correlates with a lack of organisation skills which then would lead to poor meal planning generally and an increased reliance on easily available food, e.g. fast food, crisps, chocolate, etc. So anyway, with all those things going on, it basically illustrates that correlation does not automatically mean causation. For people who just want general health advice and don't want to count calories, then advice to plan and eat regular meals including something before work in the morning is good advice as this probably does prevent overeating in some people... for people who are counting calories it really does not matter at all, other than the fact that skipping meals may make it harder for them to stick within their calories - for people doing calorie counting the best advice is just to eat at whatever time is most convenient and easiest to stick to.0 -
Generally the benefit is that it keeps your metabolism active throughout the day. This is why they recommend that you have 5 meals a day. I used to never eat breakfast because I was always stayed up late and woke up minutes before school. Now that I graduated college and can make my own schedule I've found that eating in the morning even when I am not hungry limits my hunger urges later in the day. If I didn't have breakfast I would normally have a large lunch because I would fell hungry. We're all different and it may not apply to you, but for me it is a lot easier to make a healthy choice when I don't feel hungry.
Who are "they"?0 -
Skipping breakfast has so many disadvantages, but if your body is all right without doing breakfast then you can skip breakfast. You can also do some light and healthy breakfast that was good for health. I find that many people are not taking breakfast and they are feet but may be some problem occurs in future, so its my suggestion for to take breakfast or if you are all right then don't do the breakfast.0
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You can. No one is stopping you. There are no rules like that.
I can't. It doesn't work with my metabolism. Breakfast is the only meal a day that I'm hungry for. ;-)0 -
man look at the fun I missed so far0
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Skipping breakfast has so many disadvantages, but if your body is all right without doing breakfast then you can skip breakfast. You can also do some light and healthy breakfast that was good for health. I find that many people are not taking breakfast and they are feet but may be some problem occurs in future, so its my suggestion for to take breakfast or if you are all right then don't do the breakfast.0
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Skipping breakfast makes you more tired throughout the day and slows down your metabolism.
No, it does not...0 -
Your body goes into starvation mode because it has no idea when it's getting food next and then when you do eat it stores as much fat and sugar as possible because it's (again) not sure when it's going to get food next.
OMG please just stop with this nonsense!0 -
Studies show that more often than not, people are who overweight or obese are more apt to skip breakfast. I don't know if that is reason enough to HAVE it, but OTHER studies show that people who eat larger less frequent meals tend to add MORE body fat on them than those who don't: http://www.webmd.com/food-recipes/most-important-meal
Then to muddy the waters there is this: http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20130304-skip-breakfast-pile-on-weight
I say do what works for you. Throwing a log on the fire of your metabolism within about an hour of waking up may rev it up a little bit for a slightly higher net burn through the day, but is there concrete evidence of this association? Elisabetta Politi, RD, MPH, nutrition manager for the Duke Diet & Fitness Center at Duke University Medical School says YES.
http://www.webmd.com/diet/features/lose-weight-eat-breakfast
All in all, the WORST thing you can do is save all your calories for dinner. You go to bed and your bod has no reason to use that energy you just ate...and will simply store it as fat.
Wake up at 3:30 am, eat my first meal around 1 or 2 pm, followed by my largest meal is almost always my dinner followed by dessert eaten in bed and well I've lost a little weight and fat.0 -
Eating breakfast may be a good idea when you are just starting out and trying to develop a foundation of better eating habits in general. That said, once you get to know your own preferences skipping breakfast (or any meal for that matter) is of no consequence.0
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You can ...0
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Skipping breakfast makes you more tired throughout the day and slows down your metabolism. Your body goes into starvation mode because it has no idea when it's getting food next and then when you do eat it stores as much fat and sugar as possible because it's (again) not sure when it's going to get food next. If you want extra calories for dinner, try a simple workout. I walk each day for 45 minutes with my dog. That gives me 241 extra calories to use Cleaning your house, gardening, ect all add up.0
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you can have breakfast anytime you want, 6pm if you wanted, all your doing is breaking the fast you had while you were asleep0
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I haven't read through the whole post but I'm going to say if your eating breakfast because you think you should eat breakfast but your not hungry then dont eat it. I get up at 5am and I can't face eating then, my throat doesn't want food going down it's like it gets tighter, all I want is coffee but when I have my break I'm straight in Costa for my ham and cheese panini, but my job is active and I'm ready to eat then, this then is more brunch but I have a snack after work for lunch.
Everyone's bodyclock is different and I personally think the best thing is getting to know your own routine and don't worry about what is meant to be the norm.
I'm definately with you though OP, I'd rather use the cals elswhere and have a nicer meal later in the day, if it suits you then your listening to your own body.0 -
Because the people who want to feel like they know something will judge you.
Honestly, there's no other reason. Some people binge out if they don't eat little and often, but if that's not you, eat whenever. It doesn't matter.0 -
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To comply with the rules of eating breakfast you can always postpone eating it till 1pm and then just skip lunch!0
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Yes, even in a calorie deficit. Your body doesn't operate on a "24-hour diet clock" that magically resets at midnight. Enzymes and hormones are produced throughout the day in response to what you are eating or not eating, it doesn't just total everything up at midnight and reset for the next day. If you put your body in a constant "famine-then-feast" situation, it will adapt and begin to simply store the calories you ate for dinner as fat if you don't need them right away. Your body doesn't just let all those absorbed calories float around in your blood all night, insulin is produced and what you don't utilize is converted to fat and stored. She asked if it mattered, and research says it does.
But if you don't agree with me that is fine too. I look at research, I have a degree in Human Nutrition and am obtaining my Masters in Obesity Prevention and Management, but what the heck do I know? Quoting Fargo "I'm not gonna debate you Jerry...."
Apparently that nice degree you're getting ain't worth jack squat. :laugh:0 -
My God....I can see how people on MFP get frustrated trying to dispell these dieting myths. HOW MANY WAYS CAN IT BE SAID??
*SMH* I'm so, sorry...I can't even...0 -
FULL OF WIN0
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