Excercising Before or after you eat.

theresalizotte
theresalizotte Posts: 29
edited September 27 in Fitness and Exercise
I am looking for a little bit of input on thoughts about working out before or after you eat.. I was watching Good Morning America yesterday and a personal trainer said that she tells her clients to work out before they eat so they can burn stored fat. from watching the biggest loser I thought you needed to fuel your body prior to excercising. I am wonder now how to choose what to do.
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Replies

  • Sasha_Bear
    Sasha_Bear Posts: 625 Member
    I don't think it makes much difference just make sure you wait at least a hour after eating before working out.
  • I heard the same thing?? I am not sure so I do both sometimes for the week.
  • bzmom
    bzmom Posts: 1,332 Member
    bump
  • heathersmilez
    heathersmilez Posts: 2,579 Member
    After BUT, if you work out in the am you may want a few almonds or apple slices so that you don't feel nauseous since you've gone 8-10 hours w/o food. I love breakfast so I make sure to have 1/2 cup of all bran and skim milk before my spin class on weekends and have a protein shake when I come home. Every other day I workout after work so I eat dinner after and have a shake for dessert by 8:00pm.

    BL eat before they work out? Explains why they’re always barfing and why I won’t watch that show. What they do is not realistic and Jillian is not properly certified, she is a PR individual first and foremost and an instructor second so don't wall into that trap.
  • pkarim
    pkarim Posts: 171
    I usually workout around 5:30pm everyday and I have a snack/small lunch around 3:30 to 4. This is usually something like fruit and fat free yogurt or cottage cheese and maybe an egg. After working out I always have a protein shake, and this is around 7:30 or 8pm so i'm full for the rest of the night. This way I get fuel to burn throughout my workout and then afterwards getting a protein shake will help your body heal faster. I've lost 40 pounds doing this so I really recommend it.
  • Rtrue18
    Rtrue18 Posts: 45
    I always think its best to work out after you eat and hear that much more often. I agree with the whole burning stored fat when working out before eating plus your body burns the food that you eat after a workout faster because your metabolism is up. I don't recomend going to the gym starving though because you won't have a great workout. I usually try to have a snack or powerbar (that doesn't have crazy stats) like an hour or so before a workout. If I go with a growling stomach I just don't get that great of a workout.
  • KaylaKilgore
    KaylaKilgore Posts: 160 Member
    I am looking for a little bit of input on thoughts about working out before or after you eat.. I was watching Good Morning America yesterday and a personal trainer said that she tells her clients to work out before they eat so they can burn stored fat. from watching the biggest loser I thought you needed to fuel your body prior to excercising. I am wonder now how to choose what to do.

    I have asked this question in many different places and go different answers. I would rather, wake up drink a glass of water and work-out then get ready for the day before I have my breakfast.
    I've tried eating an hour before I worked out and I couldn't find motivation to actually do it. That was a fail for me. Plus, the way I see it is if you eat before you work-out your only burning the food that you just ate.
    Although I'm not an health expert. I have read some places that after a weight work-out to eat some protein food which will help the muscles.
  • catrinka77
    catrinka77 Posts: 2
    I eat and then wait at least an hour before working out. I need the boost or I get tired during my workout. Maybe it will change as I get more fit.
  • ShaeDetermined
    ShaeDetermined Posts: 1,525 Member
    I'm with Good Morning America :wink:

    working out in the morning before eating has been proven to burn 200% more than the same workout after eating.
  • meggonkgonk
    meggonkgonk Posts: 2,066 Member
    I work out early and usually try to have about 1/2 a banana before hand. If you are AM working out, you may find it necessary to eat something just to have the energy to get going.

    Long run, I don't think it much matters- everyone has their preferences, research and reasons. But what matters most is however you will keep doing it, so stick with what works best for you.
  • HeidiMightyRawr
    HeidiMightyRawr Posts: 3,343 Member
    Personally, I could never exercise with no food in me. Some people love getting up in the morning and straight into exercise but it's different for everyone. I usually will eat something fairly light, enough so I'm not hungry mid workout, wait 30 mins - an hour for it to settle fully and then I'll exercise. After a workout I'll have a protein shake and maybe something to eat again depending on the meal before and how long ago that was.
    I do think you need to fuel your body before a workout but it's important afterwards as well, especially if it's been a big workout.
  • Kanzaki3
    Kanzaki3 Posts: 656 Member
    My routine has always been to wake up, weigh myself, go workout, and then eat. It's been giving me good results so far so I'm sticking to that.
  • TurboChels
    TurboChels Posts: 69 Member
    I have found that if I get up,empty stomach, and work out straight away I have to most energy and feel the best. I find that if I workout after breakfast or dinner I feel heavier and even if I wait an hour I still cramp a little. I think it is different for each person, you have to find what works best for you :)
  • SarahofTwins
    SarahofTwins Posts: 1,169 Member
    I usually have some oatmeal first and then do my workout...however I dont wait it out for 30mins, I usually start 10mins after I eat which most people wouldnt agree but when you have 3 kids under 2 then I need to hurry my butt up! lol.
  • Still_Sossy
    Still_Sossy Posts: 868 Member
    I am really confused now. I read in several places that if you do not eat with in and hour of waking you stall/slow your metabolism for the day, that you need it with in that hour of waking to kick start your metabolism. That said, if you are a morning exerciser do you not eat first thing then? So much conflicting info out there. :huh:
  • TexasNurseMom78
    TexasNurseMom78 Posts: 897 Member
    I usually have something small pre workout. like a banana or a fiber one bar. That way i have some fuel in my, but not a full belly that will make me sick when I am running. And water. Have to have water pre work out.
  • meggonkgonk
    meggonkgonk Posts: 2,066 Member
    working out in the morning before eating has been proven to burn 200% more than the same workout after eating.

    I have to point out that this is a really misleading statistic. The study showed that on average most participants on the same diet doing the same workout but ate after they worked out instead of before did lose more weight on average over the same 6 month period, but the difference was only about 5 lbs. Not 200%.

    Also there are draw backs to not eating before working out- your body doesn't necessarily "attack fat stores" simply because you haven't eaten- it is harder for your body to build and maintain muscle if you aren't fueling your workouts.
  • Bakins929
    Bakins929 Posts: 895 Member
    I think it is almost always preferable to eat after since you can push your body into a catabolic state (breaking down muscle fiber for energy) without proper nutrition for your muscles.

    I have started drinking a 1/2 potency protein shake before I start p90x in the morning. It seems to give me a boost. Then when I finish, I drink another full strength. I'm using isopure fat-free, so that gives me about 300 cals for b'fast and lots of protein.

    HTH
  • Erindipitous
    Erindipitous Posts: 1,234 Member
    I always exercise before I eat.

    Few reasons:

    Food makes me sleepy.
    Exercise is a appetite suppressant for me.
    I make better choices after a good workout.
  • meggonkgonk
    meggonkgonk Posts: 2,066 Member
    I am really confused now. I read in several places that if you do not eat with in and hour of waking you stall/slow your metabolism for the day, that you need it with in that hour of waking to kick start your metabolism. That said, if you are a morning exerciser do you not eat first thing then? So much conflicting info out there. :huh:

    There is a lot of conflicting info largely because it's almost all hypothesis. Educated guesses but guesses nevertheless.

    The best thing to do is try out a couple of options and see how you feel. For a lot of people a little bit of food, especially high carb, is a good AM energy booster (hence- banana or energy bar) for really putting your all into a workout. A full meal may be too much, or it may be just right for you. Not eating at all until you are done may make you feel sluggish or it may leave you light enough to get through without feeling sick. Try out what works for you.
  • Life_is_Good
    Life_is_Good Posts: 361 Member
    Before & after....

    BEFORE - You need something in your body to fuel your workout - CARBS - an apple is a great choice, or a piece of whole wheat toast with peanut butter. Not to much to make you sluggish. Not eating prior will slow you down & you won't work out to your full potential - you may also find yourself getting dizzy during your workout if you don't eat.

    AFTER - you need something to help repair your muscles - PROTIEN - a glass of lowfat milk is a great choice if your not going to have a meal with in an hour or two.
  • fteale
    fteale Posts: 5,310 Member
    It depends what time I am exercising. I try to run in the morning before I eat, but I do evening circuits classes so obviously I have to eat at some point during the day before them. On those days I don't eat after 4pm. Exercising on a full stomach makes me vom.
  • wonnder1
    wonnder1 Posts: 460
    So much conflicting info out there. :huh:

    Amen! Personally, I can't work out in the morning. So I work out at night after work. If I got it in my head that you had to do it first thing, that would be it for me-I just can't.

    The only thing I find really important is to get some protein in just AFTER I work out.
  • ShaeDetermined
    ShaeDetermined Posts: 1,525 Member
    <sorry for the long post, just one article from the NY Times regarding working out before breakfast>

    Phys Ed: The Benefits of Exercising Before Breakfast
    By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

    The holiday season brings many joys and, unfortunately, many countervailing dietary pitfalls. Even the fittest and most disciplined of us can succumb, indulging in more fat and calories than at any other time of the year. The health consequences, if the behavior is unchecked, can be swift and worrying. A recent study by scientists in Australia found that after only three days, an extremely high-fat, high-calorie diet can lead to increased blood sugar and insulin resistance, potentially increasing the risk for Type 2 diabetes. Waistlines also can expand at this time of year, prompting self-recrimination and unrealistic New Year’s resolutions.

    But a new study published in The Journal of Physiology suggests a more reliable and far simpler response. Run or bicycle before breakfast. Exercising in the morning, before eating, the study results show, seems to significantly lessen the ill effects of holiday Bacchanalias.


    For the study, researchers in Belgium recruited 28 healthy, active young men and began stuffing them with a truly lousy diet, composed of 50 percent fat and 30 percent more calories, overall, than the men had been consuming. Some of the men agreed not to exercise during the experiment. The rest were assigned to one of two exercise groups. The groups’ regimens were identical and exhausting. The men worked out four times a week in the mornings, running and cycling at a strenuous intensity. Two of the sessions lasted 90 minutes, the others, an hour. All of the workouts were supervised, so the energy expenditure of the two groups was identical.

    Their early-morning routines, however, were not. One of the groups ate a hefty, carbohydrate-rich breakfast before exercising and continued to ingest carbohydrates, in the form of something like a sports drink, throughout their workouts. The second group worked out without eating first and drank only water during the training. They made up for their abstinence with breakfast later that morning, comparable in calories to the other group’s trencherman portions.

    The experiment lasted for six weeks. At the end, the nonexercising group was, to no one’s surprise, super-sized, having packed on an average of more than six pounds. They had also developed insulin resistance — their muscles were no longer responding well to insulin and weren’t pulling sugar (or, more technically, glucose) out of the bloodstream efficiently — and they had begun storing extra fat within and between their muscle cells. Both insulin resistance and fat-marbled muscles are metabolically unhealthy conditions that can be precursors of diabetes.

    The men who ate breakfast before exercising gained weight, too, although only about half as much as the control group. Like those sedentary big eaters, however, they had become more insulin-resistant and were storing a greater amount of fat in their muscles.

    Only the group that exercised before breakfast gained almost no weight and showed no signs of insulin resistance. They also burned the fat they were taking in more efficiently. “Our current data,” the study’s authors wrote, “indicate that exercise training in the fasted state is more effective than exercise in the carbohydrate-fed state to stimulate glucose tolerance despite a hypercaloric high-fat diet.”

    Just how exercising before breakfast blunts the deleterious effects of overindulging is not completely understood, although this study points toward several intriguing explanations. For one, as has been known for some time, exercising in a fasted state (usually possible only before breakfast), coaxes the body to burn a greater percentage of fat for fuel during vigorous exercise, instead of relying primarily on carbohydrates. When you burn fat, you obviously don’t store it in your muscles. In “our study, only the fasted group demonstrated beneficial metabolic adaptations, which eventually may enhance oxidative fatty acid turnover,” said Peter Hespel, Ph.D., a professor in the Research Center for Exercise and Health at Catholic University Leuven in Belgium and senior author of the study.

    At the same time, the fasting group showed increased levels of a muscle protein that “is responsible for insulin-stimulated glucose transport in muscle and thus plays a pivotal role in regulation of insulin sensitivity,” Dr Hespel said.

    In other words, working out before breakfast directly combated the two most detrimental effects of eating a high-fat, high-calorie diet. It also helped the men avoid gaining weight.

    There are caveats, of course. Exercising on an empty stomach is unlikely to improve your performance during that workout. Carbohydrates are easier for working muscles to access and burn for energy than fat, which is why athletes typically eat a high-carbohydrate diet. The researchers also don’t know whether the same benefits will accrue if you exercise at a more leisurely pace and for less time than in this study, although, according to Leonie Heilbronn, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Adelaide in Australia, who has extensively studied the effects of high-fat diets and wrote a commentary about the Belgian study, “I would predict low intensity is better than nothing.”

    So, unpleasant as the prospect may be, set your alarm after the next Christmas party to wake you early enough that you can run before sitting down to breakfast. “I would recommend this,” Dr. Heilbronn concluded, “as a way of combating Christmas” and those insidiously delectable cookies.

    http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/15/phys-ed-the-benefits-of-exercising-before-breakfast/
  • Cletc
    Cletc Posts: 352
    to work out before they eat so they can burn stored fat

    I'm interested in burning stored fat.
    I exercise on a fast (before I eat)

    I also Slow It Down
    http://www.markallenonline.com/maoArticles.aspx?AID=2

    Sure, makes sense to me.
  • dkbrummitt
    dkbrummitt Posts: 21
    From what I was told when I was in the military, it really depends on your body type. If you are already a lean person, then you should probably eat a light meal so that your body has some energy store. But if you aren't lean, then you have your energy store already. I tend to carry mine in my hips and thighs :wink: .

    I tend to not eat before a workout. Especially if its going to be a really hard one. Its easier for me to really press harder if I don't have to worry about hurling afterwards.
  • MinnieInMaine
    MinnieInMaine Posts: 6,400 Member
    On the rare occasion that I do a morning workout (weekend walk/runs in the summer before it gets too hot out), I'll just have something small like a banana, snack bar or protein shake. If I eat any more than that, I'll be nauseous.
  • if you didn't eat a snack beforehand if you just wake up and work out would you end up eating more anyway?? You would be hungry from your workout plus it would be breakfast time. I eat a small breakfast eg toast an then work out then eat some protien after work out and I have lost 50 pounds :)
  • Cletc
    Cletc Posts: 352
    if you didn't eat a snack beforehand if you just wake up and work out would you end up eating more anyway??

    No.

    :smile:
  • decu68
    decu68 Posts: 78
    I am looking for a little bit of input on thoughts about working out before or after you eat.. I was watching Good Morning America yesterday and a personal trainer said that she tells her clients to work out before they eat so they can burn stored fat. from watching the biggest loser I thought you needed to fuel your body prior to excercising. I am wonder now how to choose what to do.

    I believe this probably depends on what exactly you are doing. Are you doing light exercise, moderate exercise or heavy exercise? As a weight lifter of over 13 years I know my body very well. I have talked with good people, have information from books, DVD's, magazines and the internet. From "my personal experience" doing any heavy exercise you will want "some" energy in order to exercise. If I don't have something to eat at least an hour before I lift I cannot lift as effectively. Afterwards is a MUST to eat to replenish your system. Also when competing in martial arts it was a must to eat something prior; nothing heavy just something light as well through out the tournament.

    There are so many things out there with it being one way or the other. I have always found to get all of the information and then through trial and error find what works for YOU. Nobody has YOUR body and they can only provide GUIDELINES.
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