I am SOO hungry all the time.
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mou_254
Posts: 153 Member
I am 5'4'' and weigh 230lbs, female.
I eat 1500-1600 calories everyday; have been taking 10,000 steps almost daily for the last 2 weeks. The thing is, I feel so hungry all the time. I do eat fruits and veggies as much as I can. I also have a thing with sugar addiction; I quit for about 15 days,and Incorporated it back 10 days ago, and I am still struggling with cravings of sugar, especially after meals.
Please advise.
I eat 1500-1600 calories everyday; have been taking 10,000 steps almost daily for the last 2 weeks. The thing is, I feel so hungry all the time. I do eat fruits and veggies as much as I can. I also have a thing with sugar addiction; I quit for about 15 days,and Incorporated it back 10 days ago, and I am still struggling with cravings of sugar, especially after meals.
Please advise.
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Replies
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How big is your daily deficit at your current calorie intake?0
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So, my maintenance is about 2150 cals, and estimating 100 cals burnt for every 2k steps, that would put me in a deficit of about 1000 cals. (If I take 10k steps everyday, but my weekly average is 60k I think).1
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I do eat fruits and veggies as much as I can.
Are you also eating meat, fish, eggs, dairy, (whole) grains and other starches, beans, nuts and seeds, butter and oils?4 -
If you don't eat enough carbs, you will always be hungry. I know so many people on low carb diets, but then they binge eat. Try to eat healthy sweets like dates or peaches in a cup, even if you feel you are overeating healthy sweets it is better than a cupcake or candy bar. Try eating popcorn, it takes a while to eat a small bag. And don't forget to drink water. Also try eating gum after you eat, sometimes that will help when you feel like eating more even though you are full.0
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I'm also 5'4" and your weight is just shy of my starting weight, but I'm older. I'm eating 1200 calories.
These are things that worked for me...
Carb/protein/fat with every meal
Drink water I try for 48oz
Get 7-8 hrs of sleep at night (less increases hunger hormone which in turn makes you hungrier)
I don't normally eat my exercise calories back but I don't walk that much. You may want to eat 50-75% of your calories back.
Hope this helps!
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That can't be your maintenance. That's less than my maintenance at sedentary and I am 158 pounds and you are moderately active. You're not eating enough.
I'd eat more but also look at your macros. I'd bet dollars to donuts that you need more fat and protein.
Eta: sorry. I don't know what happened there. Somewhere between all the comments I got your numbers mixed up. I do still think your maintenance estimation might be a little low though.
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If you struggle with eating too many sweets you should try to cut them out of your diet completely. That way you eventually won't get crazy cravings for sweets. If anything eat some fruit instead.1
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If you don't eat enough carbs, you will always be hungry.
Some people find that carbohydrates promote satiety, others find they don't make much of an impact or they even make them hungrier. I love carbohydrates and eat a lot of them, but if I eat some fruit (especially dried fruit) by itself, it just unleashes my hunger.
If I had to choose between overeating dates or having a controlled portion of dark chocolate (which I find very satisfying), I would choose the dark chocolate every single time. Why? Because maintaining a calorie balance is a key to maintaining weight loss (overeating will result in weight gain) and I find the dark chocolate to be much more satisfying.
That isn't to say I won't enjoy dates or peaches as part of a larger meal or snack, but overeating is what led to my weight gain in the first place. Why would that be healthier for me than a reasonable portion of candy or cake?
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I like snacks as well, it is OK to put something you crave back into your diet to help with the urge. I like potato chips, I eat snack sized baked Lays chips maybe once every 1-2 weeks and it keeps me from getting crazy urges and binge eating.
Also another tip a friend recommended was Metamucil. It seems odd, and is commonly seen as a laxative but I have been using it for a few weeks now and the fibre helps me to feel full longer. I drink one in the morning, and one before dinner and it helps me keep my portions and snacking in check.
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I think where I struggle the most is with eating fats; I am scared of them for no good reason.
Can anybody please suggest some quick, low calorie snacks? I feel especially hungry at office between 5-6pm, I think. I am 23, by the way.0 -
Also, most of what I eat count as carbs, I think. And so far, they are not helping that much with satiety.0
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janejellyroll wrote: »If you don't eat enough carbs, you will always be hungry.
Some people find that carbohydrates promote satiety, others find they don't make much of an impact or they even make them hungrier. I love carbohydrates and eat a lot of them, but if I eat some fruit (especially dried fruit) by itself, it just unleashes my hunger.
If I had to choose between overeating dates or having a controlled portion of dark chocolate (which I find very satisfying), I would choose the dark chocolate every single time. Why? Because maintaining a calorie balance is a key to maintaining weight loss (overeating will result in weight gain) and I find the dark chocolate to be much more satisfying.
That isn't to say I won't enjoy dates or peaches as part of a larger meal or snack, but overeating is what led to my weight gain in the first place. Why would that be healthier for me than a reasonable portion of candy or cake?
Most people that are overweight cannot eat just a reasonable portion of candy or cake, that is why they are overweight. It is better to learn to eat healthier foods than put yourself in a situation where you end up eating more than a reasonable amount. This forum is for opinions, not to bash other people's opinions....
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2 pounds/week is pretty aggressive. It is the biggest deficit recommended. Some people can sustain that for a long time by balancing their macros, so no one can say out of hand "your deficit is too big." But a too big deficit will result in hunger. That is the most likely cause if your hunger persists.
You can:
1) back off to a 500 cal daily deficit for several weeks to see if that is more sustainable for you
2) start experimenting with macros (e.g. more fat & protein, fiber, too) to see what keeps you full longest
3) wait it out. You're only 2 weeks in, and often people are hungry in the beginning & their perception of hunger does change.
Good luck!2 -
janejellyroll wrote: »If you don't eat enough carbs, you will always be hungry.
Some people find that carbohydrates promote satiety, others find they don't make much of an impact or they even make them hungrier. I love carbohydrates and eat a lot of them, but if I eat some fruit (especially dried fruit) by itself, it just unleashes my hunger.
If I had to choose between overeating dates or having a controlled portion of dark chocolate (which I find very satisfying), I would choose the dark chocolate every single time. Why? Because maintaining a calorie balance is a key to maintaining weight loss (overeating will result in weight gain) and I find the dark chocolate to be much more satisfying.
That isn't to say I won't enjoy dates or peaches as part of a larger meal or snack, but overeating is what led to my weight gain in the first place. Why would that be healthier for me than a reasonable portion of candy or cake?
Most people that are overweight cannot eat just a reasonable portion of candy or cake, that is why they are overweight. It is better to learn to eat healthier foods than put yourself in a situation where you end up eating more than a reasonable amount. This forum is for opinions, not to bash other people's opinions....
I'm not bashing your opinion, I'm providing my opinion too (as well as my personal experience).
Eating 500 calories of dates isn't going to produce better results than eating 500 calories of cake. If portion control is an issue for someone, that's the issue that needs to be addressed.
I can't speak for everyone, but I was an overweight person who found it very easy to control my portions once I gained a better understanding of what foods helped me feel satiated. OP may be like me, she may not. But it's something to consider instead of overeating dates or peaches since overeating is, by its very definition, going to result in weight gain.
I wasn't overweight because I overate candy or cake. I was overweight because I consumed more calories than I could burn. I consumed more calories of all types of food, many of them carbohydrates. That includes lots of fruit.
I'm glad you found a method that works for you, but a blanket statement like "If you don't eat enough carbs, you'll always be hungry" just isn't true for everyone (some people feel fuller with fat, some with protein). And advising people to overeat is always going to be counterproductive for weight loss *which is OP's goal*.11 -
I think where I struggle the most is with eating fats; I am scared of them for no good reason.
If your meals tend to be low fat and you struggle to get enough fat, google "fat bombs." They are sugarless flourless treats (made with nuts, nut flours, artificial sweeteners, butter, etc). And yum-mmy.
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Actually 2lbs/week gave me 1200 calories, and 1.5 gave me 1460 or thereabouts, so I manually changed the calories to 1500. Have been doing this for about 5 weeks, it's just that being hungry makes me cranky. Thank you for your advice. I shall try more protein,I guess. I hit my fibre goal almost daily1
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I think where I struggle the most is with eating fats; I am scared of them for no good reason.
Can anybody please suggest some quick, low calorie snacks? I feel especially hungry at office between 5-6pm, I think. I am 23, by the way.
I find fat to be incredibly satiating. I am always feeling hungry when I don't get enough.
Your body actually needs a certain amount of fat. It's nothing to be scared of. They're calorie-dense so you want to make sure you're accurately measuring and logging them, but fat can be one of your best friends when trying to lose weight.4 -
I would up your protein, protein makes you fuller for longer. I love snacks and have a sweet tooth so make sure I have calories for a mid morning protein bar (pretty much a chocolate bar, I'm not saying it's healthy), mid afternoon maybe a small chocolate (100cals) or raspberries, and after dinner I allow myself a 150 cal sweet snack like skinny cow mint chocolate chip lolly. My other meals after well calorie controlled so it works.
Favourite snacks between 1 and 200 cals:
Melba toast and cheese spread
Peanut butter in yoghurt with cocoa powder
Skinny cow mint chocolate chip
Promax mint chocolate protein bar
Coconut collaborative mini chocolate pots
Ombar raw chocolate
Graze chocolate cherry tart
Graze fudge cookie
Ice lollys and diet Fanta are low calorie says to satisfy my sweet tooth.
Hope this helps0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »If you don't eat enough carbs, you will always be hungry.
Some people find that carbohydrates promote satiety, others find they don't make much of an impact or they even make them hungrier. I love carbohydrates and eat a lot of them, but if I eat some fruit (especially dried fruit) by itself, it just unleashes my hunger.
If I had to choose between overeating dates or having a controlled portion of dark chocolate (which I find very satisfying), I would choose the dark chocolate every single time. Why? Because maintaining a calorie balance is a key to maintaining weight loss (overeating will result in weight gain) and I find the dark chocolate to be much more satisfying.
That isn't to say I won't enjoy dates or peaches as part of a larger meal or snack, but overeating is what led to my weight gain in the first place. Why would that be healthier for me than a reasonable portion of candy or cake?
Most people that are overweight cannot eat just a reasonable portion of candy or cake, that is why they are overweight. It is better to learn to eat healthier foods than put yourself in a situation where you end up eating more than a reasonable amount. This forum is for opinions, not to bash other people's opinions....
Pretty sure she didn't bash your opinion...she asked you a question.4 -
Actually 2lbs/week gave me 1200 calories, and 1.5 gave me 1460 or thereabouts, so I manually changed the calories to 1500. Have been doing this for about 5 weeks, it's just that being hungry makes me cranky. Thank you for your advice. I shall try more protein,I guess. I hit my fibre goal almost daily
Good job on the fiber. If your deficit is 1000/day including your steps, that's 2 pounds per week. You might want to reassess your total daily energy expenditure (including steps & exercise) in addition to the deficit you can live with for the duration.0
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