Humans logo

The Two Faces Of Hunger

3 Strategies to Defeat Hunger & Stay on Your Weight Loss Plan

By vaishnavi vermaPublished 3 years ago 5 min read
Like

In the beginning of your weight loss plan, Hunger looks and acts like a cute, cuddly dependent, much like a pet (maybe like a goldfish you won at the county fair), who just needs to be fed once in a great while.

You’re riding high on your first weeks of fast, dare-I-say, easy weight loss and your Hunger can be satisfied by the occasional light snack; an apple, greek yogurt, carrot sticks, or 100-calorie packs. You feel like a BOSS.

You feel completely in control of your eating choices, and are 100% convinced that people who complain about being hungry are just “not doing it right.”

Then suddenly, for no apparent reason, Hunger explodes like your belligerent drunk uncle at the family reunion. You eat a normal breakfast first thing in the morning but you’re starving by 10:00 AM.

You’re finding it nearly impossible to stop thinking about food. You start fantasizing about your next meal. You either give in and eat more than you should, or you seriously consider it. Either way, something is different. Hunger is showing you it’s other face: the scary face. The one that would eat you whole if given half a chance. This side of Hunger is extremely difficult to reason with.

You try throwing an apple at your Hunger and it just laughs right in your face. Ouch. What Hunger really wants is to see you stuff your pie-hole at an all-you-can-eat buffet of candy, cookies, chips, soda, and deep-fried-anything until you can’t feel your face anymore. He wants you to give him anything and everything you can get your hands on, and he will not shut up.

The wall is starting to look like the most delicious snack you’ve ever seen and if no one were looking, you might chew through your pencil to see if that helps stave off the Hunger monster a tiny bit longer.

It is ultimately a losing battle with Hunger. Since we must to eat to live, we cannot just STOP eating altogether, we have to feed our Hunger eventually.

I need food! I need calories! I need protein! I need vitamins! I need lipids And eat. And eat.

When you’re trying to lose weight, this can become a serious problem. Operating at a calorie deficit during a weight loss program causes stress on your body and it tries to compensate. Often, the body sends us signals in the form of Hunger that overcompensate for the calorie deficit we’re living in.

Bodies are complex living organisms that respond to stimuli; the food we eat, the environment we’re in, and even the thoughts we think have an effect on our bodies.

A winning strategy for weight loss MUST incorporate your body’s signals, including the raging Hunger beast, in order to be successful and achieve your goals. Fighting against it will not work in the long run. Trust me, I’ve tried!

To win with Hunger, you have three strategies to consider: Wait it out, Sacrifice a meal, or Nuke it!

Strategy 1: Wait It Out

If you find yourself facing the Hunger monster at a point when you’ve already used up your calories for the day, you can try to wait it out. If you haven’t used up your calories for the day, you should eat them. (You should not be eating under your calorie goal on a regular basis, but that’s another post for another time.)

Read More About: SAUCE WALKA NET WORTH

Waiting out the first signs of Hunger beast involves distraction. Go to bed early. Brush your teeth. Nothing tastes good in a toothpaste-flavored mouth.

Try to outlast the Hunger and see if it goes away. Nine times out of ten, this strategy is the best option while you’re trying to lose weight. Most of the time, what we think is the monster is actually just a craving because we’re bored/tired/lonely/stressed/etc.

I often get snack-cravings in the evening while I’m relaxing after work. Most of the time I recognize it as a craving, but sometimes it starts to act like the Hunger monster. Usually, this Hunger monster will chill-the-fuck-out by morning. If I can stay out of the pantry/fridge until morning, and the Hunger monster is still screaming at me, I’ll feed it. This leads to…

Strategy 2: Sacrifice a Meal

If waiting it out didn’t make the Hunger monster take a hike, have a big luxurious breakfast, logging the calories no matter how much you eat, and see if that works to satiate the monster.

Eight times out of ten, this will work. The big meal is a sacrifice to the Hunger monster so he’ll leave you the hell alone. Most of the time, this strategy also allows you to get back on track by the end of the day. You can finish out the day with a lighter dinner and stay within your calorie goals.

Strategy 3: Nuke It!

This is the nuclear option; the strategy for defeating Hunger that you turn to after exhausting the previous two options (waiting it out & sacrificial meal). When nothing else is placating your Hunger monster and you are starving, can’t think straight, have no energy, and are chewing on the walls (I see you! Stop that!), it’s time to feed the beast.

Take a full day to feed your Hunger. Eat large meals and regular snacks. If there’s something you’ve been craving, make sure to have it.

There is no need to stuff yourself to the point of feeling sick, but eating regularly throughout the day will help to deliver the message to Hunger and your body that you aren’t actually going to starve, even though you are going to lose weight.

Also Read: Things You have to Do Before Turn 18

advice
Like

About the Creator

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2024 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.