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Nutrition  (Expert Forum)
 | 
Chronic Hunger
Answered by
Renee Radenberg - Child Nutrition, nutrition
This forum is for questions and support regarding heart issues such as: Acne and food, Allergies to food, Balanced Menus, Diabetes, Eating Disorders, Healthy Snacks, Hypo and Hyperglycemia , Nutrition, Over-eating, Weight Loss.

Chronic Hunger

by Booster, Feb 27, 2008 01:43PM
Tags: hunger
I have lost a total of 150 lbs since July of 2005 on Weight Watchers.  While trying to lose the last 30 lbs, I began to develop dangerous eating habits including limiting my caloric intake to around 600 calories a day.  I ran 5 miles every day, 7 days a week.  I was starving myself.  But when I got to my goal weight, I then began binging uncontrolibly and sought therapy for exercise bulimia/anorexia.  I have since left Weight Watchers and am tying to heal my metoblism by listening to hunger cues: eating when I'm hungry and stopping when I am full.  The problem is that I am CONSTANTLY HUNGRY.  I feel hunger, in my stomach, all the time, even after I eat (about 10 min. later).  I have gained bacy 30 lbs of the 150 I lost.  Someone please tell me I am not crazy.  The binges have ceased. I still work out (mostly cardio) for 1-2 hrs, 5 days a week.

by Renee Radenberg, Feb 27, 2008 07:13PM
To: Booster
Try eating about 15 almonds or nuts about 20 minutes before your sit down for a meal. At the meal eat slowly, put down the fork between bits. Drink water between meals if you are hungry. See if that helps. Please state your weight and height so I can assess your nutritional status. Thank you.
Member Comments (4)

by Booster, Feb 28, 2008 09:42AM
To: Renee Radenberg
Thank you!

I am 5'9 and weight approx. 200 lbs.

I will try the nuts idea.  I drink water and diet soda all day long.  Usually about 32 oz. of diet Pepsi and 64 oz. of water a day.

Hope this helps.  Thanks again!

by sharonov, Feb 28, 2008 11:38AM
To: Booster
First of all I should identify the fact that I'm not a certified nutritionist but a 65-yr-old woman from a fat family who has had to watch herself forever in order not to get type 2 diabetes like my siblings and deceased parents--I should say, all but one of my siblings and he's Down Syndrome and lives in a facility where his food is prepared for him and monitored.  I'm 5'8 and 160 pounds, and I have to really work at keeping it there.   I've done it at various times with TOPS, Weight Watchers and Nutrisystem (no, I'm not a shill.)  All these programs give you suggestions, like using a smaller plate, not keeping junk in the house (I'm religious about that), etc. etc. etc.  I've heard them all.  To make matters worse, my husband is slender, though almost to my delight he's growing a pot!

Here's my take:  when you started starving yourself down to 600 calories, your body rebelled.  It wanted and needed more food.  It's like your body is making up for what it missed and more, almost like a teenager who's been kept too restricted and now she's at college and going nuts.  

The teen, and your body, need at least some discipline.  Maybe a return to a few weeks of Weight Watchers wouldn't be too bad, just to get back on track.  Eating the nuts (or a spoonful of peanut butter) a half hour before meals is an excellent suggestion.  Also, cut out the diet soda.  Diet soda can actually kick up your appetite.  What I've found helpful is to have a midmorning and midafternoon snack of either a cup of warm skim milk or lite vanilla soy with either a teaspoon of decaf or Postum (not as gross as it may sound after you sprinkle cinnamon and add a little artificual sweetener) or a non-fat yoghurt smoothie with frozen berries (no sugar).   At night I have a apple while I watch TV.  It's funny how after awhile your body starts to crave the apple!  And I used to crave a beer!

All those things help, but the bottom line is always control.   Nobody wants to admit it, but I've learned it though hard experience.  Sometimes I'm out of control and gain 5 or 10 pounds and believe me, it takes lots of will power to walk by the scores of delicious places to buy food in my neighborhood (I live in downtown Chicago and you should SEE what's walking distance from my house!)  But I want knees that don't hurt, the ability to go on a hike without huffing and puffing, and above all.............no diabetes.  You can do it!

by Renee Radenberg, Mar 01, 2008 07:13PM
To: Booster
It is great that you lost 150lbs and you were trying to lose more. You need to eat sufficient amount of calories for your body to maintain itself and it is recommend never going below 1200 calories. Below 1200 runs the risk of having malnutrition. From the weight you stated, you seem to need to loss more weight. I suggest you go back to Weight Watchers where you will have a support group and eat healthy. Set small weight goals (1/2lb – 1lb a week) and loss the weight slowly. The slower you loss the weight, easier it is to maintain the lost weight, and adapt to the new healthy life change. You can do it. You did it before with much success and you can do it again. Best of luck.
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