Reverse Diet
brittaut
Posts: 20 Member
Has anyone ever tried a reverse diet?
1
Replies
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yes2
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such as "teid"
?5 -
Any success with that?0
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Haha. From what I read about it, its basically eating a huge meal for breakfast, not necessarily breakfast menu items, and a smaller lunch and a very small dinner. Example:
Breakfast:
Chicken breast, boiled potato and steamed vegetables.
Lunch:
Tuna salad sandwich
Afternoon Snack:
Tofu berry smoothie
Dinner:
Shredded wheat with orange juice0 -
Haha. From what I read about it, its basically eating a huge meal for breakfast, not necessarily breakfast menu items, and a smaller lunch and a very small dinner. Example:
Breakfast:
Chicken breast, boiled potato and steamed vegetables.
Lunch:
Tuna salad sandwich
Afternoon Snack:
Tofu berry smoothie
Dinner:
Shredded wheat with orange juice
I've never seen that called a reverse diet.
What I've heard called a reverse diet is when you have been eating at a deficit and want to work your calories back up slowly in order to find (and hopefully maximize) your maintenance calorie level. You take your current daily calorie intake and add 100 calories and eat that new calorie level for a week or two. If you are still losing, add 100 more calories every week or two until you find your maintenance level.
As for your plan to eat most of your calories early in the day, that's not going to lead to any extra weight loss. Weight loss is about overall calorie deficit, not when you consume those calories.
If eating early leaves you more satiated overall, then go for it. Otherwise, experiment to find what works best for you.25 -
Look_Its_Kriss wrote: »No.. that is not a reverse diet.
Thats just eating calorie amounts in a larger to smaller order and in all honesty it does not matter what amount you eat at any time, its deficit.
If you like to eat more at night, eat a bigger meal then.. save calories for a snack, do whatever you want.
And correct me if i am wrong here MFP peeps but reverse dieting i believe is slowly increasing your calories by 100 or so every week or so until you reach maintenance.
And a diet break is when you eat at maintenance for a couple weeks and then go back to deficit.
You are correct.
OP you are describing "eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, dinner like a pauper."11 -
Yes, one of the articles I read did explain that part about increasing calorie intake. Im gonna try it, as Im not a fan of most traditional breakfast items. So Ive been known to skip it....but chicken for breakfast, that I can do. I typically dont eat enough to lose any weight. My body is used to being in starvation mode. I put myself on a 1200 calorie diet and that is hard to do sometimes. I was just curious about it mostly, wondering if anybody had any success on that diet. Thank you for your input.1
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"Reverse" diet? That's normal, x3 squares a day. "Reverse diet" instinctually leads me to assume eating in excess/you're going for weight gain.
I've tried eating my largest meal for breakfast and smallest for dinner. For several months. I saw no difference in weight loss. FYI.
The folks here on MFP helped set my head straight. CICO; meal order is irrelevant as long as your dinner is several hours before bedtime and you weigh yourself before dinner.0 -
Yes, one of the articles I read did explain that part about increasing calorie intake. Im gonna try it, as Im not a fan of most traditional breakfast items. So Ive been known to skip it....but chicken for breakfast, that I can do. I typically dont eat enough to lose any weight. My body is used to being in starvation mode. I put myself on a 1200 calorie diet and that is hard to do sometimes. I was just curious about it mostly, wondering if anybody had any success on that diet. Thank you for your input.
As for breakfast, you don't have to eat it if you don't want to eat it. People lose weight just fine with intermittent fasting, eating one meal a day, whatever timing works for them. The important part is the calorie deficit.9 -
Thank you. Im relatively new to dieting and how it works. Any help or advice is greatly appreciated.1
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metalmeow1 wrote: »as long as your dinner is several hours before bedtime and you weigh yourself before dinner.
You can eat right before you go to sleep as long as you don't have gastric issues. I eat right before bed and I lose just fine.
Many on MFP (including me) recommend weighing first thing in the morning after using the bathroom. That cuts out the variability of recent food/liquid intake.9 -
OP look up Layne Norton reverse dieting. He has blogs, a podcast and a service on his website ($9 to figure macros) for reverse dieting.
Hope that helps.2 -
Starvation mode as in the body storing food for fat. Thats how my nutritionist described it to me. Is that I wasnt eating enough or consuming enough calories to be able to lose weight the healthy way. But yes, calorie deficit is the key.3
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No. You are confused.
Reverse dieting is a means of getting your calories back up to maintenance slowly, without adding extra pounds if you have acquired adaptive thermogenesis after being in a prolonged or aggressive caloric deficit. Some think it can be used to go beyond what your TDEE should be but I'm not sure there is much scientific evidence of that. Or of reverse dieting in general.
You do not store fat by not eating enough..9 -
Starvation mode as in the body storing food for fat. Thats how my nutritionist described it to me. Is that I wasnt eating enough or consuming enough calories to be able to lose weight the healthy way. But yes, calorie deficit is the key.
People who have gastric surgery couldn't lose weight if starvation mode worked that way. Doctor-supervised VLCD's could not work.
Anyone can call themselves a nutritionist. Registered dietitians have degrees.14 -
Starvation mode as in the body storing food for fat. Thats how my nutritionist described it to me. Is that I wasnt eating enough or consuming enough calories to be able to lose weight the healthy way. But yes, calorie deficit is the key.
Bodies do not do that. Why would people who were truly starving be emaciated while people who were dieting and ate too little hold onto fat? Doesn't that seem illogical to you?11 -
Starvation mode as in the body storing food for fat. Thats how my nutritionist described it to me. Is that I wasnt eating enough or consuming enough calories to be able to lose weight the healthy way. But yes, calorie deficit is the key.
Fire your nutritionist. She's clueless, I'm afraid.
If you stop and think for a second - does being able to eat more *and* lose weight at the same time make any sense at all?6 -
One can also reverse diet in maintenance to increase ones maintenance calories.
ie: my maintenance calories, (I hit the trifecta of being petite, older, and quite sedentary when not exercising) are 1200. It worked fine for a while after hitting maintenance, but it gave little room for fun, so I started slowly increasing by 25 cals a day, every couple of weeks, until I got to 1375. That's where I started a slow gain so backed off to 1350.
Cheers, h.2 -
metalmeow1 wrote: »as long as your dinner is several hours before bedtime and you weigh yourself before dinner.
You can eat right before you go to sleep as long as you don't have gastric issues. I eat right before bed and I lose just fine.
Many on MFP (including me) recommend weighing first thing in the morning after using the bathroom. That cuts out the variability of recent food/liquid intake.
Yes and yes. I'm glad you lose just fine, so do I, but I lose faster doing what I'm doing than doing what you're doing.
It's more predictable to assume you can pee in the morning than poo (gross I know, but it's true and it's "fake weight." Some care, some don't. Personally I want accuracy when I weigh in.)
I didn't say you can't lose weight if you eat before bed. I'm saying not to because A.) My doctor tells me to eat dinner several hours before bed to promote healthy weight, B.) The body rests better while not having broken sleep or discomfort and C.) Your body operates better and feels better on a proper schedule with proper rest... Fact. What your shift is is irrelevant, schedule is very relevant.0
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