Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
For sure. It just goes to show that even a self-described success story has to engage in disordered behaviors to maintain. Which is totally consistent with the long term data for weight loss maintainers, of course.
Eating once a day is not disordered. Everyone is not the same. Nobody should eat when they aren’t hungry. That’s what is disordered.
Another factor is age - with perimenopause and menopause, for many women, digestion slows down essentially permanently, making it physically uncomfortable for many women to eat medium to large dinners. Beyond GI unpleasantness, that issue can also contribute to insomnia. It’s pretty evident that reframing OP’s decade-long success as an extremely slow-burning binge-eating disorder is what a poster or two has to do in order to salve their own frustration at never managing their own binge-eating, and now relying on semiglutides.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Yeah, your Ozempic is a better choice.
Respectfully, OP is describing a daily bingeing episode after spending all day able to “control” her food then losing that control after work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
For sure. It just goes to show that even a self-described success story has to engage in disordered behaviors to maintain. Which is totally consistent with the long term data for weight loss maintainers, of course.
Eating once a day is not disordered. Everyone is not the same. Nobody should eat when they aren’t hungry. That’s what is disordered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
For sure. It just goes to show that even a self-described success story has to engage in disordered behaviors to maintain. Which is totally consistent with the long term data for weight loss maintainers, of course.
Eating once a day is not disordered. Everyone is not the same. Nobody should eat when they aren’t hungry. That’s what is disordered.
Hmm. Binge eating once at night rather than fueling your body throughout the day is a big red flag for disordered eating. Paired with a history of disordered eating (overeating/obesity) that’s a strong indicator of an ongoing eating disorder. Of course anyone engaging in these behaviors should discuss it with a qualified eating disorder specialist and not self-diagnose.
OP eating 80% of her calories in the evening is not binge eating. If she's eating 80% of 1500 calories, that's a large meal, but only 1200 calories.
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
For sure. It just goes to show that even a self-described success story has to engage in disordered behaviors to maintain. Which is totally consistent with the long term data for weight loss maintainers, of course.
Eating once a day is not disordered. Everyone is not the same. Nobody should eat when they aren’t hungry. That’s what is disordered.
Hmm. Binge eating once at night rather than fueling your body throughout the day is a big red flag for disordered eating. Paired with a history of disordered eating (overeating/obesity) that’s a strong indicator of an ongoing eating disorder. Of course anyone engaging in these behaviors should discuss it with a qualified eating disorder specialist and not self-diagnose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
For sure. It just goes to show that even a self-described success story has to engage in disordered behaviors to maintain. Which is totally consistent with the long term data for weight loss maintainers, of course.
Eating once a day is not disordered. Everyone is not the same. Nobody should eat when they aren’t hungry. That’s what is disordered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
For sure. It just goes to show that even a self-described success story has to engage in disordered behaviors to maintain. Which is totally consistent with the long term data for weight loss maintainers, of course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Maybe? But I'm just not hungry early in the day, and I don't like going to sleep hungry. Different strokes for different folks! If I've maintained for a decade, then it clearly works well for me.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the slow process of losing weight- down from 255 to 240 - and I want to know when you stop thinking about food all the time? I hate that when I wasn’t trying to lose weight I never thought about it, but now I think about food at all times.
Anonymous wrote:What is your BMI?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you manage food chatter/hunger?
I'm a late-day eater/snacker. Because I work out of the house, it's easy for me to control food intake during the day. Once I get home, I honestly eat about 80% of my calories. It works for me. I guess it's almost a form of intermittent fasting?
It honestly sounds like a form of binge eating that you manage harm reduction for.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the slow process of losing weight- down from 255 to 240 - and I want to know when you stop thinking about food all the time? I hate that when I wasn’t trying to lose weight I never thought about it, but now I think about food at all times.