How do you prevent after dinner sweets & snacking?
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I don't try prevent it - I just work it into my daily calories.1
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I have the same problem, except it is after every meal. I am not hungry, I just want something sweet. I started using the 20 minute rule, and it is working so far. I set a timer (or Seri ) for 20 minutes. If I still want something sweet after the timer goes off, I will have it. But that hasn't happened yet. After 20 minutes of not thinking about it, the craving is gone.0
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Hi, I am the same way, so far I've been staying under my calorie intake everyday so, I usually make myself ants on a log, one or two stocks is plenty, or I opt for a small bowl of cheerio multi-grain cereal. Snack on it like that, I get the sweetness and the crunch. Hope that help! Good luck:-)0
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Drinking alcohol in excess and falling asleep0
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I used to have this problem until I simply stopped. That's it. I wish I could offer better advice but that's literally what I did. After a few weeks of not having a snack after dinner it simply became habit to not have one.
Although I should add, I usually have a hot drink after dinner and sometimes a banana before bed. The hot drink is either tea or teas with soya milk or a 40 calorie hot chocolate. The banana is rare, only if I'm low on calories for the day really.
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I try to find something busy to do at night. If I sit in front of the TV it is too easy to think about food, but if I go out for a walk, write, even play video games my hands and mind are busy and I don't have as much time to think about snacking.
I also like to brush my teeth and even go to bed early.0 -
GiselleBrand wrote: »1) Flossing and brushing your teeth and getting out of the kitchen and dining room would be a good start to prevent snacking.
2) Whenever, I go away on a meditation retreat, I do not have dinner at all every night for 10 consecutive nights. And I am always pleasantly surprised that I never experienced hunger once.
3) Mind mastery through meditation works miracles and powerfully steers our minds away from food. Try it some time.
I do #1(after my Ben and Jerry’s) and find it helpful, additionally nasty mouthwash helps too. Have to do some meditation and see if that helps.0 -
When I crave sweets I just drink a bottle of water and have a piece of fruit.. usually grapes, watermelon, or an apple. It always helps me.0
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It's a huge issue for me too and on the weeks I've been successful it's when I tell myself "this week, my goal is not to eat after 8 p.m."- that is usually the time when my little one is down and I want to sit on the couch and just watch some tv, and also the time I want to snack. So my little rule of "just, not after 8" allows me to have a snack or dessert after dinner (and make room for it in my day) and I reach for herbal tea as my "couch treat." I find if I say something like "nothing after dinner" then I feel deprived and eventually rebel.1
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I eat 2 cups of lite premade kettle corn for only 140 calories. It satisfies the sweet cravings.0
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This a big issue with me also! I can be on point with diet and workout all day and give it all up after dinner by bingeing on sweets.....I am to the point of calling it an addiction! I wasn't like this a few years ago, don't know how it got started. It's a problem for both my husband and I. It doesn't do any good to not buy them when we grocery shop because we live within 2-3 minutes of convenient stores and double kwik stations. This thread was meant for me. I am open to any suggestions.0
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One of my biggest hurdles was late night snacking. Even if I wasn't that hungry, I HAD to munch on something while watching TV with my husband. It was like my stress relief. Now, I eat dinner at around 7-7:30, save calories for a lowfat greek yogurt, green olives, or Luna bar to eat if I'm snacky, and drink a hot cup of tea if I still need something in my tummy.0
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--Don't buy the sweets.
--Have your sweet and then brush your teeth.
--Try completely eliminating them from your diet for three weeks.
--Have a family member hold or lock up your sweets.
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Don't fight it; accommodate it. Add a meal in your MFP log and call it snacks. Then whatever snacks you want, load them first, then build the rest of your meals around it. Just don't go too heavy on the snacks or you won't have room for B, L & D. Good luck!!0
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melissamk89 wrote: »Good advice, I just need to prove to myself that I can say no! Thanks
Sounds like it hasn't worked. And guess what, just saying "No" doesn't work for a lot of people. They need to change their environment and habits.0 -
MommyL2015 wrote: »Very simple: Don't keep sweets and "snack foods" in the house. That way, no matter how badly you want them, they aren't there for you to consume. Make it so that the only things in your fridge and pantry are ingredients for meals.
Unless your'e like me last weekend. We had no chocolate ice cream. I wanted chocolate ice cream, so I went to the store and got some. Just because it isn't in my house means nothing. Will power is everything. When I was somewhere around 8 months pregnant with my twins, I went to walmart at 10:00 at night because I needed smarties. I ate inhaled the entire bag.
I do this a lot less than I used to, and last weekend, I did have the calories for the ice cream but just didn't have the ice cream. I'm about 1/2 mile from the nearest grocery store, which happens to be open 24/7, so the only thing stopping me from actually getting what I want is money or outside temperature/weather.
I still think it's better to make yourself leave the house to get something than to have it at home. The best thing, when possible, is to go to a café, have a pastry and coffee and then leave. It may sound wasteful, but if you go out and buy a bag of candy and know you will consume the whole thing that night, it would be better to dump half the bag.0 -
I don't keep any snacks in the house that would blow my day. I simply can't eat enough apples, broccoli or cucumbers to go over my limit each day. My rule is that if I really want a sweet that badly, I should have no problem putting my walking shoes on to purchase a single serving. If I don't want it that bad, forget it. I want you to know that not once have I put on those walking shoes to go to the store0
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It's mind over matter for me and plenty of water/tea.
Takes time to get out of the snacking habit but it's totally achievable
In saying that you could also save a few hundred cals for night-time fixes1 -
Yes the after dinner grazing would kill my daily goals!
Now I've set up my meals on mfp as "breakfast, lunch, dinner, and supper" (plus a snack).
Basically I divide the majority of my calories over 4 meals instead of 3.
Dinner is eaten right when I get home from work, then supper about 3 hours later.
Psychologically, it helps to think of it as a balanced meal rather than late night snacking. I put all the food on one plate and eat it all at once, so the calories can't creep up on me. And I try to plan it out like an actual meal too- with healthy portions of fiber, protein, fat, & complex carbs.0 -
It is a habit. But, I find that when I start eating meals throughout the day that are protein and a carb balanced, I don't get cravings as much. This seems to be key for me and happens every time I start eating this way. I do however eat a protein fiber bar every night. The flavors are chocolate mint, cookies and cream, and peanut butter Caramel. Although it is a processed food it's still healthier and I feel like I'm eating a candy bar every night.0
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