Curbing hunger at night
em_ador
Posts: 6 Member
Hi! Anyone have any tips on curbing hunger at night? or maybe healthy snack suggestions? I usually eat well during the day, then around 9-10:00 I become ravenous. I ruin my whole within this time, then I go to bed soon after and wake up the next morning feeling terrible. Any advice is appreciated! Feel free to add me!
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Replies
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I have the same problem! I drink alot of water and have some popcorn for a snack. Helps alot.0
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Here's something that has worked well for me. I DO NOT DRINK with my meals. The theory is that, if you drink with meals, the weight of the liquid pushes the food through your stomach and into your digestive tract, leaving just water in your stomach at the end of your meal. This passes quickly through your system, leaving your stomach empty soon after eating. If you don't drink, the food has more time to move through your system and therefore, you don't get the 'munchies' after a meal. Try it out and see what you think!
All the best!
Gwen0 -
If your hungry your metabolism will slow down and you need to eat! I drink a protein shake when Im hungry before bed.0
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I save some of my calories for that time of night. Once I get all of my water in if I am still hungry in the evening I have a piece of fruit or yogurt.0
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I have trouble around 7-9 pm so I try to drink a lot of water if not that is when I go for a walk or run or try to work out in our home gym... anything to get away from food! Most times it works... and then I can add the exercise to my diary! and I sleep better! Good luck! It takes 3 weeks to make it a habit though.. so keep trying!0
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I had the same problem, so now I skip breakfast and save those calories for evening. It really works for me as I found that when I did eat breakfast I was hungry all day long.0
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I used to eat a box of cheese its and wash it down with 5-6 beers...............now i just blast down 32 oz of water or so and go to bed.0
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If your hungry your metabolism will slow down and you need to eat! I drink a protein shake when Im hungry before bed.
I'm just wandering, do you know how long you can go without eating before your metabolism slows? A hint it's not in one day..0 -
Hi all! I too have had the same problem. The best thing is to plan ahead and make sure you aren't actually hungry at 9pm. Honestly, the best way to not eat that late is to get out of the habit of eating late. I've been told to pinch your fat in the places you want to loose it every time that nighttime binge happens. That helps, OR what helps me the most is at 9pm go brush your teeth. I promise you, out of habit, your body will not want food. If your body still wants food, don't give in. Have a nice glass of cold water by your side and let that be your 9pm snack.
If you must snack, try fruit, or popcorn w/o butter or salt etc. You can get 100 calorie packs. Those aren't bad for you.
Hope that helps!!0 -
How many cals are you eating daily and what are your macronutrients set to?0
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I do this, too. But I'll be frank. Binge eating is a mental thing more than anything else.
The likelihood that you're actually still hungry is probably inaccurate if you've eaten well throughout the day.
Times like that, I eat a spoon of peanut butter and send myself to bed. :P0 -
I had the same problem, so now I skip breakfast and save those calories for evening. It really works for me as I found that when I did eat breakfast I was hungry all day long.0
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How many cals are you eating daily and what are your macronutrients set to?0
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As someone said before, protein drinks with milk are my fix.0
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If you are that hungry you may consider drinking a cup of 1% milk just before bed so that you can go to sleep feeling satisfied. It usually works well for me.0
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I usually have a low-cal hot chocolate (under 50 cals per serve). Satisfies my sweet tooth and knocks the hunger pangs on the head0
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Regarding the OP:
I would suggest eating less during the day and save more calories for night time so that you can freely eat more at night and stay at the same end-of-day calorie/macro intake. If this still causes problems, I'd look at satiety on a per-meal basis and see if you can select foods that keep you full for longer periods of time.
Regarding skipping meals, you can go for a day or two without issues. Skipping breakfast is perfectly harmless metabolically speaking. The whole concept of eating frequently to stoke your metabolism has been debunked readily.
I wrote a detailed and referenced post on this, but I'll be damned if I can find it. LOL.0 -
Hi! Anyone have any tips on curbing hunger at night? or maybe healthy snack suggestions? I usually eat well during the day, then around 9-10:00 I become ravenous. I ruin my whole within this time, then I go to bed soon after and wake up the next morning feeling terrible. Any advice is appreciated! Feel free to add me!
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
I had the same problem, so now I skip breakfast and save those calories for evening. It really works for me as I found that when I did eat breakfast I was hungry all day long.
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Regarding the OP:
I would suggest eating less during the day and save more calories for night time so that you can freely eat more at night and stay at the same end-of-day calorie/macro intake. If this still causes problems, I'd look at satiety on a per-meal basis and see if you can select foods that keep you full for longer periods of time.
Regarding skipping meals, you can go for a day or two without issues. Skipping breakfast is perfectly harmless metabolically speaking. The whole concept of eating frequently to stoke your metabolism has been debunked readily.
I wrote a detailed and referenced post on this, but I'll be damned if I can find it. LOL.
If you say something enough it becomes true regardless of facts. "Eat more often to speed up your metabolism" or "don't skip breakfast or you'll not lose weight" etc. I'm so tired of seeing this constantly from people. I don't think it will ever be accepted since it goes against what all the "Experts" say...0 -
A tablespoon of healthy peanut butter or cream cheese on a stalk of celery is enough to help me.
Or, I drink a glass of milk.
I usually save some calories for night because it happens to me often.
If you are running low on calories - cucumbers are very low in calories and can be filling. Maybe try cucumbers
with some hummus.
Stay away from breads and sugary foods as they make you feel hungry.0 -
And if your exercising you should never skip breakfast.
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Regarding the OP:
I would suggest eating less during the day and save more calories for night time so that you can freely eat more at night and stay at the same end-of-day calorie/macro intake. If this still causes problems, I'd look at satiety on a per-meal basis and see if you can select foods that keep you full for longer periods of time.
Regarding skipping meals, you can go for a day or two without issues. Skipping breakfast is perfectly harmless metabolically speaking. The whole concept of eating frequently to stoke your metabolism has been debunked readily.
I wrote a detailed and referenced post on this, but I'll be damned if I can find it. LOL.
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Hi! Anyone have any tips on curbing hunger at night? or maybe healthy snack suggestions? I usually eat well during the day, then around 9-10:00 I become ravenous. I ruin my whole within this time, then I go to bed soon after and wake up the next morning feeling terrible. Any advice is appreciated! Feel free to add me!
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
yup. I'm looking at a -3 right now, just finishing dinner. (jimmy john's, ftw.)
but I'm headed to the gym in 4 or 5 hours, will knock off 400 or so calories. that means a nice 300-calorie snack at about 1 a.m. or so.0 -
And to the op, there's tons of good ideas on things to eat at nite. I got this one from a guy that lost like 150lbs. Eat sugar free jello at nite if your worried about going over your calories. It has almost zero calories and it's very filling.0
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And if your exercising you should never skip breakfast.
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
yeah, but look at you! you've burned through all your muscle!0 -
LoL0
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And if your exercising you should never skip breakfast.
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
yeah, but look at you! you've burned through all your muscle!
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
And if your exercising you should never skip breakfast.
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
yeah, but look at you! you've burned through all your muscle!
A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Since your handle is football related I will use the following article as an example, it includes the daily meal plan for the players of the NY. Jets and was implemented by the teams Nutritionist Dr. Tom Bilella C.C.N. (Dr. Tom Bilella is an expert in metabolic nutrition and a leading authority in exercise & nutrition, nutritional medicine, and training).
and is very detailed down to what and how his players eat (It varies depending on the individual player) and down to the minute of when they should eat . The arcticle is located on page 80 of Muscle & Fitness NFL Training Issue called """""""" Jets Fuel, New York Jets Nutrtionist Dr. Tom Bilella, C.C.N. Shows You How To Eat For Maximum Performance."""" """"""Breakfast first thing in the morning then the players eat a meal every 2-3 hours (depending on the player) throughout the day, even on day days they do not train, to keep the body from going into a catabolic state. While post-workouts is the anabolic phase, the "growth phase" spans from workout to workout., and the goal is to maintain an anabolic environment by getting frequent feedings during the day, Bilella says, "One of the big buzzwords in sports nutrition is nutrient timing- staying in an anabolic state, whether that be pre-exercise, during,after or at other times of the day."""""
Now I apologize but Im gonna have to go with the opinion of an actual Dr. that is also an expert in metabolic nutrition and a leading authority in exercise & nutrition, nutritional medicine, and training.
And by the way, in charge of the diets of each and every player on the NY. Jets (some of the best athletes in the world and worth millions of dollars) than the opinion of a PT. that just has an NFL team's name in his handle.0 -
I like to have a fiber one oats and chocolate bar around 7:30- 9:00 pm, and either a Edys fruit frozen bar or a piece of fruit with or after my dinner to satisfy my sweet tooth if its hollering at me.0
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