the "eating when you're not hungry" dilemma

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  • SHBoss1673
    SHBoss1673 Posts: 7,161 Member
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    bump, forgot about this one, but someone asked me about it so I'm bumping.
  • SHBoss1673
    SHBoss1673 Posts: 7,161 Member
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    I probably bumped this a little to early in the morning for most people. So here's a secondary bump.
  • runningneo122
    runningneo122 Posts: 6,962 Member
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    Bump
  • baisleac
    baisleac Posts: 2,019 Member
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    bump
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
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    Bump
  • tradkins12
    tradkins12 Posts: 20
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    Thanks for this info :)
  • GalaxyDuck
    GalaxyDuck Posts: 406 Member
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    Thanks for this great info! Good to see the science behind it :D
  • GalaxyDuck
    GalaxyDuck Posts: 406 Member
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    Bump!
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
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    This is in need of a bump as well..
  • SHBoss1673
    SHBoss1673 Posts: 7,161 Member
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    little bumpity bump.
  • sandislim
    sandislim Posts: 264
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    A lot of people on here post with a question similar to this:

    "I'm not hungry, it's after dinner, and I worked out, do I still need to eat the extra calories?"

    And there are almost always 2 very separate and distinct thoughts on this.


    I would like to clear up how it's geared to work if you follow MFP's recommendations explicitly.

    Just so we have a solid starting point, let’s assume that the person in question has done the goals wizard
    and put in the correct information and chosen an appropriate goal for weekly weight loss (not always true, but we have to start somewhere).

    With the above statement as a given, the two opinions are basically:

    1) Eat them, always.

    and

    2) If you're not hungry, don't eat or "Listen to your body."


    Before we go any further, I'd like to detail how the human body normally registers hunger and how that normal process can become distorted in people who are unhealthy.

    For people who are at a healthy weight, and have no metabolic conditions, and who eat generally healthy, hunger is a sign of energy need. When you need energy, your body sends out signals in the form of hormones that trigger the brain to say "feed me!” . The two main hormones affecting hunger levels are Ghrelin and Leptin. Ghrelin is a short term, "feed me now" hormone that governs our immediate desire for food, whereas Leptin is a longer term satiety response to feeding. These two hormones work in concert to each other. When healthy, the hormones are sent out at the correct times and in the correct amounts based on how much energy is needed.

    The first argument (Eat them, always)


    Studies done on these hormones suggest that in obese people, the central nervous system may become desensitized to the Leptin response (RE: Roles of Leptin and Ghrelin in the Loss of Body Weight Caused by a Low Fat, High Carbohydrate Diet" - The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 88(4):1577–1586 ).

    Research is unclear as yet as to the exact cause of the insensitivity to these hormones, but the outcome is the same, essentially in many obese people, hormones are incorrectly interpreted. This means that for those of you (myself included in the past) who aren't considered to be at a "normal" or "healthy" weight (I.E. obese) may not be receiving the correct signals about when to eat, when not to eat, and how much to eat to satiate your hunger levels.
    That means you should be relying on our higher brain function to figure out when to eat and when not to eat. Eventually, your body will correct the hormone insensitivity, but until that occurs, it's not accurate to say that your body knows when it needs energy.

    The second argument (eat when you are hungry).

    This works if you're generally healthy, but only to a degree. If weight loss has been an issue in your past, many times eating is a psychological "control" issue, and thus even if our body is physically sending out certain levels of hormones, your brain could be either masking those hormone levels and/or heightening the sensitivity to those levels subconsciously in order to satisfy some primal response to trauma in your life. At least until you can confirm that your body is correctly signaling for food, you should be very aware of when you feel hungry, and how much you are eating before you feel full.


    It boils down to this: You can't just "eat when you're hungry", you must make sure, first, that your body is correctly telling you when to eat and how much, and until you can confirm that, you should NOT trust those signals.


    The question then becomes: How do I eat those extra calories.
    It's actually not that difficult, but it takes practice. You must do some prep work ahead of time, if you know you're going to be exercising on a given day, estimate how much, and add extra calories throughout the day, don't try to stuff yourself at the end of the day, after a few weeks of this, it's not that difficult to do, but you do have to actively practice it or it won't work. Make it a habit, that's the easiest way to do it.

    Hope this helps people out there.

    -Banks

    Leptin can be interrupted by a number of things. Leptin is actually produced by fat cells - the more fat cells you have and the bigger they are the more leptin you have in your body. Leptin stops you from eating and helps you naturally exercise more. Problem is why doesn't leptin work in obese people when they have so much of it? Obese people can often be leptin resistant, and this is greatly liked to insulin resistance. Leptin signals can get blocked by too much triglycerides in the brain - which can be caused by an excess of fructose or hydrogenated oils.

    Leptin actually regulates metabolism more so than the thyroid. According to dr. byron richards, the best way to regulate leptin so it is seen by the body is to slow meals down so they last 20-30 mins - space meals out 4 hours between each meal and not eat less than 3-4 hours before bed. Exercise also helps with both insulin and leptin resistance.
  • SHBoss1673
    SHBoss1673 Posts: 7,161 Member
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    Leptin can be interrupted by a number of things. Leptin is actually produced by fat cells - the more fat cells you have and the bigger they are the more leptin you have in your body. Leptin stops you from eating and helps you naturally exercise more. Problem is why doesn't leptin work in obese people when they have so much of it? Obese people can often be leptin resistant, and this is greatly liked to insulin resistance. Leptin signals can get blocked by too much triglycerides in the brain - which can be caused by an excess of fructose or hydrogenated oils.

    Leptin actually regulates metabolism more so than the thyroid. According to dr. byron richards, the best way to regulate leptin so it is seen by the body is to slow meals down so they last 20-30 mins - space meals out 4 hours between each meal and not eat less than 3-4 hours before bed. Exercise also helps with both insulin and leptin resistance.

    for clarification, are you speaking of Byron J. Richards of Wellness Resources notoriety? I ask because you put Dr. in front of his name, and he's not a doctor, he's a nutritionist. IMHO it's an important distinction. I did Google dr. byron richards and found nothing about any doctor by that name, only the aforementioned person.
  • ladyhawk00
    ladyhawk00 Posts: 2,457 Member
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    Bump
  • Just1forMe
    Just1forMe Posts: 624 Member
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    Bumping this to refer back to :) Thanks!
  • jbro456
    jbro456 Posts: 15
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    bump
  • 1nsanity
    1nsanity Posts: 95 Member
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    beautiful
  • irenephillip824
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    bump
  • Angelabdc
    Angelabdc Posts: 4 Member
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    Thank you, an excellent post, very helpful
  • neverstray
    neverstray Posts: 3,845 Member
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    Thank you. I've always wonder if people trying to lose weight here really know when they are hungry or not, and therefore I always fall back to "just follow the plan".
  • Liasings
    Liasings Posts: 150 Member
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    This is great, very informative. Yesterday, I fell seriously short in eating enough calories. It was not intentional and didn't indicate a trend, but my husband wigged out anyway. I had to reassure him that I was not headed toward bulemia.

    I think the problem was that I did not snack (super busy at work) and I didn't log my lunch immediately (ditto). So when I logged lunch and dinner right before bed, I realized that I had a significant deficit. However, I was still ful from supper which was a lot of tomatoes and watermelon.