Should I eat breakfast?
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tanyanelson922 wrote: »You need to fuel your body and increase your metabolism, you cannot skip meals 3-5 small meals will keep you energized though out the day, and keep burning calories. Your stomach will growl and you will lose weight properly. Breakfast is a necessity. Egg-protein, nuts-protein, fruit or smoothie, sausage-protein, skip hashbrown, one bread-any way with jelly vs. butter/margarine. Very healthy for you. Some may add veggies and have omelet, and sausage, two egg, with veggies, Parmesan cheese and garlic, better choice of cheese. Tastes great less filling
There is absolutely 0 evidence for what you've stated there. Total myth. Meal timing has 0 effect on metabolism. It all about energy balance and calorie deficit for weight loss and meal timing is all about preference, performance and sustainability.8 -
lots of people skip breakfast, it's fine.0
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When I worked I got up early enough so I had time for breakfast. It was necessary for me to function until lunch. Now that I am retired i eat my breakfast (first meal) when I get hungry. Sometimes 9am, sometimes 11am. Sometimes not till noon or later. The only thing for sure, it is always eggs.1
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Almost everything I have read for the past several months encourage eating breakfast. For weight loss related or for other reasons. So I’m stumped somewhat about the overwhelming votes for no need for breakfast comments here.0
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Almost everything I have read for the past several months encourage eating breakfast. For weight loss related or for other reasons. So I’m stumped somewhat about the overwhelming votes for no need for breakfast comments here.
Unproven theories can be published over and over on the internet. You can also read how bad carbs are for you over and over again for months but it doesn't make that true either unless you have a medical issue.7 -
If I skip breakfast routinely, I eventually start getting really hungry before bed. I think it's because my body knows I won't be eating for awhile. So I usually eat something small for breakfast (eg an 80 calorie yogurt).
But everyone is different. If skipping breakfast works for you, then do it! There is no scientific research that definitively answers your question unfortunately. And even if there was, just because eating breakfast might be better for most people wouldn't necessarily mean it's better for you.1 -
I think breakfast cereal companies have gone a long way towards pushing this idea that breakfast (as in, food eaten soon after waking) is so important. I don’t have a “most important meal”—calories, and to some extent, filling protein, are what I focus on.1
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I think it's a personal option. Me? I have to eat within an hour of waking or I get nauseous. I'm one of those " fill the tank before you take a trip" kind of people. But for those that don't feel hungry, I'd say eat when you DO feel hunger creeping up on you. However, I wouldn't suggest not eating just to save calories for the rest of the day... as others have said, listen to your body! Whatever time you eat, your first meal of the day is "breakfast" because you're breaking your overnight fast.1
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Almost everything I have read for the past several months encourage eating breakfast. For weight loss related or for other reasons. So I’m stumped somewhat about the overwhelming votes for no need for breakfast comments here.
It's because people here are responding based on what has worked for them in real life, not stuff they read on the internet.
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If you aren't hungry, don't worry about skipping breakfast. Breakfast being touted as the "most important meal of the day" was a cold cereal marketing ploy. I usually only have coffee in the morning.0
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poisonesse wrote: »I think it's a personal option. Me? I have to eat within an hour of waking or I get nauseous. I'm one of those " fill the tank before you take a trip" kind of people. But for those that don't feel hungry, I'd say eat when you DO feel hunger creeping up on you. However, I wouldn't suggest not eating just to save calories for the rest of the day... as others have said, listen to your body! Whatever time you eat, your first meal of the day is "breakfast" because you're breaking your overnight fast.
I'm the same🙋0 -
I've never been able to eat breakfast. As a child, it made me physically sick. As an adult, I'd have to force myself. I just have coffee or tea and I'm fine until around 12 noon. I make up my calories at lunch and dinner. I exercise in the morning and have never had a problem. I think each person has to determine for themselves what is best for them and then just take what everyone else as to say about it with a grain of salt. People mean to be kind - they think if it works for them, it should work for everyone else.1
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I only eat breakfast sometimes on the weekends - never during the week. I used to get a lot of flack for it because "breakfast is the most important meal of the day" and "omgz it'll slow down your metabolism if you don't eat breakfast" but I'd rather save my calories for a good snack after dinner. And I've lost over 31lbs so far so it works for me!1
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Personal preference...2
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Almost everything I have read for the past several months encourage eating breakfast. For weight loss related or for other reasons. So I’m stumped somewhat about the overwhelming votes for no need for breakfast comments here.
@kcmcbee
And were these articles aimed at calorie counters / calorie aware people?
Or were they aimed at the general population who might, just might, eat less over the course of a day if they eat at a traditional breakfast time?
Context matters.
As does personal experience and choices made based on that experience.
If I wish to gain weight I know that eating breakfast is likely to help me achieve that.
Conversely if I wish to lose weight I know skipping breakfast personally is an easy way for me to achieve that with no negative consequences.
I also know if I'm cycling for many hours then a breakfast is useful.4 -
@sijomial
Here’s a light one from mfp blog just yesterday.
https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/10-most-popular-breakfast-recipes-of-2019/
Other ones on webmd etc. mostly all seem along the same line as this one.0 -
Here’s a light one from mfp blog just yesterday.
https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/10-most-popular-breakfast-recipes-of-2019/
Other ones on webmd etc. mostly all seem along the same line as this one.
What an awful article!
Sadly typical of MFP blogs.....
Yes eating boosts your metabolism - but of course eating means calories.
Gaining weight is a sure fire way to boost your metabolism!
Serious advice - whenever "metabolism boost" is mentioned in blogs or magazine articles but not explained or quantified put on your cynical reading glasses and raise one eyebrow!
What eating at "breakfast time" as opposed to other times of day doesn't do is boost your metabolism more if overall food intake is the same - it's the quantity of food, not the timing.
How does eating fibre or protein first thing in the morning boost your daily intake unless you eat more food over the course of a day?
Some of those recipes sound tasty and nutritious but that's from the food and not when it's eaten. Those calories count just the same whether you eat on waking or later in the day.
Eat this "special food" to help weight loss is missing the point entirely.4 -
Here’s a light one from mfp blog just yesterday.
https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/10-most-popular-breakfast-recipes-of-2019/
Other ones on webmd etc. mostly all seem along the same line as this one.
What an awful article!
Sadly typical of MFP blogs.....
Yes eating boosts your metabolism - but of course eating means calories.
Gaining weight is a sure fire way to boost your metabolism!
Serious advice - whenever "metabolism boost" is mentioned in blogs or magazine articles but not explained or quantified put on your cynical reading glasses and raise one eyebrow!
What eating at "breakfast time" as opposed to other times of day doesn't do is boost your metabolism more if overall food intake is the same - it's the quantity of food, not the timing.
How does eating fibre or protein first thing in the morning boost your daily intake unless you eat more food over the course of a day?
Some of those recipes sound tasty and nutritious but that's from the food and not when it's eaten. Those calories count just the same whether you eat on waking or later in the day.
Eat this "special food" to help weight loss is missing the point entirely.
Since the statement was this:Starting your morning with a well-balanced breakfast helps increase your fiber and protein intake, which can help boost metabolism and aid weight loss.
I suspect this is an example of over-exaggerating the impact of TEF, just as we often see sources dramatically overplay the effect of EPOC. 🙄
OP, carefully note the structure of the sentence I just quoted. It's not actually saying that breakfast boosts metabolism. It's saying that breakfast can help increase your fiber and protein intake, and that increasing fiber and protein intake can "boost metabolism and aid weight loss".
Protein requires slightly more energy to digest than other macros. There's some limited evidence that high fiber foods do the same. This is called "thermic effect of food", or TEF. Compared to your all-day calorie burn, or even to the inevitable errors we all make in estimating intake and activity, this is a very small effect. Chasing it for weight loss reasons is seriously majoring in the minors (though eating enough protein and fiber is worth doing for other reasons, of course).
The quoted statement (and the concept of TEF) are not counter to what people are saying in this thread: That eating breakfast is good if it helps your energy level, or helps avoid over-consuming calories later in the day; that breakfast is optional if it doesn't affect your energy level or appetite; and that breakfast may be a hindrance if it hampers your morning workout intensity or leads you to consume more all-day calories.
Moreover, it's just a casual statement as an intro to some breakfast recipes, not the well-considered thesis of that blog post.
I have no doubt that there are sources that will tell you straight out that eating breakfast is a vital metabolism-booster. There are sources that will tell you that the earth is flat, and that humans never landed on the moon.
Even if it were true that breakfast boosted metabolism (and there's poor evidence for it), the thing is, if eating breakfast somehow either causes you to eat more, or to burn fewer activity calories, that advantage could easily be wiped out as a practical matter.
For people like me, who stay semi-comatose until some nutrient intake happens, and who tend to snack more at night without a solid breakfast, breakfast definitely is an aid to weight loss, because we do more and eat less (fewer calories) with breakfast in the picture.2 -
@sijomial
Here’s another with slightly more info just today. I’m no expert but timing does seem to matter at least in practical application as well as how our bodies process food. At least from what I’ve been reading and listening to. I’ve become a fan of Dr. Greger on nutritionfacts.org. Lots of really interesting and factual stuff there including these topics.0 -
Here’s an intro:
https://nutritionfacts.org/video/time-restricted-eating-put-to-the-test/
And yes it may be that eating bfast may help with eating less during the rest of the day reducing overall calorie intake, so what’s wrong with that as a strategy? Just something to use if one wants. Not pushing bfast on anyone just adding some info I’ve come across on this.
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