Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may get attacked for this, but.....
I don't eat before noon, ever.
You won’t get attacked, but that’s hardly a small change. Intermittent fasting is a big change.
No it's not. Please. For most of your fasting window you're asleep - it's not hard at all. If you can't control yourself until noon (11am in my case), then I don't know what to say.
NP, but I'm an early riser by nature, and workout hard most mornings at 5:30/6am. I'm supposed to wait hours to eat because... why, exactly?
Anonymous wrote:I may get attacked for this, but.....
I don't eat before noon, ever.
Anonymous wrote:Invisalign - stops snacking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may get attacked for this, but.....
I don't eat before noon, ever.
You won’t get attacked, but that’s hardly a small change. Intermittent fasting is a big change.
No it's not. Please. For most of your fasting window you're asleep - it's not hard at all. If you can't control yourself until noon (11am in my case), then I don't know what to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gave up carbs pretty much, except what I need to get 30+ grams of fiber daily. No sugar. Very limited flour (only in low carb bread or tortillas). No rice, grains, bread, pasta, etc. Instead I eat 25+ grams of protein per meal and low carb veggies.
I also stopped eating breakfast, which I never really liked but ate as an example for my kids. Instead, I have large coffee with about 3/4 cup of protein milk. Eat a meal at noon, a high protein snack in the mid afternoon and dinner by 7 pm.
This completely stopped my binge eating. For me there was something about carb consumption that made me want to eat more carbs - I never felt satiated and I could pound a bag of cookies, chips, bread, cake or pasta.
It may sound like a big change, but is actually much easier for me this way.
No exercise. Pounds kind of melted off.
Agree with this - eating carbs (not just empty junk like crackers but also rice and pasta) makes me hungrier and I eat a ton. Limiting them is the only thing that works for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The other change was a mind change, from short term goal to long term lifestyle/ health change
this right here. You have to grieve your old lifestyle of not using food as an emotional crutch.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up carbs pretty much, except what I need to get 30+ grams of fiber daily. No sugar. Very limited flour (only in low carb bread or tortillas). No rice, grains, bread, pasta, etc. Instead I eat 25+ grams of protein per meal and low carb veggies.
I also stopped eating breakfast, which I never really liked but ate as an example for my kids. Instead, I have large coffee with about 3/4 cup of protein milk. Eat a meal at noon, a high protein snack in the mid afternoon and dinner by 7 pm.
This completely stopped my binge eating. For me there was something about carb consumption that made me want to eat more carbs - I never felt satiated and I could pound a bag of cookies, chips, bread, cake or pasta.
It may sound like a big change, but is actually much easier for me this way.
No exercise. Pounds kind of melted off.