How do you deal with hunger from exercising?
meg7117
Posts: 42 Member
Hey there!
So I'm big on running and will run anywhere from 20-35 miles a week. It's great for burning calories but I also get so hungry and tend to overeat. What do you guys do to curb hunger throughout the day when you exercise? Do you eat back your calories? I'd love to hear your suggestions!
So I'm big on running and will run anywhere from 20-35 miles a week. It's great for burning calories but I also get so hungry and tend to overeat. What do you guys do to curb hunger throughout the day when you exercise? Do you eat back your calories? I'd love to hear your suggestions!
0
Replies
-
Are you eating back any exercise calories at all? If your calorie goal comes from MFP, it's designed for you to eat at least some of those calories back. If you're running a lot (and you are), it's important to fuel that activity even while you are losing weight.2
-
If I'm hungry after exercise I eat back my exercise calories ( not all of them).0
-
If you got your goal from a TDEE calculator then it includes exercise, but if you got your goal from mfp it does not include exercise and you should be eating back a portion of those exercise calories. You need to fuel your workouts. I walk and usually eat back about 80% of my exercise calories or else I lose at a faster rate than expected. Most people say to start with 50% of the exercise calories to adjust for any overestimation. If you are running 20-35 miles a week and you are hungry then you need to eat more.2
-
Also make sure you are drinking enough water. Sometimes what is really hunger is actually thirst. If you are hungry, drink 1-2 glasses of water and wait 30-45 minutes. If you are still hungry, then eat a small snack. You don't want to eat back your exercise calories if you want to lose weight, but you also need to make sure you are eating enough (especially protein).1
-
I try to exercise within 30 minutes to an hour after a meal (usually breakfast), so the cravings aren't as likely to rear their head. I also have a small snack (usually fruit and a cheese stick) after exercising.
I usually eat back all my calories in excess of my 500 calorie deficit. I know many people on MFP are opposed to eating back calories, but I have a Fitbit, and its calorie burn estimate has proved to be fairly accurate over the last year. I feel comfortable eating back any excess calories listed on MFP.0 -
Protein shake!0
-
Since you are training towards another half marathon, I would highly suggest not being on a strict cut while you are training, and certainly not in the last few weeks before the race. I speak from experience--I ran my first half while cutting, and while my time wasn't horrible (sub-2 hours), I took nearly 15 minutes off when I ran my next while properly fueled. I try to only eat back about 50% of the calories I "earn" from running--this works well for me and helps me balance between tracking what I eat and not being overly obsessive about weighing my food. Try dividing your daily allotment over a few smaller meals and snacks over the course of the day, and make sure you're getting adequate protein. Drinking plenty of water, while not only helping you maintain hydration, will also help differentiate between emotional hunger and/or thirst and true hunger. Good luck!0
-
Eating more times per day helps a lot for me.1
-
My basic rule: If I'm TRULY hungry (not bored, upset, uncomfortable, etc), then I eat. To me hunger is my body's way of saying I need something, and I don't say no. I make good choices, and if I go over that day, I go over.
This strategy has helped me drop 12# and 4% BF in the past couple of months without ever being uncomfortable. To me allowing yourself to be hungry is not a sustainable technique.
Here's some of my choices:
Protein shake after every workout.
Carrots and Hummus (only 80 calories!).
Almonds.
Water (helps more than you think).
Greek yogurt and granola.
Good luck!2 -
Give yourself little to no deficit. I give myself 90 calories for every mile I run and it's worked well for me.0
-
Protein! When your starving or craving eat healthy protein and vegetables. If I go over my calories a day and I am still hungry at the end of the day I have protein in any form, by doing this I still lose weight.0
-
I eat back exercise calories. If I do very heavy exercise then I don't eat them all back that day as I don't get hungry enough, but I will probably eat them back over the next few days. I keep an eye on average net calories more than daily goals.
Eating at a deficit AND doing heavy exercise without eating it back will give a deficit which is too large in my opinion. I'm aiming to lose weight slowly and sustainably, and I'm not going to starve myself if there's no need to.0 -
I always have pre and post workout snacks that include both carb & protein.0
-
I eat back all my exercise calories. Earlier in the year when my marathon training ramped up I went up to maintenance, because I found I couldn't do the distances I needed to on a deficit. I usually have half a pint of semi skimmed milk after a long run, and keep cashews in my work drawer for the afternoons after I run in the week, I found I was getting a bit dragonish when I got home if I hadn't had a proper snack...2
-
singletrackmtbr wrote: »My basic rule: If I'm TRULY hungry (not bored, upset, uncomfortable, etc), then I eat. To me hunger is my body's way of saying I need something, and I don't say no. I make good choices, and if I go over that day, I go over.
Every bit of this.
I've stopped counting my calories a long time ago and am trying to be in maintenance for the summer (because a deficit isn't good for my endurance cardio goals or for building muscles) so now I go by hunger more than calorie counts.
When I do a hard exercise I'll have a protein/fat/carb smoothie afterwards. I use raspberries, milk or half and half, protein powder, and other good stuff.1 -
I mix two heaped table spoons of Food Grade DE with a pint of water and chug it follwed by a small glass of plain water as it leaves your mouth chalky. It kills my appetite and gives me energy and it doesn't contain any calories or nasties just pure minerals.0
-
I do similar mileage. If I can have a substantial snack or meal after a run, that helps keep me from getting too hungry. I have to stay ahead of the hunger.0
-
I eat.0
-
Preparation of food prior to training would help you immensely. Leave it ready to eat soon as you get home. Drink water to hold you over till you get back home to eat.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions