Always always hungry

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kmartens9655
kmartens9655 Posts: 7 Member
edited November 2024 in Food and Nutrition
So I’ve been cutting out sugars and junk food for a few weeks now but only yesterday did I descover this app ... but ever since I’ve been eating healthy etc ( yesterday I slipped up a bit) I’m always hungry !! It’s driving me bananas any tips or advice ??

Replies

  • kimny72
    kimny72 Posts: 16,010 Member
    1. Make sure you are eating enough. How much total weight are you trying to lose, and what did you set up as your weekly rate of loss?
    2. Are you eating all your calories?
    3. Are you exercising? Are you eating back any of those calories?
    4. Are you hitting your protein, fat, and fiber goals?
  • kmartens9655
    kmartens9655 Posts: 7 Member
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    I maxed my protein my carbs and my fibre yesterday I’m on my feet about 8 hours in a day I drank about 2700 mls of water I ate about a total of 2220 calories over my goal of 2080 for the day I’m 245 and I want to get back down to 150 after having a baby I’m sick and tired of my belly I’m also breast feeding so I’m sure that’s a factor but like it doesn’t make sense to me why I’m still hungry ....
  • apullum
    apullum Posts: 4,838 Member
    What rate of loss did you set in your MFP goals? If it's not already set for 1 pound per week, try changing it to that. This should give you some extra calories to eat each day.
  • kmartens9655
    kmartens9655 Posts: 7 Member
    I did the recommended 1 lb per week :)
  • knotmel
    knotmel Posts: 80 Member
    edited June 2018
    I was hungry the entire time I was breastfeeding and I wasn’t nearly as active as it sounds like you are. Making breastmilk takes a lot of energy. You may have better luck setting your goal to maintain and eating back your exercise calories, and using the breastfeeding to create your deficit. I couldn’t make that work while I was still breastfeeding—too hungry—but it works for others. But since I have stopped breastfeeding, I don’t get nearly as hungry and have been able to maintain a deficit and start losing the baby weight. It may be worth waiting until your baby is weaned or eating some solid food before you go into full weightloss mode. (Fast weight loss wasn’t worth it to me if I had to be that hungry (and hangry), so it was TOTALLY worth the wait for me.) Good luck!
  • kmartens9655
    kmartens9655 Posts: 7 Member
    knotmel wrote: »
    I was hungry the entire time I was breastfeeding and I wasn’t nearly as active as it sounds like you are. Making breastmilk takes a lot of energy. You may have better luck setting your goal to maintain and eating back your exercise calories, and using the breastfeeding to create your deficit. I couldn’t make that work while I was still breastfeeding—too hungry—but it works for others. But since I have stopped breastfeeding, I don’t get nearly as hungry and have been able to maintain a deficit and start losing the baby weight. It may be worth waiting until your baby is weaned or eating some solid food before you go into full weightloss mode. (Fast weight loss wasn’t worth it to me if I had to be that hungry (and hangry), so it was TOTALLY worth the wait for me.) Good luck!



    Thanks !! Yea right now I’m more focusing on creating a solid foundation of healthy food habits I was hoping for it to help me lose weight while still breast feeding but if I can’t then so be it it’s just frustrating af
  • knotmel
    knotmel Posts: 80 Member
    It is sooooo frustrating! But I got through it by reminding myself it’s temporary (though it didn’t always feel like it, hahaha). I like your idea of using this time to set a healthy foundation! And you might want to see how you feel at what MFP thinks is maintenance. That should still be a deficit if you’re breastfeeding, so if you’re not as hungry you might be able to lose some as well. (Just don’t beat yourself up if you don’t. Breastfeeding hunger is for real!)
  • kimny72
    kimny72 Posts: 16,010 Member
    Yep, remember that breastfeeding burns calories, so it already creates a deficit for you. I've often seen it suggested here to eat at maintenance and let breastfeeding create your deficit, especially when you are exclusively (or mostly) breastfeeding.
  • neugebauer52
    neugebauer52 Posts: 1,120 Member
    Every person is different - but when I started to lose weight I also felt hungry, especially late at night. A piece of cheese, a boiled egg, some smoked salmon or just a mug of tea helped me. After a few months I learned not to be hungry - mainly by having some protein handy in the fridge.
  • kmartens9655
    kmartens9655 Posts: 7 Member
    Thanks so much guys !! I’ll definitely take the tips into consideration as well as adjusting my settings and see if that helps :)
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 37,236 Community Helper
    Another thing you can do is experiment with the timing of when you eat, to see if that helps: 3 meals, 2 meals, which meal(s) are biggest, snacks or not, that sort of thing. Review your food diary when you feel more hungry than normal, or stay satiated better than normal: Do you see any patterns? (Patterns could involve macronutrient combinations of meals/snacks, specific foods, timing of eating vs. exercise or breastfeeding, sleep adequacy, stress levels, etc.). If you can identify patterns, you can identify different remedial strategies to try.

    Satiation tends to be very individual, so it's hard to make specific recommendations. Personally, I need a solid breakfast with some protein, protein in each meal, and volume (like plenty of veggies) in at least one of my meals, for best satiation. But other people do better skipping breakfast, eating relatively more fats, getting complex carbs regularly, or who knows what-all other variations.

    Hope you find something that helps!
  • fb47
    fb47 Posts: 1,058 Member
    So I’ve been cutting out sugars and junk food for a few weeks now but only yesterday did I descover this app ... but ever since I’ve been eating healthy etc ( yesterday I slipped up a bit) I’m always hungry !! It’s driving me bananas any tips or advice ??
    Is your diet high in protein and fiber, those are two things that help big time in that area.
  • fb47
    fb47 Posts: 1,058 Member
    Nevermind, I just saw one of your replies
  • kmartens9655
    kmartens9655 Posts: 7 Member
    fb47 wrote: »
    Nevermind, I just saw one of your replies

    That’s okay it depends on the day too like today I didn’t have as much protein as I do when I’m at work I made sure add in an extra meal with chicken or meat of some kind to help with the energy I’m expending my idea is to just add more snacks into my day at work so more veggies and maybe the occasional granola bar and then be lenient on if I lose weight or not untill I’m done breast feeding it just sucks lol
  • IGbnat24
    IGbnat24 Posts: 520 Member
    Looking at your sample day, that is a LOT of carbs and very little fiber. Fiber fills you up so
    I’d focus more on fruits, vegetables, and beans as your main carb sources. I’d also drop at least 100g of the carbs in favor of another 30g of both fat and protein for more of a 33% split between the macros. Focus on the quality of your food and try to maximize the quantity you eat for the calories—think giant salads with tons of veggies, chicken, avocado, and a sprinkle of nuts or seeds or homemade veggie soups loaded with celery, carrots, cabbage, squash, etc. Foods that are filling, high in fiber, and mainly contain fresh ingredients.
  • FireOpalCO
    FireOpalCO Posts: 641 Member
    edited July 2018
    If you are breastfeeding could some of the desire to eat be driven by thirst? Your body is desperate for water when making milk and it knows that food contains water. If you're eating a lot of processed food, swap it out with fresh produce that contain a lot of water (cucumbers, oranges, etc).
  • MeteoraTitanium
    MeteoraTitanium Posts: 102 Member
    Cutting out junk is great. If you're breastfeeding I would carry on what you're doing and not worry too much about tracking. You need carbs and fats in your diet, keep it balanced and also hydrated
    I breastfed twins and craved sweet stuff, calcium rich foods and drank lots of fluids. Never gained an ounce.
  • Scottgriesser
    Scottgriesser Posts: 172 Member
    At 245 lbs 107g of protein is on the low end. Not wrong, just on the lower end. Protein is the most filling of all macros so I'd alter the macro breakdown to include a lot more protein and less carbs. The default MFP macros are pretty carb heavy.

    For reference, I'm about the same weight, male, and I take in about 140g protein per day on a lower calorie budget. Hungry, sure, but not to the point where I need to eat or someone is getting punched.

    Can't really comment on how much energy/how hungry gets from breastfeeding.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 37,236 Community Helper
    At 245 lbs 107g of protein is on the low end. Not wrong, just on the lower end. Protein is the most filling of all macros so I'd alter the macro breakdown to include a lot more protein and less carbs. The default MFP macros are pretty carb heavy.

    For reference, I'm about the same weight, male, and I take in about 140g protein per day on a lower calorie budget. Hungry, sure, but not to the point where I need to eat or someone is getting punched.

    Can't really comment on how much energy/how hungry gets from breastfeeding.

    I agree that protein is filling for me . . . but I understand satiation to be pretty individual. I've seen others here name protein, fats, fiber, volume, or complex carbs as what's most filling for them. (Shrug)

    In a nutritional sense (beyond satiation), protein intake is mainly about maintaining lean body mass. We don't need extra protein to maintain our fat mass. From a purely nutritional standpoint, we can estimate protein needs based on lean body mass, or, if we don't know LBM, by using a healthy goal weight as the basis with an adjusted multiplier.

    There are extreme differences of opinion about how much protein is nutritionally optimal. Ive seen lows as low as 0.4g per pound of LBM, and highs up to 1.2-1.5g. Personally, I shoot for 0.6-0.8g per pound of healthy goal weight, as an approximation for 0.8-1.0g per pound of LBM. For me, at 5'5", female, goal 120 pounds, I go for a minimum of 100g daily - nice round number. But I don't know whether more would be advisable when breastfeeding.
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