What to do at night when your hungry?!?!

Every night for the past couple of days I eat dinner and then hours later right before bed I get super hungry. By that time I usually don't have enough calories left to eat anything. I try to suck it up and just go to sleep but I'm too hungry. Help! What can I do? Any suggestions on small calorie foods maybe?
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Replies

  • imogene912
    imogene912 Posts: 32 Member
    Maybe have a smaller portion of your dinner and put something aside for later. Preferably a protein item.
  • Asher_Ethan
    Asher_Ethan Posts: 2,430 Member
    I always save myself calories to eat right before bed so that doesn't happen. Try saving 100-200 calories to eat right before bed
  • grizzlygift
    grizzlygift Posts: 22 Member
    I drink hot tea (caffien-free) with slice of lemon or miso soup put some scallion for more taste(around 25 calories) and that make me be able to sleep without feeling hungry.
  • frankiesgirl21
    frankiesgirl21 Posts: 235 Member
    Go to bed and imagine myself the way I want to be. Wake up be happy isuceededed yesterday ..if I did.... Start again today. Repeat.
  • Karen112345
    Karen112345 Posts: 2 Member
    I read somewhere that hunger at night is actually thirst. Try drinking a glass of water. :)
  • medelaney13
    medelaney13 Posts: 9 Member
    Sometimes hunger is really thirst. Pay attention to how much water you are drinking throughout the day. Try to drink water during meals which will help. Also, make sure your meals are balanced with carbs, proteins and fats to help smooth out your blood sugar levels and slow digestion. And as mentioned above, try to plan out your calories to allow a small snack in the evening.
  • MegSchuy16
    MegSchuy16 Posts: 189 Member
    Glass of water or tea. I also eat a 100 calorie snack about an hour or two before bed.
  • that_fat_guy_5
    that_fat_guy_5 Posts: 6 Member
    Hit up a Weight Watchers store. They have low fat, calorie, salt and sugar snacks, such as chips, pretzels and chocolate bars that are for calorie counting people. They are really good
  • Orphia
    Orphia Posts: 7,097 Member
    I go to bed soon after dinner, so I don't ever have that problem.

    Plenty of good advice above. I'd echo the suggestions to save some calories from your earlier meals.
  • MaydayAquiles
    MaydayAquiles Posts: 3 Member
    Cold glass of water should help with that.
  • kelly450
    kelly450 Posts: 9 Member
    I usually eat dinner at 5 or 6 and then keep a big bottle of water for the evening. Fills me up well x
  • aechastain
    aechastain Posts: 1 Member
    All my life, I have felt the need to go to bed with a full stomach. I have adjusted my meals so I can have something filling before bed. I typically don't eat until the afternoon anyway so my breakfast might be as late as someone's dinner. Other than that, try to make sure you are eating filling foods, especially for your dinner or late snack. Drink plenty and be mindful of why you want to eat. I had a bad habit of eating late just because I was bored or watching a show but I wasn't physically really hungry. That was the most difficult thing to break. Kind of like quitting smoking. Even once you get past the nicotine need, you have the physical hand to mouth thing to kick. For the habit part, I find chewing gum or just finding some sort of distraction helps. I just have to get out of the environment. Take a walk, a bath, clean or pretty much anything that will distract me for a minute while the urge to eat passes.
  • I don't tend to get hungry after my evening meal, but my husband regularly ate 'supper' in to his mid-20's and cannot sleep if he's hungry. If you're genuinely hungry save some calories for the evening - 100 calorie or less snacks - fruit or vegetables, an egg, some meat slices, yogurt pot, hot chocolate? Or eat your evening meal a bit later. If I'm hungry in the evening a hot drink usually does the trick.
  • Jams009
    Jams009 Posts: 345 Member
    Definitely saving calories... I'd rather be hungry in the morning at work when there's no food around, so I eat smaller meals during the day and have the bulk of my calories in the evening.
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    Eat your dinner later?

    Smaller breakfast to save some calories for an evening snack? Berries are high taste / low calorie.

    Often it is the act of eating you are craving not actually food as fuel, you may just have to break the habit.

    But consider if you have you perhaps gone for too high a calorie deficit / too fast weight loss?
  • MaureenDarst1
    MaureenDarst1 Posts: 11 Member
    i have done two things eating popcorn but also i find if i get busy doing something like playing solitaire i dont want to stop to eat if im on a role and then when i start nodding off i go to bed but the gum and water thing does work too done both or even just ate ice
  • lyndsay692
    lyndsay692 Posts: 2 Member
    Small mug of hot skimmed milk. Very low calorie and it helps send you to sleep.
  • MommyL2015
    MommyL2015 Posts: 1,411 Member
    edited March 2016
    I save calories for nighttime before bed. If I am hungry, I cannot sleep, so I make sure to have something satisfying. A lot of nights I'll have a bowl of hot cereal. If I don't have a lot of calories left, I'll make hot chocolate with skim milk, Hershey's baking powder and splenda. Makes a nice warm cup for about 100 calories.
  • phyllis731
    phyllis731 Posts: 58 Member
    Make sure you have plenty of protein and whole grains in your diet. I go with air popped popcorn with Mrs dash, cucumbers, peppers, or just water at night. I chew fruity gum to fight sugar cravings.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    Plan your day and save some calories for a snack. I usually have at least 100-200 calories for snacks.
    Drink some water and wait 20 minutes to an hour to see if the feeling passes. If it doesn't then try eating something small. Try to stay at or below your maintenance calorie level.
    Look at what you ate on those hungry days. Did you get enough protein and fats? Was your dinner smaller than normal?
    Vegetables are usually pretty low calorie. You could eat a bunch of spinach, broccoli or celery for less than 100 calories. If you need more protein maybe a hard boiled egg would be a good snack choice.
  • vikinglander
    vikinglander Posts: 1,547 Member
    A small protein or fat hit usually does it for me. An ounce or two of meat, a tablespoon of nut butter, only about 100 calories. Usually not a problem unless I've been off my calorie count that day.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    For those of you who drink liquid right before bed, doesn't it make you need to get up and pee?

    I budget calories for a bedtime snack, and if I'm thirsty, have fruit.
  • egable1
    egable1 Posts: 2 Member
    edited March 2016
    I have several pieces of advice to kick the "hunger" issue. I always had issues with it, as well, but I learned how to eliminate the problem after a few years of trying various diets and keeping a log of what I ate and how I felt.

    1) Increase your protein intake, reduce carb intake, and eat healthy carbs like vegetables and some fruit. Personally, I recommend you look up what your "maintenance" protein intake is and then double that. Eat at least that much protein each day and it will really help stave off hunger. If you need a quick number, eat 0.7 grams of protein per pound of body weight. So, if you weigh 200 lbs, then eat 0.7 * 200 = 140 grams of protein per day. As you lose weight, the number will quickly approach the recommended intake per pound of lean body weight. Most importantly, it will help you lose weight quicker and easier because it will eliminate those insane hunger pains. The other thing to keep in mind is that vegetables and fruit are mostly water, so they are quite filling for few calories. However, they tend not to stick with me as long as protein does, so focus most on protein intake.

    2) When you wake up in the morning, if you are not hungry, don't eat anything until you feel the first hunger pains. Then, eat a high protein breakfast like no-fat greek yogurt, scrambled eggs, or some lean meat. Personally, I like to make a smoothie in my Vitamix using 1 cup of greek yogurt (23g of protein, 0g fat, a handful of carbs), 1 scoop of Vega One organic protein powder (which provides lots of vitamins and minerals equivalent to several servings of vegetables and fruit and 20g more protein), plus 1C - 2C (70g - 140g of each) of frozen blueberries or peaches (to sweeten it). If you use blueberries, you must get the ones which are very large, otherwise they won't provide much sweetness. I use the fruit to sweeten it instead of sugar because it is obviously healthier. I add about 8oz of water and then blend. It makes almost 32oz of smoothie with around 44g of protein. Plus, it provides half of my daily vitamin needs. It typically comes in under 400 calories. I use Vega One as the protein powder because it is basically ground up and dehydrated organic vegetables. That gets me much larger dose of vegetable intake than I would normally get.

    3) When you start feeling hungry again, eat a small, high protein snack and wait until you feel hungry again before eating your next meal.

    4) Make sure you stick with protein and veggies as the main items you eat for your meals. Eat at least 35g of protein for each meal, but 45g would be better to start with. Choose lean meats or fish to keep the calories down. You want at least a half of a plate of veggies with each meal, but a full plate would be better. The less "dressed" you can make them, the better. For example, I sometimes eat an entire bag of fresh cut green beans (12oz). To prepare them, I put them in a pot of water, raise them slowly to a boil on medium heat, strain, add 7g (half a tablespoon) of Organic Valley Pasture Butter (my favorite butter) and stir to coat, then add salt to taste and eat. It is basically a full plate of green beans and has only 63 calories of butter on it for extra flavor.

    5) Eat your last meal of the day relatively close to bedtime. I get up at 5:30am and go to bed at 9pm. So, I typically eat dinner either between 6pm and 7pm or between 7:30pm and 8:30pm. I try not to eat after 8pm, but sometimes life is crazy and it just happens. You need to have about a 3 - 4 hour window between when you eat your last meal and when you fall asleep. If you fall asleep less than 4 hours after you eat your last meal, and you ate a lot of protein in that meal, you will not quite be done digesting the protein at that point, so you should not be hungry. But, you will have had enough time to digest most of your meal so it shouldn't keep you awake.

    6) When all else fails, eat watermelon! Seriously. 1kg (2.2 lbs) of watermelon is only 300 calories. For the small round seedless melons, that's typically half or more of the melon. For the larger elongated melons, it's still probably 1/4th of the melon. Watermelon is about 93% water. All of that water really fills you up fast. Because it is contained in the food itself, it keeps you full longer than if you had just drank the water from a cup. Even if I am nearly fainting from hunger, I find it hard to eat more than 300 calories of watermelon in one sitting, and that much watermelon keeps me full for quite a while. I will slice a bunch onto a plate, weigh the plate, eat as much as I want while putting the rhine back on the plate, then weigh the plate again and log the number of grams I ate.

    7) If you get a craving for sweets, eat watermelon first until you are full. Then if you get another craving for sweets, eat more. Repeat until you hit the end of the day. If you have cravings on the next day, try it again. If on the third day they have not disappeared, you can either try it again or you can try a single serving of 70% cacao or higher dark chocolate. Try Perugina if you like chewing your chocolate or Lindt if you like letting it melt in your mouth.

    Using these tactics, I am able to get by on as little as 1,000 calories per day without feeling much hunger. It's a lot easier to do 1,200 - 1,300 calories per day without hunger. At the time of this writing, I am 253lbs. I'm male, almost 6' tall, and fairly muscular. If a guy of my size and build can get by on such a small calorie count without feeling much if any hunger during the day, you can too.

    For a last-ditch effort, if you are still having issues with hunger after making those changes, there is one sure-fire way to kick it. However, it takes 3 days of going out of your mind, wanting to pull your hair out and climb the walls to do it. That no-fail method of kicking the feelings of hunger is to consume nothing but 12 - 16 cups of water for 72 hours. If you want to go that route, I strongly recommend you find something *very* engrossing to do for those 3 days. Like binge-watch multiple seasons of your favorite TV show or a new show you always wanted to get into or play a super-engrossing computer game or walk 10 miles from civilization in all directions with a tent and sleeping bag and some books and water and set up camp for the three days. By the end of the 2nd day it won't be so much the feeling of hunger that gets you but the insane, mind-bendingly overwhelming compulsion to eat. I recommend everyone try it at least once. It will give you a new respect for drug addicts who have gone through withdrawal, regardless of whether they succeeded or failed to kick their habit.
  • MommyL2015
    MommyL2015 Posts: 1,411 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    For those of you who drink liquid right before bed, doesn't it make you need to get up and pee?

    I budget calories for a bedtime snack, and if I'm thirsty, have fruit.

    Sometimes. But I'd rather get up and pee once than toss and turn because I'm hungry.
  • nordlead2005
    nordlead2005 Posts: 1,303 Member
    If I had calories I ate (I don't generally eat breakfast and generally try to save calories for an after dinner snack). If not and we were talking 6 months ago when I was really trying to lose weight the answer was go to bed hungry. Now, I'd probably just eat something and either say who cares or adjust for it in the following days.
  • stephanie20314
    stephanie20314 Posts: 81 Member
    Have a snack or take a sleeping pill. Maybe your calorie deficit is too ambitious if you're constantly running out of calories and hungry.
  • Linzon
    Linzon Posts: 294 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    For those of you who drink liquid right before bed, doesn't it make you need to get up and pee?

    I budget calories for a bedtime snack, and if I'm thirsty, have fruit.

    Yeah, I need to stop drinking an hour before bed or I'm up at least twice...

    I go for the budgeting calories route as well and have popcorn most nights!
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    edited March 2016
    Reasonable goal, eat at least half exercise calories, plenty of protein, fat, and fiber. Then you won't go to bed as hungry.
  • zyxst
    zyxst Posts: 9,149 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    For those of you who drink liquid right before bed, doesn't it make you need to get up and pee?

    I budget calories for a bedtime snack, and if I'm thirsty, have fruit.

    So no one else gets up to pee at night? I'm the only one?

    OP, pre-plan your day so you have a snack at night. Aside from medical fasting, there's no reason to go hungry.
  • CherylG1983
    CherylG1983 Posts: 294 Member
    What are you eating for dinner?