Anonymous wrote:I have done IF for a couple years. I started at 210 and am now at 160. A very muscular 160 but still, I'm not teeny tiny.
I generally eat between 12-7. I don't really edit what I eat in my window, I could likely lose the rest of the weight if I did! I generally have two meals and maybe an afternoon snack. I work out a lot so sometimes I get hungry. I don't drink often but if we're going out to dinner or I had a stressful day I'll have a glass of wine.
I know most people wouldn't consider this COMPLETE SUCCESS but I went from stage two obese to stable 'overweight' and that is a giant victory in my book! Shooting for attainable for the rest of my life! So basically probably depends on what your current weight and goal weight are to answer this question.
Agree that IF removes a LOT of bored eating and so all by itself can do wonders for someone with really awful eating habits. But if you're just trying to lose that last five pounds its unlikely to do all the work for you.
Anonymous wrote:In Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Greece - they basically practice IF without realizing it.
It's not that hard if you just listen to your body and stop eating when you're no longer hungry - which is different from stopping when you're "full". People in those countries (and others I didn't list) don't wake up and shove their faces full of pancakes, waffles, and Frappachinos. They have a small cup of coffee with whole milk and a small roll or croissant maybe. Lunch is their largest meal but even then it's not a grotesque amount of food. Then dinner is a small piece of protein and side salad with olive oil and salt. maybe only a bowl of soup. Then that's it! they never walk back into the kitchen till the next day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I heard about an alternative to IF. Instead of one 7-8 hour eating window, try 3 30-minute eating windows. Also known as breakfast, lunch, and dinner! Use that fasting mindset between meals. It has been proven that IF isn’t really effective. But people have had great success with it. Most likely because these people were diligent about not eating one morsel of food during that window and then stayed disciplined during their eating window. I was great about fasting, but I wasn’t successful with IF because I was not disciplined during my eating window. It was too easy to grab a few chips or crackers, a piece of candy, or a sugary drink without really giving it any thought. So, think of your between meal times as fasting times without a single morsel of food. I’m going to give it a try.
I’m going to try this. I did IF for awhile but haven’t been able to stick with it. I think my problem is snacks, not my meals. Thanks for this idea.
Anonymous wrote:I heard about an alternative to IF. Instead of one 7-8 hour eating window, try 3 30-minute eating windows. Also known as breakfast, lunch, and dinner! Use that fasting mindset between meals. It has been proven that IF isn’t really effective. But people have had great success with it. Most likely because these people were diligent about not eating one morsel of food during that window and then stayed disciplined during their eating window. I was great about fasting, but I wasn’t successful with IF because I was not disciplined during my eating window. It was too easy to grab a few chips or crackers, a piece of candy, or a sugary drink without really giving it any thought. So, think of your between meal times as fasting times without a single morsel of food. I’m going to give it a try.