Intermittent fasting!
LauraSrock18
Posts: 125 Member
I’ve been doing intermittent fasting since Sunday while remaining in a caloric deficit! So far I’m really enjoying it! It works great for my lifestyle & makes my relationship with food SO MUCH BETTER.
I feel like I’m leaning out but the scale isn’t moving much which is to be expected but I’m wondering how long it takes for your body to adjust to IF?!
I feel like I’m leaning out but the scale isn’t moving much which is to be expected but I’m wondering how long it takes for your body to adjust to IF?!
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Replies
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You body doesn't adjust, doesn't have to adjust, nothing to adjust to, it's just different meal schedules; maybe your bowel movements if you go more than once per day.14
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I feel like you might want to take a step back, a deep breath, and look at the bigger picture. But maybe I'm reading too much into your posts...
But to your question - your body doesn't really adjust to IF. It may need to adjust if there was a change in calories or to the types of food you are eat... but probably not to a simple change in eating schedule. I guess maybe a small adjustment would come if you had been eating all your cals by 2pm and are now eating all your cals after 4pm and weighing in first thing in the morning, but even that seems like a stretch to me.
Slow down. Be patient. Relax.11 -
You feel you are leaning out because you changed your eating pattern last Sunday?
Great enthusiasm but that's not realistic.
Your body doesn't need to adjust. You eat, you digest your food, you poop what you can't use.
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Glad to hear that it improves your relationship with food - it does have that effect on some people. IF works well for me in terms of satiety also. But the only thing that will "adjust" is maybe your hunger/satiety, your eating times, or your bathroom habits. Other than that, weight loss will still comes down to the number of calories you consume.8
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Your liver stores enough glycogen to keep your blood sugar even for at least 24 hours. Therefore you have adjusted. IF is not magic. I think it helps with maintaining the caloric deficit because you are limiting when you are eating. For me I'm very busy in the morning anyway and I don't get hungry until lunch. Then I'm not hungry again all day. However, you are losing weight because of a caloric deficit.3
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LauraSrock18 wrote: »I’ve been doing intermittent fasting since Sunday while remaining in a caloric deficit! So far I’m really enjoying it! It works great for my lifestyle & makes my relationship with food SO MUCH BETTER.
I feel like I’m leaning out but the scale isn’t moving much which is to be expected but I’m wondering how long it takes for your body to adjust to IF?!
You think that you're magically leaning out in five days?5 -
If you are talking about your hunger lessening in the morning time I have heard it takes 2 weeks for some people and I have heard for some people it never happens.
I don't remember ever actually choosing to skip breakfast. For me this is natural and has been for a very long time. I wish it were not so natural on the weekends but for me there are consequences to eating in the morning that are best avoided.0 -
I haven't eaten breakfast since I was in my teens. It seems like if I eat in the morning I feel hungry all day long and then end up eating way too much later. I'm a back once again because of the steriods I had to take for my lungs. Now that my lungs are better here I am with 35 xtra pounds...UGH! What I do know for sure is I have a 52 mile backpacking hike coming up on September 10th and I need to get this weight off before the hike. I haven't stepped on a scale since I started cutting back. It would just discourage me. Maybe tomorrow will be the big weigh in day. Right now want to think up a good nickname for my page here...1
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If you feel leaner than that is all that matters, rock on. I have been IF for several months now and keto for a year and a half prior. I may be in the minority here but I do think there is an adjustment period. I skip breakfast to allow for an overnight fast of 16-18 hours and initially it was tough some days, now it is super easy and I eat when I'm hungry instead of following a clock to know it is lunch or dinner.1
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collectingblues wrote: »LauraSrock18 wrote: »I’ve been doing intermittent fasting since Sunday while remaining in a caloric deficit! So far I’m really enjoying it! It works great for my lifestyle & makes my relationship with food SO MUCH BETTER.
I feel like I’m leaning out but the scale isn’t moving much which is to be expected but I’m wondering how long it takes for your body to adjust to IF?!
You think that you're magically leaning out in five days?
No but I think I’m less bloated & my digestion is much better, therefore feeling leaner.5 -
To clarify, I was referring to hunger in the mornings & the eating window feeling natural, for the adjustment. not a sudden drop in weight!1
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LauraSrock18 wrote: »To clarify, I was referring to hunger in the mornings & the eating window feeling natural, for the adjustment. not a sudden drop in weight!
I wouldn't force IF - it's something I'd do if it felt natural to do it. If you are forcing it, i think it could lead to overeating when you actually get to eat.2 -
livingleanlivingclean wrote: »LauraSrock18 wrote: »To clarify, I was referring to hunger in the mornings & the eating window feeling natural, for the adjustment. not a sudden drop in weight!
I wouldn't force IF - it's something I'd do if it felt natural to do it. If you are forcing it, i think it could lead to overeating when you actually get to eat.
^ This is a valid point worthy of consideration. I do IF because it does feel natural to me. I'm not particularly hungry in the morning and I'm very hungry in the evening, so it works for me to skip breakfast, have a decent lunch and a big dinner/dessert.
Experiment with what feels best to you in terms of satiety. Some people do best on multiple small meals spread throughout the day, some do better with 2-3 meals, some get along just fine on one meal a day. There's no wrong answer - whichever one fits your preferences the best is the one which will be most successful for you. Don't force yourself into an eating pattern you struggle with.4 -
I say this with all kindness,
I think you really, really need to reflect upon how you approach weightloss. You have posted around ten threads over the past two months. Ever since you posted about deciding to let go of your trainer and their calorie or meal guidance or whatever it was, you really seem to be bouncing around. I'm wondering if you have really read and considered the responses you've received in your other threads because it seems like if you had, you wouldn't still be posting the things you have as frequently as you have.
Looking through your diary, I think if you simply focused on logging better and eating a more varied diet, you would make progress. It seems like a lot of days you eat close to goal. However, it doesn't seem that you weigh your food. Weighing your food is not a necessity, but if you're not losing weight, you should tighten up your logging. In your case, weighing your food would probably be a good starting point.
I only mention varying your diet because I recall you posting about hunger. It seems you eat very few vegetables. Or if you do, you're not logging them and you should probably start doing so. Adding vegetables might help with hunger, due to volume and fiber. You also seem to eat a lot of snack-type foods, like chips and crackers. There's nothing wrong with that, but if you're struggling with hunger, those calories might be better spent on more nutrient dense foods.
Think about how far you could have come over the past two months if you had focused more on the basics instead of bouncing around being worried about carbs and IF'ing and keto (I think you had a post about that, if not, I apologize). Developing good habits now is more likely to lead to weight maintenance after the loss.
Also, I know you're getting married soon - two weeks or something? Maybe/it's likely that's been contributing to the stress you've been expressing about this whole process. At the end of the day, a marriage is about the two people who make a commitment to each other. I hope you're focusing on that rather than all the stuff that at the end of the day, is just one day.13
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