Help with my food intake

wesley6366
wesley6366 Posts: 2 Member
edited November 21 in Food and Nutrition
I still feel hungry most of the day. I wanted to let everyone look at my food intake and see if anyone could help with suggestions.

Replies

  • diannethegeek
    diannethegeek Posts: 14,776 Member
    Your diary appears to be set to private or friends only. You'll have to change it to public for the rest of us to see it.

    Until then, these are my really general tips for hunger:

    1. Make sure that your calorie goals are actually set appropriately. Don't skip this step. A lot of people set goals that are too aggressive and then wonder why they're having a hard time. http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/819055/setting-your-calorie-and-macro-targets

    2. Look for foods higher in protein, fat, and fiber. These help us stay full and more satisfied longer. If you're using MFP's default settings, try to consider protein, fat, and fiber as minimums to reach every day rather than maximums to stay below.

    3. Drink plenty of fluids. Some people really do confuse thirst and hunger.

    4. Get plenty of rest. This includes sleeping enough and taking rest days from the exercise. Sometimes our bodies look for food when they're exhausted.

    5. Play around with your meal timings. Some people do really well on 5-6 small meals a day and others feel like they want to gnaw their own arm off eating like that. Skipping breakfast, eating breakfast, 16:8 fasting, 6 small meals, 3 larger meals, snacks, no snacks, meal timing won't make a big difference to your weight loss, but it may help your hunger levels, mood, concentration, gym performance, etc. throughout the day. Don't be afraid to try a different way and see if it helps.

    6. Wait it out. If you know you're eating enough and the other steps above aren't helping, you may just have to wait it out. Our bodies send out hunger signals partially out of habit. If you eat at a certain time every day your body will start to get hungry at that time. The good news is that these signals can be retrained to stop telling you to be hungry all the time. The bad news is that you may just have to be hungry for a little bit while that happens.

    7. I also think it's important to remember that there's a habitual component to hunger. This goes along with point #6, but if you eat because you're bored or you're used to eating in front of the TV or in the car or whatever it is, then you can replace those habits with others that are better for you. Things like keeping water on hand to sip instead of snacking or picking up hobbies that keep your hands busy or that get you out of the house more can help out a little while you're retraining your hunger cues. You might need to pay attention to why you're eating/hungry or what you're feeling when you eat and try to replace food with other things, but it can be really beneficial over time.
  • RodaRose
    RodaRose Posts: 9,562 Member
    edited July 2015
    Open diary like this:
    Food > Settings > Public
  • PamCabrera
    PamCabrera Posts: 4 Member
    Thanks Dianne, this is very good information put very simply: )
    Can you give any tips on increasing iron & fibre. I struggle to get adequate levels of both but particularly iron?
  • RodaRose
    RodaRose Posts: 9,562 Member
    PamCabrera wrote: »
    Thanks Dianne, this is very good information put very simply: )
    Can you give any tips on increasing iron & fibre. I struggle to get adequate levels of both but particularly iron?

    Foods high in iron: Beans, Red meat, Pork, Chicken, Sardines, Liver, Spinach, Raisins, Apricots.
    Foods with fiber: Beans, Broccoli, Brussels Sprouts, Other Leafy Greens, Nuts.
  • wesley6366
    wesley6366 Posts: 2 Member
    Sorry settings are changed thanks for the help
  • PamCabrera
    PamCabrera Posts: 4 Member
    RodaRose wrote: »
    PamCabrera wrote: »
    Thanks Dianne, this is very good information put very simply: )
    Can you give any tips on increasing iron & fibre. I struggle to get adequate levels of both but particularly iron?

    Foods high in iron: Beans, Red meat, Pork, Chicken, Sardines, Liver, Spinach, Raisins, Apricots.
    Foods with fiber: Beans, Broccoli, Brussels Sprouts, Other Leafy Greens, Nuts.

  • PamCabrera
    PamCabrera Posts: 4 Member
    I will try to incorporate more of these
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