Always hungry....is that normal?
cladinose
Posts: 19 Member
In late August I decided I wasn't at a healthy weight, so I tried out and made a beach volleyball team. I lost a lot of weight quickly even though I ate the same amount of food (roughly 1,700 calories). Now I'm constantly hungry, even after I eat a sandwhich or some soup. Is this normal? If so, are their certain foods that would actually make me feel full? If not, how can I fix this?
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Foods that typically keep you satisfied for longer are high fibre and high protein foods, some feel satisfied for longer with a higher fat intake.
Sometimes thirst can also feel like hunger. Make sure you are properly hydrated.
If you are exercising a lot, you may need to eat back some of your exercise calories.
What does a day's typical menu look like for you? We may be able to offer some tweaks in what you are eating.
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The hormone leptin, which makes you feel full, is produced by adipose tissue. Losing fat means less lepin which means you're hungrier.0
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For me, it depends on the diet and if that diet suits you.
Right now I am eating very LCHF, and I would say no, being hungry all the time is not normal. If trying to lose weight by moderating my food intake, I would say yes, hunger is normal.
Just my experiences0 -
I concur with above. A low carb High fat diet usually eliminates hunger because insulin remains low. It's the ideal diet in many ways!0
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tiptoethruthetulips wrote: »Foods that typically keep you satisfied for longer are high fibre and high protein foods, some feel satisfied for longer with a higher fat intake.
Sometimes thirst can also feel like hunger. Make sure you are properly hydrated.
If you are exercising a lot, you may need to eat back some of your exercise calories.
What does a day's typical menu look like for you? We may be able to offer some tweaks in what you are eating.
I usually eat a turkey or peanut butter sandwhich for breakfast. Tomato/chicken noodle soup for lunch. Then some pasta or a salad for dinner. I'm a poor college kid and I want to get more bang for my buck. But if there are some foods that will fill me up that aren't too expensive, I'm willing to invest.
Thanks for your reply!!!!!0 -
For me, carbs are at the bottom of the list as far as what keeps me feeling full. Don't get me wrong, I love many carb heavy foods, but for hunger control they fall behind protein and fats.
Proteins keep me full longer. Almost any meat is protein heavy, and chicken breast and pork loin are both dirt cheap if you buy larger packages. As a side bonus, they are also lean, which means you can add your fats in whatever tasty way you choose. Quite a few types of beans are protein rich as well, and if you buy them dry in bag form they are really cheap protein. Lentils, black beans, and several others in dry form can be 100 or so grams of protein for a buck, maybe a buck and a half. Talapia and several other fish are real high in protein.
Fats are easy to find. In a bind eat some ice cream. If you have calories left to spare have some peanut butter and chocolate.0 -
robertw486 wrote: »For me, carbs are at the bottom of the list as far as what keeps me feeling full. Don't get me wrong, I love many carb heavy foods, but for hunger control they fall behind protein and fats.
Proteins keep me full longer. Almost any meat is protein heavy, and chicken breast and pork loin are both dirt cheap if you buy larger packages. As a side bonus, they are also lean, which means you can add your fats in whatever tasty way you choose. Quite a few types of beans are protein rich as well, and if you buy them dry in bag form they are really cheap protein. Lentils, black beans, and several others in dry form can be 100 or so grams of protein for a buck, maybe a buck and a half. Talapia and several other fish are real high in protein.
Fats are easy to find. In a bind eat some ice cream. If you have calories left to spare have some peanut butter and chocolate.
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tiptoethruthetulips wrote: »Foods that typically keep you satisfied for longer are high fibre and high protein foods, some feel satisfied for longer with a higher fat intake.
Sometimes thirst can also feel like hunger. Make sure you are properly hydrated.
If you are exercising a lot, you may need to eat back some of your exercise calories.
What does a day's typical menu look like for you? We may be able to offer some tweaks in what you are eating.
I usually eat a turkey or peanut butter sandwhich for breakfast. Tomato/chicken noodle soup for lunch. Then some pasta or a salad for dinner. I'm a poor college kid and I want to get more bang for my buck. But if there are some foods that will fill me up that aren't too expensive, I'm willing to invest.
Thanks for your reply!!!!!
I'm genuinely curious how that works out to 1700 calories. Unless you're using a lot of turkey/peanut butter, and eating a lot of soup, it doesn't seem like it would even hit 1500 calories. Looking at a typical menu for your day, though, I would guess it's more along the lines of you're simply not eating enough. Do you exercise in addition to dieting? Do you eat back any of the calories (I know most say not to eat back all of them - but my boyfriend and I both find if we don't eat back at least half, we're famished by the end of the day)? Do you always finish what you eat?
My initial thought was that you should just try increasing calorie intake a little bit. Maybe try adding a light snack somewhere during the day. Some snacks can be rather filling, and aren't always heavy in calories. Cheap and affordable for college students, too. Also, perhaps try more filling soups? I personally don't find neither tomato soup nor chicken soup to be too filling, but say... the Campbell's chunkies? While not necessarily as healthy as homemade (which I'm sure you're not having anyway if you're on a budget), they fill me up just as well and many are the same amount of calories (around 300 for a full can, 150 per serving).0 -
robertw486 wrote: »For me, carbs are at the bottom of the list as far as what keeps me feeling full. Don't get me wrong, I love many carb heavy foods, but for hunger control they fall behind protein and fats.
Proteins keep me full longer. Almost any meat is protein heavy, and chicken breast and pork loin are both dirt cheap if you buy larger packages. As a side bonus, they are also lean, which means you can add your fats in whatever tasty way you choose. Quite a few types of beans are protein rich as well, and if you buy them dry in bag form they are really cheap protein. Lentils, black beans, and several others in dry form can be 100 or so grams of protein for a buck, maybe a buck and a half. Talapia and several other fish are real high in protein.
Fats are easy to find. In a bind eat some ice cream. If you have calories left to spare have some peanut butter and chocolate.
Bolding both as he brings up very valid points. Your day is low on protein and fats. While turkey may get some protein in, I don't really see where you'd get it elsewhere. Chicken is cheap, ground beef is cheap, pork is somewhat affordable. Fats are filling, too. Ice cream could be your snack.0 -
robertw486 wrote: »For me, carbs are at the bottom of the list as far as what keeps me feeling full. Don't get me wrong, I love many carb heavy foods, but for hunger control they fall behind protein and fats.
Proteins keep me full longer. Almost any meat is protein heavy, and chicken breast and pork loin are both dirt cheap if you buy larger packages. As a side bonus, they are also lean, which means you can add your fats in whatever tasty way you choose. Quite a few types of beans are protein rich as well, and if you buy them dry in bag form they are really cheap protein. Lentils, black beans, and several others in dry form can be 100 or so grams of protein for a buck, maybe a buck and a half. Talapia and several other fish are real high in protein.
Fats are easy to find. In a bind eat some ice cream. If you have calories left to spare have some peanut butter and chocolate.
It's really going to depend on your body... here is what affects my hunger the most. 1. protein, 2. fiber, 3 starches (especially potatoes), and then fats.. in fact, I literally just ate 400 calories of nuts and I am still starving (thank god dinner is coming up).0 -
I'm genuinely curious how that works out to 1700 calories. Unless you're using a lot of turkey/peanut butter, and eating a lot of soup, it doesn't seem like it would even hit 1500 calories. Looking at a typical menu for your day, though, I would guess it's more along the lines of you're simply not eating enough. Do you exercise in addition to dieting? Do you eat back any of the calories (I know most say not to eat back all of them - but my boyfriend and I both find if we don't eat back at least half, we're famished by the end of the day)? Do you always finish what you eat?
My initial thought was that you should just try increasing calorie intake a little bit. Maybe try adding a light snack somewhere during the day. Some snacks can be rather filling, and aren't always heavy in calories. Cheap and affordable for college students, too. Also, perhaps try more filling soups? I personally don't find neither tomato soup nor chicken soup to be too filling, but say... the Campbell's chunkies? While not necessarily as healthy as homemade (which I'm sure you're not having anyway if you're on a budget), they fill me up just as well and many are the same amount of calories (around 300 for a full can, 150 per serving).
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If you say you are starving, how are you not able to eat more? Also, i would cut back on peanut butter if you need greater volume to keep you full.
Can you open your food diary? Also, what are your stats (height, weight, age, sex and workout plan)?0 -
How do I open my food diary?0
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Nevermind I found out how.I usually have very little time openings between class, volleyball and work to eat. So I try to get something in that. I also drink sugary drinks to help substitute lack of calories. I have beach volleyball every Sunday and Mondays. And I have indoor volleyball for around 3.5 hrs every Monday and Wednesday. So the calories I burn usually are too much for me, and I don't log some of them in. But if I eat enough, despite loosing the calories, I don't see why I would be hungry0
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I say that im hungry all the time because i will eat an amount but still feel hungry, but when i need to eat an extra 2000 calories on top of my daily allowance, i dont have time to eat that much and that just seems like an unhealthy amount of food. And Im still trying mull over how eating 3 times a day is not good enough, for a non olympic athlete.0
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So you are very active, a lot of your calories are liquid and most days you dont get near your goal. Pretty much all reasons you are starving. There are plenty of good fast foods that can be eaten; greek yogurt, protein shakes or bars, nuts, luncheon meats, hard boiled eggs, fruit, veggies, etc..
How old are you, male or female, how much you weigh?0 -
I would suggest switching out some of your usual foods for a lower-calorie alternative, so that you may eat more in -quantity- of it for the same calories.
For example; I love stir-frying those lil 'miracle noodle' things. Shirataki noodles. Yum! And they are veeerrryyy little calories. "But Pixel!," you say, "while there is a lot of that, where is the nutrition? Where is the food?" WELL, HERE COMES THE FUN PART. Loading up those noodles with stuff. Veggie, LOTS of meat, a fried egg, sauce (I recommend peanut satay). The regular, plain noodles you substituted out just got their *kitten* handed to them by a packed peanut stir fry.
... Also, those noodles fill me -up-.0 -
Im 5'4 female, and currently im 145, so at the end of the bmi scale. What would I search on google to know what foods I should to be eating?0
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oh and Im 210
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Im 5'4 female, and currently im 145, so at the end of the bmi scale. What would I search on google to know what foods I should to be eating?
No specific foods need to be eaten. Fruits, veggies and proteins will keep you full the most. Foods containing monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats are also good for your health. Fish has omega 3s which are great. And potatoes seem to keep me full.0 -
Ah, we are pretty similar. I'm 24, 5'3, an currently at 146-ish.0
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Pre-planning your meals and making snacks can help with getting your calories in.0
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Thanks sooooo much psulemon!!!!! I needed a slap in the face.0
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Im 5'4 female, and currently im 145, so at the end of the bmi scale. What would I search on google to know what foods I should to be eating?
No specific foods need to be eaten. Fruits, veggies and proteins will keep you full the most. Foods containing monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats are also good for your health. Fish has omega 3s which are great. And potatoes seem to keep me full.
Thanks sooo much!! I needed a slap in the face!0 -
Looking at your diary (assuming it is accurate) you are not eating enough, at least for the past couple of days. You were at a little over 1000 calories the one day and right about 1200 the other. You need to eat at least the 1700. As to what will fill you, that is pretty personal to each individual.
Edit:
I went back even further, you have not been hitting your calorie goal. In fact there is not one day going back to the 22nd, where you have hit your goal. One was even down in the 700s. Your hunger is because of chronically eating too little.0
This discussion has been closed.
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