Night eating/binging
tlw7
Posts: 41 Member
Anyone had success in stopping this cycle? I'm a former college athlete, lift 4x a week, and run 4x/week. That's not my issue at all...its food! Always has been. I've had a few times where I was able to stop but always fell back into it. Please share if you have been able to successfully overcome this.
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Replies
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I have the same struggle. I try to eat foods that are less calorie dense and more filling like popcorn or yogurt or veggies and hummus. Or drink some water or tea. Sometimes you just have to save calories for a square of chocolate. Just logging it keeps me more accountable and mindful of what I'm eating3
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If you like eating at night, eat less during the day so that your daily calories fit into your goal.4
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Doesn't happen to me all that often, but just last night I woke up craving something to eat and had 3 small cookies, against my better judgment. Oh well, I'll walk it off today.0
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It's not just eating at night..it's a binge-that walking won't take off the next day. You know if you binge. It's like nothing fills you up and you can't stop.0
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Try some very strong minty gum or some ginger - kind of goofs up your taste buds for a bit so things don't taste quite right0
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What do you binge on? Are there specific foods you can remove from the house and eat them only on occasion?
For example I don't bring a big bag of potato chips into the house only one single serving when I want chips with a sandwich.3 -
Can you determine the cause of the binge? Stress? Aniexty? Depression? Tired?0
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It's not just eating at night..it's a binge-that walking won't take off the next day. You know if you binge. It's like nothing fills you up and you can't stop.
It's a habit. I know believe me. Only way I have been able to stop it is to simply lay down a hard rule - no eating after a certain time - like 7 or 8. This has nothing to do with "fitting it into your daily calories". This is just an issue of plain ol' discipline. Write notes on the refrigerator, put up mirrors everywhere. If all else fails, GET OUT OF THE HOUSE. Walk. Go to the gym. Go to the mall. Eventually you'll break it.2 -
I've had this issue for at least 12 yrs now..I don't know the trigger. It has become an almost unable to break habit. Gum doesn't work. I don't keep 'bad' foods in my house but eating even too much of good foods isn't good for you. I eat great all day..then after dinner I just crave food-doesn't matter. I'd prefer ice cream or cake or something really good but I don't keep that in my house so I'll just grab anything. It's such a strong craving/pull.0
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I (HAD) an annoying notorious habit of binging on "Carrot Cake". My psyche was using logic in this fashion: A Carrot is a VEGETABLE so it must be good for you. #EpicFail. I do love carrot cake, it's my favorite "Comfort Food", it relaxes my nerves. My other vice is Lay's Ridged BBQ Potato Chips, a potato is a good carb, #Fail. I will murder a whole family size bag in one sitting if I am stressing over something. So I realized that I have "Food Triggers". I now buy Microwave Popcorn to replace the chips. I also buy Natures Valley "Bars" to replace the Carrot Cake. I don't allow my body to get away with "Dictating" to me when to eat. I will not allow myself a "Bowl" of ice cream. I take a tablespoon and "Rake across the top", no digging or scooping. I allow only enough to successfully get a tablespoon from one side of the container to the other (Straight Across). It's about discipline with me. I LOVE to eat and I am good at it but I have to train myself to not overeat.2
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It's not just eating at night..it's a binge-that walking won't take off the next day. You know if you binge. It's like nothing fills you up and you can't stop.
I know this all to well. I wish I had a solution to share with you. ☹ I suffer from this too but have learned a couple of my triggers - excess stress & PMS.
I lose ALL control & will even hide from my family in the garage & eat secretly. I will look in the mirror & ask why are you doing this to yourself with tears streaming down my face.
I've learned to develop a mantra to tell myself it will pass soon, remember the guilt and shame you will feel as soon as you eat that... it helps, some..i can go months without a binge.
Best of luck to you!4 -
I've had this issue for at least 12 yrs now..I don't know the trigger. It has become an almost unable to break habit. Gum doesn't work. I don't keep 'bad' foods in my house but eating even too much of good foods isn't good for you. I eat great all day..then after dinner I just crave food-doesn't matter. I'd prefer ice cream or cake or something really good but I don't keep that in my house so I'll just grab anything. It's such a strong craving/pull.
I've binged on celery until I vomited, I can relate to this.0 -
I can't see my snacks, they're in the freezer, in the pantry away from me and unseen. I also redirect. Last night I swore I was hungry, was thinking about bread with peanut butter, but I started reorganizing and cleaning, reading, etc. and eventually I went to bed. I'm not saying I'm 100% successful, but it definitely helps me stop most of the time.3
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I overcome it by fasting until 1pm so that I can eat 1/3 of my calories after dinner. Eat when you prefer to eat, just make it work with your macros.1
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Your story sounds just like mine ..... it actually just happened to me tonight. All of my hard work I did today was ruined from 7 pm- 10pm. Now I feel huge and I'm mad at myself1
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I am up all night watching movies and ESPN and I have to always be eating or drinking. I'm not a huge fan of celery but I have now ended up cutting up 3 -4 cups of it and sit down with a huge glass of water and a huge cup of coffee. When I was a little girl I used to dip it in peanut...now that I'm cutting calories I dip my little celery chunks into salsa or mustard. And it works awesome for me. Cuz I love eating a shitload of food...especially at night. You should at least try it!
I also do it throughout the day. Or air popped popcorn. And I just sit and eat for hours, because I can, fin when the calories are that low. Also, drinking a ton of propel helps me because its delicious and no calories..and it fills me up while I'm eating like a pig. Good luck!2 -
I used to if i was doing nothing but sat watching tv. I would just want to eat everything i could find
Now i redirect. I want allll the foods...... ill clean
Still want foods..... ill take a bath, read a book, get out the treadmill, phone a friend, leave the house just anything that keeps me occupied until it passed2 -
I always get cravings at night; it's when I get bored and just want to sit around and veg. Because of that, I only eat about 1/3 of my calories during the day. I keep my meals small (around 300-400 calories) so I can snack pretty much all evening. I tried to find foods that aren't super calorie-dense, like certain cereal or popcorn, so I can eat a lot of them without going over my limit. I also usually fit in a light workout in the evening, because any time spent exercising is time NOT spent eating ;-)
The other main thing I do to keep from over-indulging is just go to bed. I'm a bit of a night owl and I rarely fall asleep right away so forcing myself into bed can be tough, but I just try to suck it up. Try drinking some herbal tea or other non-caffeinated beverage, too - sometimes drinking liquids helps me curb my cravings.2 -
First, avoid temptation by not keeping super convenient high calorie snack foods around your house. If you have a habit of binging, then that bag of chips is the pantry is going to get eaten.
Second, keep lots of healthy convenient snack foods around. Eg, fruit, cottage cheese, deli slices, etc. I don't care how much you like to bing, eating 3 apples ain't easy!3 -
It's a habit for a lot of people to eat when they have downtime in the evening.
Sometimes setting hard rules like 'no eating after a certain time' or 'no eating while the TV is on' or 'only eating at the table when home' will work.
Not having calorie dense 'cravy' items around that are easy to grab quick and munch on helps (in my case, this means any lunch meat or cheese I might use when doing meal prep is otherwise kept in the freezer, and no snack food in the house).0 -
Try calling a friend when you want to binge. Sometimes loneliness triggers me. Or go to bed earlier?1
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Thanks for all the suggestions. It's just such a strong craving to eat-anything. I don't keep 'bad' foods in my house but that doesn't matter. It's the toughest struggle to get one full good day in. Then I can usually keep going..except I'd like for that to become habit bc I tend to fall bk off after a few days, couple of weeks, even made it a few months one time!1
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I've been eating in the middle of the night, I can do fine all day; I don't sleep soundly, often my dog needs to go out and wakes me so I'm rarely not up at least once a night.
I have always struggled with BED and other issues which make it more challenging. I'm taking vyvanse - it wears off by night so physical hunger is also part of it.
I've been regaining control lately and working hard on progressing. I think I am going to intentionally shift some calories/macros to night eating and prepackage appropriate servings. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.1 -
I'm a binge eater, too. I have a particular time of day that I'm weaker, too. It's not bedtime, but it is a daily time that I'm likely to eat when I don't want to. It's a mind game. I've had to analyze so much about what & why. It's different for everyone.
First we have to take a moment to consider if we are truly hungry. Binge eaters usually don't care about that little technicality. We'll eat so fast & so much so we won't think about whether we're hungry. First we have to slow down our actions & think about what we're doing. I've found bringing up MFP & log while I'm eating slows me down during snacking.
In time, I've noticed which snacks fill me up. Strangely, a glass of milk has satisfied my desire to snack multiple times.
Second, what if we aren't at all hungry? Knowing that doesn't curb the desire. We want what we want. This is going to be a longer fight. It takes a several weeks to break a habit. That becomes our goal. We have to will ourselves to the point where we break the habit of eating at bedtime, in front of the TV, at our computer, while cooking dinner...whatever the habit. Will power is the only answer to that...I think...2 -
I'm wondering how long it would take to break this habit. Because I've had a few times when I was successful and thought that I might actually be done with binging!
Anyways..last night was night 3 of not eating after dinner. Typically I'll still be hungry and eat a snack. I kept reminding myself that I wasn't hungry. Wish I'd see the scale move more in the direction I want!
I was pretty frustrated yesterday morning bc I saw a number on the scale I haven't seen since I was pregnant. Ugh. Hoping I can keep this up and get to where I'm proud of my body and my relationship with food.0 -
I'm wondering how long it would take to break this habit. Because I've had a few times when I was successful and thought that I might actually be done with binging!
Anyways..last night was night 3 of not eating after dinner. Typically I'll still be hungry and eat a snack. I kept reminding myself that I wasn't hungry. Wish I'd see the scale move more in the direction I want!
I was pretty frustrated yesterday morning bc I saw a number on the scale I haven't seen since I was pregnant. Ugh. Hoping I can keep this up and get to where I'm proud of my body and my relationship with food.
Have you considered speaking with a therapist about your issues?0 -
I have. And I'd like to but I have a hard time finding someone I think would be fitting. Not sure how to fit the right person. It seems like most therapist 'specialize' in everything. If you have any tips I'd be open.0
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