+1 Just the title of this thread gave me a good laugh. People need to learn discipline AND what a balanced diet is. I'd love to read this person's diet log. |
What an absolute crock. Some of you need serious help for eating disorders. |
"Fat" is an exaggeration for some. For me it's the difference between being a size 2 vs a size 4. Size 4 is when I have a regular running schedule. I would say I'm pretty disciplined and I scale most of my food. One study showed that "High intensity exercise transiently increases plasma ghrelin." One of the authors mentioned:
You can read more about it here. https://www.utsouthwestern.edu/newsroom/articles/year-2018/hunger-hormone-ghrelin.html |
No, it isn’t. It’s documented that high intensity cardio will have this exact effect on women ages 40+. She needs steady state cardio, not high intensity high heart rate cardio. |
You again. Can you please keep your crazy disorder out of here. |
| Running is terrible for your joints and heart. I would find a new form of exercise. |
One cup to 1.5 cups depending on how hungry you are. |
| I like my body SO much more since I switched from running to barre/Pilates and some walking. I maintain my weight much easier and it feels more gentle. I looked bulkier as a runner |
100%. Sitting on the couch with you potato chips is far healthier |
| OP here. Thanks for all of the suggestions. For clarification, I do eat fairly healthy (low but not no carb but the carbs are high quality - fruit or whole grains), tons of vegetables, lots of lean protein, healthy fat like salmon or avocado or nuts, very little processed or prepackaged food. I just eat too much of it, especially on days I run, and the 10 pounds of overweight isn’t enough to make me struggle with restricting since that would be very hard for me. I like the suggestion to run later in the day, since that way there’s less time to be hungry. |
Shut the f ck up. This trolling / stupidity is tiring. Grow the f ck up. |
Cite the studies or go away. It's well documented that increased running increases hunger in everyone. That doesn't mean it's bad for someone. |
Mature runner here - unless we are talking 1.5 hours or more faster than maybe 7:30/mile, running alone doesn’t really change my normal level of hunger. Everybody is different. As for OP, I train a lot. I train around regular meals mostly because otherwise it’s a pain in the ass. I eat four times a day and titrate somewhat based on activity level but on a long-ish day (like today) I don’t go out of my way to eat back ~2500 calories of output. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, pre-bed snack. I’ve been doing this for a long time, and when I’m not training and taking some time off, I’ve found I can just taper off the volume and it works out fine. My experience is that this is all more manageable the more you do it. Then again, everybody is different. |
| Would also agree with hydration. Lack of hydration definitely presents as hunger sometimes for some people. |
Does Pilates build muscle mass for you? |