Eating Patterns - Morning vs Evening

- POSTED ON: Nov 25, 2015


This describes an ongoing problem for me. It appears to be true no matter when I eat, or what I eat. 

Whether I wake up hungry or full, I start out with motivation for various types of food restrictions, but no matter what pattern of eating I choose - even including a "moderation-no-diet" pattern - my motivation recedes throughout the day and almost entirely disappears by bedtime.

I am a "morning" person who is an early riser and my bedtime is normally early in the evening.  Over time, I've learned that no matter what eating pattern I work toward, entirely skipping my morning meal and having food at only lunch and dinnertime, results in an ongoing feeling of deprivation which makes that pattern unsustainable for me.

However, my personal eating experiments tell me that even many days of having food only at breakfast and lunch then having zero food until the following day, doesn't do much to change my own desire to eat food all day long.

Here in my days of retirement, each and every meal feels like an important event to me. Three meals a day appears to be the only pattern that would be even remotely possible for me to sustain.  I do well when eating very small meals with only tiny amounts of food.  If it were not for potential weight gain due to my body's ongoing requirement for less than 1000 calories daily, my personal preference would be to snack all day, having only a bite-or-two, here-or-there-
in-between-meals, plus only tiny amounts of food during a morning breakfast, a noon lunch, and an early evening dinner.  Unfortunately, even with ongoing computer tracking of every bite of food, it is extremely difficult to follow that type of eating pattern while keeping calories under an ongoing 1000 calorie daily total.

I continually experiment with various forms of intermittent fasting, but I can honestly say, even after all of these years of experimenting, ... for me personally .... none of them have become easier or more likeable.  I hate them all.  Yes, after 3 straight days of little or no food, physical hunger leaves, but...for me... there are still other unpleasant physical feelings, as well as ongoing unpleasant emotional feelings, that persist even after 6+ days.  And this is especially true about days of total water fasting, whether it's for only 1 day, for 3 days, or for longer than 3 days.  In fact, I hate total water fasting most of all. 

DietHobby is my personal blog.  My only agenda is to tell things as I see them at the time, and to Scrapbook diet information which I find personally interesting, helpful, or entertaining.  It's good that I'm retired, because it takes an immense amount of work for me to maintain my large weight-loss, and to keep my "reduced obese" body at, or near, a "normal" BMI.   At this point, my personal dieting hobby is taking more time and thought than an ongoing full-time job.


However,... here at almost 71 years old... I will continue on, doing this one-day-at-a-time for now... but maybe not for always. At my age, I'm not certain that my goal of sustaining a normal weight until my death is worth my on-going daily struggle.


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Existing Comments:

On Nov 27, 2015 kitty wrote:
Did you ever hear the statement: being fat is hard.....dieting is hard......maintaining weight loss is hard...... Pick "your" hard. This is my go to thought when I want to throw in the towel.


On Nov 27, 2015 Dr. Collins wrote:
             Hi kitty, yes... That has been one of my own sayings for many years. I've posted it here on DietHobby several times. One of these times was on July 20, 2011. http://www.diethobby.com/blog.php?ax=v&nid=249 ................................................................................................................. Being fat is hard; Losing weight is hard; Maintaining weight is hard; Choose your hard.


On May 03, 2016 oolala53 wrote:
When you eat more, if you ever do, do the unpleasant emotional feelings and unpleasant physical feelings go away? Mine were always still there. I think something else besides food is going to have to change in my life for those to decrease.


On May 04, 2016 Dr. Collins wrote:
             Hi oolala, It seems that ... for ME... "emotional eating" does tend to relieve the tension involved with unpleasant emotional and/or physical feelings. I'm fairly certain that a large part of that relief is simply a matter of distraction. I do agree with many of the basics of the 3 Principles concept, especially the fact that our experience is created by our Thoughts, and that our Feelings come from those Thoughts... AND that our Thoughts randomly flow through us. DietHobby's BLOG CATEGORIES section has a "3 Principles" section, ... I became interested due to Dr. Amy Johnson PhD,s writings and videos. You might want to read her brief free e-book (it's under BLOG CATEGORIES " Book Reviews", and if you find her concepts helpful, then you might like her new book. The Little Book of Big Change... (details under heading: RESOURCES-"Books & tools"

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