midnight binge help
MelodyPond101
Posts: 5 Member
Hey all.
I'm in need of a way to either stop myself from binging in the middle of the night or looking for some low cal options to snacks.
If anyone has a strategy they used to minimise or stop the midnight binge please comment it in this thread. It may help others who are also in the same boat.
I'm in need of a way to either stop myself from binging in the middle of the night or looking for some low cal options to snacks.
If anyone has a strategy they used to minimise or stop the midnight binge please comment it in this thread. It may help others who are also in the same boat.
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Replies
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How much are you eating during the day?
And I think we need a bit more info to help: what is your current weight, goal weight and calorie deficit that you've chosen? How tall are you?2 -
Thanks yirara for answering. I'm sorry I didn't have the info needed, so here it is.
Right now I'm at 110kg and 5'5 and want to get down to a healthy weight, but I chose 65kg as a target.
My calorie target per day is around 1,500 which would be -0.75kg a week, but I keep going over because I can't seem to get rid of my night binging habit.
I've been good at eating around the 1,500 during the day recently but it's the nights that have let me down.
I think I just need some help with strategies on how to get myself to stop binging after dinner.0 -
I exercise at night time heavily right before so when I'm finished I'm completely exhausted and all I want to do is sleep. It works for me, but I'm not sure that would work for most people lol.1
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Are you still awake at midnight? Or waking up to eat?0
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Are you losing weight faster, slower, or on pace with what your calculated deficit (inclusive of the extra night-time calories) would lead you to expect? The 1500 is based on certain assumptions and I am checking to see if for you the estimates are close enough, or if you're perhaps creating a larger than intended deficit. If it looks like you are creating a larger than intended one, perhaps adjust in order to promote better adherence
How are you spreading your calories throughout the day?
While there exist a small number of studies that indicate that a "front loaded" day could produce marginally better results for some people, ultimately, successfully controlling calories is the ONLY way to produce results for everyone. So adherence is way more important than a small relative advantage.
I've personally found significantly more success by back loading my calories. No, I don't intermittent fast, like many do, I found that trying to do so increased the likelihood of me over-eating and I didn't find it very balanced for me. But I definitely eat the majority of my calories towards bedtime. (if you have digestive issues make sure to leave enough time).
When cutting calories I found that a number of higher volume / lower calorie items was also helpful. Low cal jello, and low cal refrigerated jello puddings as well as 0% yogurt in various combinations including with cereal or fruit were (and the yogurt and puddings remain to this day) my "go-to's" at night. Other interesting snacks: low fat/cal popcorn, egg/egg white combo seasoned, nuked, and served on slaw mix / other salad, or just a wasa, can of tuna on salad, etc. Even things that will totally mess with your water retention the next day: e.g. soup using stock cube and some veg such as onion or frozen... etc etc2 -
There's no silver bullet for this problem. If there was, we'd all be thin But generally, I think nighttime binging is usually a sign of not getting:
- enough calories
- enough treats - you're in a "deny during the day, indulge at night" cycle.
[\]
You have to remove the "deny" part to address the "indulge" part. Slow down that weight loss goal for a few weeks and up the calories. I agree with @PAV8888 that back-loading might work - try back-loading the extra cals you give yourself for a few weeks. As importantly, make sure some of those cals are going to things you love. So for instance, are you binging on chocolate at night after denying it to yourself all day? Or maybe it's something else. Try to work in some of whatever you're binging at night, into your caloric day, just in reasonable quantities.
Ultimately, Intermittent Fasting could solve the problem, and that is how I finally did it - being a lifetime night binger and almost out of hope until I started IF, wherein the problem got solved - but I don't think you need to go there just yet. Try getting some more food, and include your favorite snacky things in your cals, and see if it helps.
PS I am a huge fan of popcorn for a late night binge replacement. I keep a few bags of 150 cal per 28 gram popcorn around at all times, baggied into precise 28 gram portions, and I allow myself ONE bag when I'm just feeling overwhelmedly like I absolutely must have a late night snack. It's satisfying enough ... but without containing the seeds of further diet destruction, like with m&ms or cookies, where you just keep going until they're all gone.
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I am a midnight snacker too, I also can’t sleep if I feel hungry, so I’ve had to adjust a few things to accommodate my snacks at night. First I set a max calorie goal of 300 for these snacks and they get added to the following day. I have found that something with a little fat helps me sleep better and not crave more. Anything with peanut butter or almond butter is good. I especially like the nut butter filled cliff bars, they are 230 calories, but hit the spot and I sleep great after eating one. Greek yogurt is also good, and chocolate covered almonds. I weigh and measure everything to make sure I am accurate in my logging and I adjust my calories the following g day to account for it. Over time I have been able to cut back on the number of nights I get up to get a snack by taking a few minutes to determine if I really am hungry, or if it’s just out of habit I am reaching for food. When I truly am hungry I eat but a lot of times it’s just a que that I’ve created for myself to snack when I wake up at night. I am working on training my brain for new ques.5
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If you are not hungry you might want to try deep nose breathing to get to sleep. Works for me - I fall asleep within seconds but wake up several times throughout the night. Here are few different techniques:
https://www.healthline.com/health/breathing-exercises-for-sleep
If you find yourself hungry - have a bowl of oatmeal an hour before bed. Dark tart cherry juice works too. There are other food products that have natural occurring melatonin. There are other foods too.
Oatmeal makes me sleep like a baby for sure...1 -
Thank you all for the advice and I'll try a few of these strategies/replacement snacks and find my sweet spot.1
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my tip would be go to bed before the snacking time comes!
Being tired makes you more hungry.4
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