T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
303.1 | Hunger and cravings - any nutritional basis? | 16BITS::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Fri Jun 10 1988 12:28 | 16 |
| I'd like to know the answer to this one too. Sometimes I get a
craving for something like peanut butter or meat or something
else with protein and fat. I can eat all the dry popcorn I want,
all the carrots, all the rice, all the apples, and I am still hungry
for protein and fat. Carbs just won't do it. Other times, it's
starches I want - bread or rice or potatoes.
I've been generally doing well, but when the fat cravings come
on, it's very hard to ignore them. I have wondered if it's the
fact that my diet is so low fat, and my body is NEEDING the fat?
Or if that's just justification? I know that I didn't get any
fat/protein cravings after I went to a chinese restaurant 2 weeks
ago!
--Louise
|
303.2 | | ANGORA::ZARLENGA | Subway series in October, '88? | Fri Jun 10 1988 12:53 | 29 |
|
.0> say that I am never hungry, which brings me to my question. What
.0> really satisfies hunger? Is it nutrients? Is it calories? Is
.0> it fullness?
You have to identify the hunger first. There are at least 3 basic
kinds that I know of :
1. Hunger for flavor - usually caused by a bland diet, usually
satisfied with seasonings.
2. Hunger for substance - usually caused by an empty stomach,
usually satisfied with food of any kind.
3. Hunger for nutrient - usually caused by an ubalanaced diet,
usually satisfied by eating the particular nutrient you
are craving (BTW: fat is the most common craving).
If your hunger is the type in 3, you have 2 choices. Eat the
food you are craving, or try to ease the cravings by substituting
another food or exercise and waiting for the craving to pass.
Fat is the most common cause of "satiety" problems. And everyone's
threshold is different. Some people can go forever on 10% fat content,
some need 20% or more. Personally, when I go below 15-20% I have
problems with short, intense cravings for fatty foods.
-mike z
|
303.3 | another viewpoint... | JJM::ASBURY | | Mon Jun 13 1988 06:29 | 28 |
|
Rather than identify what type of hunger you are talking about,
I think it might be helpful to take one more step back and
identify exactly what is making you _want to eat_. Is it really
hunger? If so, then think about what Mike said in .2. Or is it
something else? I want to eat when I am bored, depressed, or
stressed. I want to eat to celebrate. I want to eat just because
it is "lunchtime" or "suppertime". There are numerous other
reasons why I _want to eat_ and not many of them involve actually
being hungry.
Most diet plans that I am familiar with tell you that you
should not be hungry. So, if "hunger" is really what you are
feeling, they say, then eat something. The trick here is to eat
the "right something".
If, however, you really stop and think before eating and discover
that you are really not hungry, you just want to eat...well,
sometimes it helps to deal with whatever emotion is causing that
feeling. Sometimes, too, doing something else will make that
urge to eat go away.
I hope this all makes sense. Take it for what it's worth...just
one more person's opinion.
-Amy.
|
303.4 | More rambling | CADSE::SPRIGGS | Darlene..Making Music ALL THE TIME! | Mon Jun 13 1988 11:02 | 13 |
| What I mean by 'hunger' is that disturbing feeling in your stomach
(usually accompanied by growling) when I haven't eaten for a while.
I guess I'm asking can I 'fool' my body by filling it up with low
calorie veggies and water? Will it tell me it's still hungry if
I don't have enough calories? Will I be hungry again sooner if
I don't have enough calories (eating an apple as opposed to a raisin
bagel)? I read once that calories don't count all that much, but
nutrients do. That is supposedly why a person can eat a whole bag
of chips (large bag) with dip and still feel hungry. Can I really
live off of powdered nutrition drinks?
Are these impossible questions to answer?
|
303.5 | | ANGORA::ZARLENGA | Subway series in October, '88? | Mon Jun 13 1988 15:04 | 46 |
|
.4> I guess I'm asking can I 'fool' my body by filling it up with low
.4> calorie veggies and water?
For a time, you can fool it. Once the bloodstream is depleted
of protein and fat, carbohydrates and water are not going to change
that. You can use this technique to postpone a meal, but never
to avoid one.
.4> Will it tell me it's still hungry if
.4> I don't have enough calories?
Possibly. Or you may just get a lazy feeling which is your
body trying to save calories.
.4> Will I be hungry again sooner if
.4> I don't have enough calories (eating an apple as opposed to a raisin
.4> bagel)?
Probably. It depends on whether or not the food you ate (bagel
vs apple) was what your body was in need of.
.4> I read once that calories don't count all that much, but
.4> nutrients do. That is supposedly why a person can eat a whole bag
.4> of chips (large bag) with dip and still feel hungry.
It depends on what you mean by "calories don't count all that
much". For weight loss/gain they are the dominant factor. For
satisfying an appetite, they might not be.
.4> Can I really
.4> live off of powdered nutrition drinks?
For a while, yes. But you'd be crazy to try. For example, one
of the beneficial side-effects of eating lots of vegetables is that
some of them cleanse the teeth while chewing. Plus, the digestion
process influences the amount of acid in the stomach. Without the
need for digestion, I'm not sure what would happen.
Couple that with the fact that science has not yet established
RDAs for almost all the trace minerals that are found naturally
in foods. So the pill that you can live off indefinitely is decades
away.
-mike z
|
303.6 | My $.02 | SRFSUP::TERASHITA | California Native | Tue Jun 14 1988 13:44 | 9 |
| I am allergic to milk and milk products, so I take calcium supplements.
I've noticed that I crave ice cream and/or frozen yogurt when I
cut back on calcium. When I get 400 mg. of calcium a day, the cravings
go away.
I'm not offering scientific evidence...just personal experience.
Lynn
|
303.7 | NOT HUNGRY BUT SUGAR-STARVED! | UBOHUB::DAVIES_A | Abby National | Mon Jun 20 1988 05:32 | 23 |
|
There seems to be a good debate going on in the medical establishment
about exactly what makes us hungry. One interesting theory says
that it's not what's in your tum (or not) that does it - it's what's
in your bloodstream. That is, when your blood sugar drops below
a certain point it trigger release of "hungry feeling" hormone(?).
Apparently this is why you can pig-out and have a full tum but still
"crave" more - the stuff you pigged out on was not the sort that
gives a steady stream of sugar but a spurt which quickly subsides
and leave you hungrier than ever.
Following on then.......the stuff which provides satiety value in
the long-term is fat and protein - carbohydrate and straight sugars
are "quick lifters". And around this is built the low-carbohydrate
theory of dieting, which is an eye-opener if you're used to counting
calories. There are quite a few of these diets - Dr. Atkins is a
famous one....
Good luck,
Abigail
|
303.8 | If your craving is for something thick & creamy.. | MARVIN::JUBB | | Fri Jun 24 1988 04:43 | 13 |
| If you have a craving for something creamy and satisfying, there
is a suggestion in the Stillman diet book, that may help.
He has a section about satisfying cravings, and the presence of
a solution for the above craving stuck in my mind, as it is where
I often fall down on diets!
I haven't had cause to try it out yet, but the concoction Dr. Stillman
describes sounds as though it would fulfil the craving. It also
sounds so awful that I think it would soon satisfy the craving too!
Ali
|
303.9 | Not all carbs are EVIL. | 16BITS::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Fri Jun 24 1988 12:32 | 16 |
| don't tell me - it's nonfat dry milk whipped up with mashed
soybeans!
By the way, not all carbohydrates are quick releasers. There
is a index called the glycemic index. Various foods appear
at different points on the index. Glucose is rated at 100.
Sucrose and all the other -oses are slightly less. Carrots
are right up there, surprise surprise, but apples are quite
low, and whole grains are generally lower than white grains.
The higher the rating, the quicker the food is used and gone.
The lower rated foods tend to make you feel full for a long
time, and supply a steady slow energy to the body. So, eat
an apple rather than carrots, to feel full.
--Louise
|