Excessive Night Eating!
stigward
Posts: 2
I'm sure that this has been asked or discussed before, but I couldn't find anything on it!
I have the HARDEST time resisting the urge to eat junk food right before bed. Throughout the day I have great self control on making healthy food decisions, but come 9pm, all self control goes out the door. I'm curious to know if anyone else has had this struggle and has come up with routines that help them overcome the strong urge for junk food? If you have any advice I'd love to hear it!
Thank you!
I have the HARDEST time resisting the urge to eat junk food right before bed. Throughout the day I have great self control on making healthy food decisions, but come 9pm, all self control goes out the door. I'm curious to know if anyone else has had this struggle and has come up with routines that help them overcome the strong urge for junk food? If you have any advice I'd love to hear it!
Thank you!
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Replies
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dont buy junkfood lol0
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Eat more protein, it keeps you fuller0
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Saw an item on TV called a 'Kitchen Safe' It was on a show called "I Want That!" It locks for a set amount of time that you set it for, so it can be locked during the evening!0
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What works best for me is not to give myself permission to snack, especially after dinner. Unfortunately, it seems like letting a particularly needy and undisciplined genie out of the bottle if I let myself do it.
I know limiting eating to meals ain't everyone's thing, but it works for me. It allows for a reasonably substantial dinner, which works out well.0 -
I usually try to save some calories or carbs for a night snack from my daily totals. THEN If I decide I do not want the snack I am that much ahead. Since my plan is Low carb my go to snack is a table spoon of heavy whipping cream. Satisfies my cravings if I have some.0
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If you want to eat junk food then just make room for it in your day. You might even find, like I did, that simply removing restrictions and eating food you enjoy without demonizing it in any way makes you less inclined to eat junky food just for the sake of eating it. I calculated my junky food intake for the last week, it's been 4% of my total intake. I have lost about 25lbs eating junk food pretty much weekly.0
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I have some salted pistachios around 9pm, 300kcals worth.
The fact it takes a while to shell/ eat them makes it appear to be a bigger snack!.0 -
clean your teeth at 8.450
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Let yourself have a salad with protein like cheese.
Or a wrap or small burrito with protein.0 -
From personal experience, I have learned that the main reason you get cravings for food is not enough calories during the day. This forces me to overeat at night.
Another problem is that when we start logging food and going on a caloric deficit, we just aren't used to eating "less food". For this purpose, I recommend for a couple of weeks eating at maintenance or decreasing your goals to only 1/2 lbs per week and go from there.
Hope this helps.0 -
Maybe plan so you have enough calories left at night for a snack? I have a casein protein shake - it's chocolate flavoured so it's a bit like dessert as well0
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If I'm out of calories for the day, and really don't want to go over (when I know I'm not hungry... Just a bad craving) I brush my teeth, I use a super minty paste, never want to eat after that!0
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Save some room in your allotment for a little treat after dinner. Drink a nice big glass of water to fill up your stomach. Brush your teeth. Distract yourself doing something else.0
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Either you eat out of pure habit then, or you eat because you're hungry.
If you're hungry, you need to look over when, what and how much else you eat during the day.
If it's psychological only, you have to find the reason and break the habit, or break it without finding the reason. This may sound dense, but it really is this simple.
What causes you to lose self-control, why do you want to give in?
Why do you label things as non-junk and junk?
The more you tell yourself something should be forbidden, the more your mind is focussed on those food items, and the more you will crave them. If you reverse it by thinking of what you are allowed to eat, you will want to eat those items, whatever they may be.
Breaking habits is difficult, but you are successful if you do it step by step. If you want to figure out how to change, you will. No one here can tell you exactly what will work for you, but you can get ideas and then need to claim responsibility yourself, figure out your own situation. Good luck.0 -
Instead of abstaining from telling yourself 'I will not have anything before bed', plan out a yummy - but healthy snack at that 9pm hour. Perhaps you enjoy oatmeal? Maybe with a drizzle of real maple syrup and a few toasted nuts? Sugar free jello? toast with nut butter/banana? Frozen banana or strawberries drizzled with dark chocolate?
Good luck...0 -
I eat a serving and a half of Ben & Jerry's, plus another 1/2 serving of gelato every night before bed. It hasn't hampered my goals in the least bit, because it's part of my daily intake... Make room for the foods you like and enjoy. You won't sabotage your progress because you ate "junk" food at 9pm. You sabotage your progress because you are overeating. If you eat "healthy" food at 9pm and it puts you over your caloric goals, you will still gain weight. Overeating is overeating, no matter the source...0
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Something I've struggled with my entire life. In my case, it's not hunger or cravings (in the classic sense), it's more out of a sense of entitlement and good old fashioned "emotional eating" so to speak. I find I'm never actually hungry when I eat late at night; although I GET hungry when I start thinking about what I could dive into.
I find the only thing I can do is put it out of my head and just fight it. No tricking myself with brushing teeth, or treating myself during the day so I won't want it at night - that's never been what it's about for me. Like any other unhealthy habit, you need to commit to stopping it without crutches or gimmicks.0 -
Brush your teeth at 8:30 pm, lay down in bed, eat a mint, put on music, drink 1 glass of water, relax and do a quiet activity before you sleep.0
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u kidding ?? if he goes 2 bed at 8:30 he'll probably wake up at 2 a.m craving whatever he can find . so , I would advice as previously mentioned make sure u make room for it , eat less during the day, buy less junk food ( if you don't have it in your house you're less likely to go out at 9 p.m to buy it) , and last but not least , read the nutritional values of everything you eat, u'll soon come to realize they're not worth the calories and fat they have.0
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almost forgot! well done on your weight loss , you look great0
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From personal experience, I have learned that the main reason you get cravings for food is not enough calories during the day. This forces me to overeat at night.
Another problem is that when we start logging food and going on a caloric deficit, we just aren't used to eating "less food". For this purpose, I recommend for a couple of weeks eating at maintenance or decreasing your goals to only 1/2 lbs per week and go from there.
Hope this helps.
Very sound advice!
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Good job on the weight loss!!!
For me it is all mental. If I have had a decent supper then the late night snack is all mental. I will start thinking about it and they I will start getting cravings which ultimately lead me to think I am hungry.
I find if I have calories left over after supper, I try and plan out an evening snack ahead of time. Usually something high in protein. I will sometimes even enjoy a sweet, like last night. Had some homemade cherry cheese cake. I will also throw in some ice cream once in awhile.0 -
I read on a similar post to this to try drinking a glass or two of water because sometimes at night we might feel hungry, but really just be thirsty/dehydrated. Plus the water could help make you feel full for long enough to get over the cravings.0
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u kidding ?? if he goes 2 bed at 8:30 he'll probably wake up at 2 a.m craving whatever he can find .
Yep, this. I struggle with night eating, and even if I manage to get to bed without snacking, I will wake up and do it in the middle of the night (when I have even less self-control over the things I choose to snack on).
The #1 best tip I have is to not keep things in the house that you will binge on. If all you have are fruits, veggies, and unflavored nuts available then there's not much damage you can do with your late-night snacking. Try not to make enough to leave leftovers when you cook dinner if you'll nosh on them all night long. I can always whip of a batch of something unhealthy if I *really* want it, but 9 times out of 10 if I actually have to put out the effort to cook to get a snack I won't do it.
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It sounds to me that you're getting hungry at night and binge eating because you are not eating enough/the right kind of food.
This is a common issue with people who crash diet. You're "good" all day and then absolutely ravenous - and eat everything in sight!
Avoid this by either raising your calorie goals (instead of setting it to 2 lbs a week loss, try 1 lb, etc) or just eating more of the good kind of food, such as protein. If you're staying within your calories during the day but you're nutritionally deficient and not hitting your macros, you WILL just keep getting hungry. If you try to eat protein with every meal, you should be so full by the end of the day you can't imagine eating anymore, but you will still be within your calorie goals.
I try to eat as many grams of protein as I weigh in lbs. This would be 130 grams. I usually hit around the 100 mark (it's hard to do) but it makes me so full I never need to binge eat. I also eat about 6 small meals a day and aim for at least 20g of protein in each meal.0 -
I have the same evening challenge and find that success in avoiding it is dependent on how exhausted I am. Sometimes I feel like I'm even too tired to go upstairs to bed, however dumb that sounds...and it's easier to give in and stand in the kitchen flipping through the mail, magazines included, mindlessly stuffing my face. And I mean mindlessly! It's as though my brain turns off. The only way I can avoid it is to get ahead of the fatigue and get upstairs before the "too tired to think straight" wave comes over me.0
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u kidding ?? if he goes 2 bed at 8:30 he'll probably wake up at 2 a.m craving whatever he can find . so , I would advice as previously mentioned make sure u make room for it , eat less during the day, buy less junk food ( if you don't have it in your house you're less likely to go out at 9 p.m to buy it) , and last but not least , read the nutritional values of everything you eat, u'll soon come to realize they're not worth the calories and fat they have.
Laying down in bed does not automatically mean sleep. It is quieting the body and mind a good hour or two before sleeping, establishing a new routine that can help get rid of his old habit of snacking after 9:00 pm. Just a suggestion. I mean, this works for me. I get ready for bed and then lay down/read a book/do homework for two to three hours and then I sleep around 11:00pm-12:00 am. If you really want to get rid of a habit, establish a new routine/activity that gets you away from the kitchen and keep your mind off food. If you still want to eat junk, then just fit it in your calories.
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