Eating Breakfast
seabs88
Posts: 11 Member
I'm curious - I've heard that you should eat breakfast in order to lose weight and I've also heard about intermittent fasting. I personally do not like to eat breakfast. Does anyone have an opinion or personal experience on whether eating breakfast is a good idea for weight loss? TIA
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I also used to skip breakfast and preferred to have bigger lunches and dinners. I changed it up and have been eating a fiber-and-protein-rich breakfast almost every day for a few months. I can’t say that it’s a “should” or that it is better, but I will say that I feel really good and energized all day. Last week I skipped breakfast because I was going out for a big lunch, and I found myself kind of cranky and not feeling so great as noon approached.3
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It doesn't matter when you eat. What matters is total calories week to week. You'll lose the same amount of weight however you choose to manage the total calories, whether via IF, TRE, or whatever.9
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I do best losing weight when my schedule allows for two meals taken between 10AM and 6PM. If my work schedule makes for an early day, I will have coffee immediately upon waking to (TMI) facilitate morning matters. Often breakfast is provided at my workplace - but if I know my first meal opportunity will not happen until mid-day, I'll have a handful of nuts and/or a hard-boiled egg and maybe a medium sweet potato for a total of 250-350 calories. On work days, I feel a light breakfast is important to keep me mentally sharp and to stop myself from binging lunch.1
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I'm curious - I've heard that you should eat breakfast in order to lose weight and I've also heard about intermittent fasting. I personally do not like to eat breakfast. Does anyone have an opinion or personal experience on whether eating breakfast is a good idea for weight loss? TIA
Anecdotally, I eat something at 10, something light at around 1 and a light dinner at 6 with a glass of wine. That works out to about 1,700 a day which is my sweet spot for a pound a week of fatloss.
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I don't eat breakfast regularly. First meal is usually after 11:30am-12pm. But I also eat late into the night usually up to 11pm so I have carbs in my system come morning time.
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I fell into an intermittent fasting eating schedule just because I have to be at work by 7, and I just can't eat that early, and then my next opportunity to eat isn't until 12:15 at lunch. I finish dinner by 8 so I can go to bed. That makes a 16 hour fasting window. I just don't ever eat breakfast except on the rare occasion. So yes, it can work, and no, you don't need breakfast.3
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Intermittent Fasting sounds sexier than the Skipping Breakfast Diet17
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I eat breakfast when I am pregnant or nursing, but I have found that when I am not, I really don't miss breakfast if I wait to eat until later (I do still drink coffee with half and half in the mornings - that's not "pure" enough for some people, but total is under 50 calories).
I do find that I prefer a larger lunch or dinner; it is difficult to eat less then for whatever reason, even when eating breakfast, and I have to very carefully manage my calories then. Skipping breakfast and eating a larger lunch and dinner just seems to fit my inclinations for how I'd like to eat and I don't struggle as much to stay within my targets. I'm not a natural snacker or grazer either. I'm not an IF "believer" per se, but I think IF has a higher likelihood of success for people inclined like me, just because it fits our habits rather than trying to make us eat less more frequently.0 -
My n=1 personal experience is that I feel better when I eat breakfast,especially on work days ( weekends sometimes breakfast is so late it morphs into early lunch ( brunch )
I don't eat a big breakfast, usually a bowl of cereal or couple of pieces of toast but I do better eating that than having nothing
Totally individual and subjective though.3 -
Breakfast: Matcha latte tea/and little scrambled eggs with cheese and spinach.
There are days when I feel a little full, and I'll make matcha latte tea. And that's when my stomach growls a ton by 10:30-11 a.m.
I'm not saying breakfast is a pain to make, but it is. I'll try to slip a little protein in.1 -
tomcustombuilder wrote: »I'm curious - I've heard that you should eat breakfast in order to lose weight and I've also heard about intermittent fasting. I personally do not like to eat breakfast. Does anyone have an opinion or personal experience on whether eating breakfast is a good idea for weight loss? TIA
Anecdotally, I eat something at 10, something light at around 1 and a light dinner at 6 with a glass of wine. That works out to about 1,700 a day which is my sweet spot for a pound a week of fatloss.
Ditto.
I generally don't eat breakfast and consume an espresso then off to the gym 2 or 3 days a week. On those off days I might have a breakfast which is generally mostly protein and fat and specifically animal protein and fat because I'm at the moment switching from low carb to very low carb. My total calories right now in the two meals I normally consume if I don't have breakfast are around 3000 from checking the caloric values periodically but it could be 3500 some days, I just basically eat until I feel satiated and some days when I'm much more active I generally do eat a little more. I try as best I can to facilitate a fasting state of around 14-16 hours. Cheers0 -
If I eat a high protein breakfast I stay on my eating plan a lot easier.5
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I skip breakfast every day. Eating makes me insanely hungry. I’m not usually hungry in the morning. But if I eat, it will make me (again - INSANELY) hungry. When I eat, I just get hungrier and never get full. So I never eat breakfast. It would ruin my day!9
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stevebozz0804 wrote: »I skip breakfast every day. Eating makes me insanely hungry. I’m not usually hungry in the morning. But if I eat, it will make me (again - INSANELY) hungry. When I eat, I just get hungrier and never get full. So I never eat breakfast. It would ruin my day!
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It depends on what works best for you. Some can go without breakfast and do just fine, and others need to eat breakfast. Everyone's body is different, so you might have to try both ways to see what works best. For me, I do better with a high protein breakfast (smoothies, eggs, etc). I'm able to go until lunch without needing a snack. If I skip breakfast I start to feel shaky a few hours later...and I get moody...and then I tend to shove anything and everything in my mouth. So for me, having breakfast works.5
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stevebozz0804 wrote: »I skip breakfast every day. Eating makes me insanely hungry. I’m not usually hungry in the morning. But if I eat, it will make me (again - INSANELY) hungry. When I eat, I just get hungrier and never get full. So I never eat breakfast. It would ruin my day!
Sounds like me until I stopped eating anything high in carbs in the morning. An hour or two after eating I'd get almost unfunctionable with what I thought was hunger. I think it was carb cravings from blood sugar drop (likely caused by insulin resistance). Hunger and carb cravings feel very much alike except the cravings are much, much (even insanely) stronger!
I changed to eating low carb breakfast because skipping breakfast tended to make me overeat for lunch, which then made me lethargic for most of the afternoon. I'd still feel hungrier after eating lunch than before I ate.3 -
I can't do breakfast. It makes me hungry way too early in the day. Breafast is literally breaking the fast your body experiences during sleep. I start getting hungry around 10 or 11 AM, but my coffee has 125 calories, so I wait for lunch. I also can't quit eating after supper. I have an evening snack at night. It's the same calorie intake, just shifted to suit my body's natural cravings. I'd listen to my body over advice any day.3
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CICO is the key, but there are a ton of different ways to do it.
I used to skip breakfast and sometimes lunch because I was working. I wasn't doing IF, I just wasn't planning well. All it did for me was make me binge in the evenings.
Now I've found that a small protein bar on the way to work or at work, does a good job for me. Of course I'm the opposite of IF now, I eat small meals (100-150cals) every 3 hours or so and then a healthy larger dinner. For me the small snacks keep me from binging during the evenings. Planning to have healthy options available was a game changer for me.3 -
pridesabtch wrote: »CICO is the key, but there are a ton of different ways to do it.I used to skip breakfast and sometimes lunch because I was working. I wasn't doing IF, I just wasn't planning well. All it did for me was make me binge in the evenings.
Now I've found that a small protein bar on the way to work or at work, does a good job for me. Of course I'm the opposite of IF now, I eat small meals (100-150cals) every 3 hours or so and then a healthy larger dinner. For me the small snacks keep me from binging during the evenings. Planning to have healthy options available was a game changer for me.
It seems to work, since I went down from about 127 kg to about 65 kg.1 -
I have been following a 16:8 intermittent fasting schedule for three years. Like others said, CICO is the most important thing. I lost 100bs in two years and have been maintaining for over a year. Tracking calories and exercising are key, but IF is a great tool for me personally. I find it easier to manage hunger and track calories. That said, I love Sunday breakfast so I don't follow IF on Sundays.3
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I have been following a 16:8 intermittent fasting schedule for three years. Like others said, CICO is the most important thing. I lost 100bs in two years and have been maintaining for over a year. Tracking calories and exercising are key, but IF is a great tool for me personally. I find it easier to manage hunger and track calories. That said, I love Sunday breakfast so I don't follow IF on Sundays.
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The only way in which timing of when you eat may affect your weight loss is how the timing of when you eat keeps you full/affects you overeating.
Example: there is nothing inherent about eating breakfast that will help you lose weight. However; it can be correlated with eating less during the rest of the day. So, for example, it just so happens to be a common pattern that a person may skip breakfast and by later afternoon be ravenous and overeat.
Intermittent fasting is the same - it's not magic that makes you lose weight. It's just that people find a good groove where they eat their needed calories during a certain time and are not hungry the rest of the time.
You can eat 5 small meals a day, 3 meals a day, or one meal a day as long as you are getting the appropriate amount of calories and nutrition. Doesn't matter.
I personally don't eat breakfast on work days. I like to sleep as late as possible lol. I usually might have some sort of snack that I keep in my office (snack bars, protein bar, or I keep dried meat like sausages or jerkey, or nuts or something)....Or I might grab a couple hard boiled eggs or something.
I will then usually eat lunch and dinner....both larger caloric meals.
On weekends I also tend to only eat 2 meals --- a late breakfast (large caloric meal) and a later lunch (maybe ~2-3pm).....then maybe a snack after that --- all depending on my activity planned for the day.1 -
I'm curious - I've heard that you should eat breakfast in order to lose weight and I've also heard about intermittent fasting. I personally do not like to eat breakfast. Does anyone have an opinion or personal experience on whether eating breakfast is a good idea for weight loss? TIA
Whatever floats your boat. Losing weight is all about consuming fewer calories than your body expends. How you get there is up to you and what works best for you. For many, IF is a great tool to help control calories...I personally have had very mixed results.
Also, "breakfast is the most important meal of the day" comes from a marketing add campaign by Kellogg's in the 19th century to get people to eat their newly invented breakfast cereal. Personally, I love breakfast, especially weekend breakfast...but there's not really any right or wrong here.2 -
I think in terms of overall weight loss, if you’re in a calorie deficit you're going to make progress with weight loss. What matters is if your eating schedule is going to be sustainable long term and leave you feeling good.
For a really long time I almost never ate anything substantial for breakfast, because I never feel that hungry in the morning either. I'd just have coffee. And then every night I'd be absolutely ravenous after dinner, and overeat off plan. I could never figure out what was going on
I've been doing much better overall when I eat some breakfast with an emphasis on protein and a little fat. Mostly eggs and cottage cheese.0 -
As you can see from all the responses ... it kind of comes down to personal preferences/habits. ...3
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Eating breakfast was a disaster for me, weigh wise. Morning is the only time I’m not hungry. If I eat in the morning I’m starving all dang day. I eat about 1/4 of my calories at lunch time. And 3/4 at night. For me this is the only thing that works. Down 75 pounds since 2018 and have kept it off with only slight (5-6 pound) fluctuations.6
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Annie42019 wrote: »Eating breakfast was a disaster for me, weigh wise. Morning is the only time I’m not hungry. If I eat in the morning I’m starving all dang day. I eat about 1/4 of my calories at lunch time. And 3/4 at night. For me this is the only thing that works. Down 75 pounds since 2018 and have kept it off with only slight (5-6 pound) fluctuations.0
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So the best diet (intermittent fasting, keto, CICO, IIFYM etc) is statically.....Drum roll.....the one that you like the best. This has been proven in science journals time and time again. It is as simple as it if don't find it too hideous then you are more likely to stick to it and a diet stuck to is going to provide better results than one, that may be better on paper but you have given up after a week because it sucks!!
SOOO whether you eat breakfast or not is really down to whether you like eating breakfast and whether you feel better with it or not. If you are on MFP you are probably counting calories...so experiment. Keep in your kcal deficit and for one week have breakfast and see how you feel. One week don't and see how you feel. Then just do what makes you feel better.4 -
I like to eat breakfast. I usually have eggs or a protein shake. I eat around 7 a.m and have a mid morning snack at work and lunch isn't till 1. I can't skip it, I'd feel so hungry! If I eat a higher calorie breakfast, I feel like I have all day to burn those calories off.0
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Prior to weight loss journey I often skipped breakfast and only had coffee. I had energy so I didn’t think anything of it. But now that I switched to a rather regimented plan (Atkins 20) I have breakfast, lunch, and dinner and two planned snacks. I don’t think evening or morning calories are magical but I do notice that this approach requires me to plan ahead and overall be more mindful about what, where, when, and even how I eat. Now a morning breakfast that’s a bit more than grab and go feels like a nice way to start my day—a little pampering if you will.
Try it and see if it makes a difference for you. The longer I’m on this journey the more I realize that everyone’s path is different. It’s about figuring out what works for you.1
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