Okay guys. I get about 3000 cals a day and i still feel hungry before i go to bed. Does this mean i am in caloric deficit?
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Okay guys. I get about 3000 cals a day and i still feel hungry before i go to bed. Does this mean i am in caloric deficit?
No, it means you're hungry.
No, but you will definitely feel hungry while cutting.
What about when bulking?
[QUOTE=nullbee;1019168123]What about when bulking?[/QUOTE]
It means nothing
Hunger is not a caloric deficit, it's your brain's reaction to certain chemicals you put into your body. I don't know the exact science behind it - only what my trainer tells me - but fast sugar can trigger glucose/insulin levels to drop, therefore making you hungry. Nothing to do with how much food you put into your body.
For example, my training partner ate 3000 calories worth of nutella pancakes at breakfast out of anger; he usually consumes 2200cal a day. Three hours later, he felt hungry again, not because he was low on calories but because his brain felt the sugar level drop.
So long story short don't listen to your brain.
Well I don`t eat any foods that are that high in GI. I keep my blood sugar level steady as far as i am concerned. I guess it is my metabolism. I guess it just is ridiculously fast.
Nojennyno that makes a lot of sense, I have noticed this after eating higher carb meals vs. high protein meals.
[QUOTE=nojennyno;1019170173]Hunger is not a caloric deficit, it's your brain's reaction to certain chemicals you put into your body. I don't know the exact science behind it - only what my trainer tells me - but fast sugar can trigger glucose/insulin levels to drop, therefore making you hungry. Nothing to do with how much food you put into your body.
For example, my training partner ate 3000 calories worth of nutella pancakes at breakfast out of anger; he usually consumes 2200cal a day. Three hours later, he felt hungry again, not because he was low on calories but because his brain felt the sugar level drop.
So long story short don't listen to your brain.[/QUOTE]
You don't know the science, you just blindly follow somebody else's lead and advocate not listening to your own brain... Hmmm.
You also state that your hunger levels have NOTHING to do with how much food you put in your body... I'm no scientist, but I have had enough food in my time to come to the conclusion that what you said might be a smidge wrong.
And your training partner ate Nutella pancakes "out of anger"? Is he a teddy bear?
[QUOTE=dimmupelto;1019198493]You don't know the science, you just blindly follow somebody else's lead and advocate not listening to your own brain... Hmmm.
You also state that your hunger levels have NOTHING to do with how much food you put in your body... I'm no scientist, but I have had enough food in my time to come to the conclusion that what you said might be a smidge wrong.
And your training partner ate Nutella pancakes "out of anger"? Is he a teddy bear?[/QUOTE]
Well if you're no scientist then you have 0 argument against my case. However, you're welcome to argue your completely unsupported idea with my trainer who is a retired pro MMA fighter and spent years in college to get an actual fitness/nutritional degree.
No offense taken; not from idiots.
Insulin is an appetite supressive hormone. However, in some people, a sharp rise in glucose causes an insulin overreaction, once it has dispersed, it can leave blood sugar on the low side which is the trigger to appetite. Also, just from personal experience, strongly flavoured foods (usually sweet / salty) have a much more profound affect on appetite than actual calorie content.
[QUOTE=befit46;1019181003]Nojennyno that makes a lot of sense, I have noticed this after eating higher carb meals vs. high protein meals.[/QUOTE]
Yeah, higher carbs could possibly be related to your glucose/insulin levels. Although complex carbs have less effect, I believe.
[QUOTE=nojennyno;1019170173]
... don't listen to your brain.[/QUOTE]
Apparently, some posters here are better at this than others.
[QUOTE=nojennyno;1019226913]Well if you're no scientist then you have 0 argument against my case. However, you're welcome to argue your completely unsupported idea with my trainer who is a retired pro MMA fighter and spent years in college to get an actual fitness/nutritional degree.
No offense taken; not from idiots.[/QUOTE]
Wait, so since I'm not a scientist my ideas aren't valid, but you and your trainer aren't scientists as well and yours ARE valid? There's way too much derpage in your posts.
Be careful of what you think is hunger. Sometimes when you're just really thirsty, you experience the same sensation as you do when you're hungry. This often leads to overeating. If you feel hungry, drink some water. If you're stomach is rumbling, then your body does actually need food.
[QUOTE=dimmupelto;1019257503]Wait, so since I'm not a scientist my ideas aren't valid, but you and your trainer aren't scientists as well and yours ARE valid? There's way too much derpage in your posts.[/QUOTE]
Where in my post did I ever say anything about validation? All I did was offer you the chance to argue with someone who actually has an education.
But seeing that you use the word 'derpage' in your arguments past the age of 15 and your inability to form a grammatically correct sentence...
[QUOTE=nojennyno;1019430003]Where in my post did I ever say anything about validation? All I did was offer you the chance to argue with someone who actually has an education.
But seeing that you use the word 'derpage' in your arguments past the age of 15 and your inability to form a grammatically correct sentence...[/QUOTE]
I wouldn't call a fitness trainer an education
[QUOTE=AlwaysTryin;1019467913]I wouldn't call a fitness trainer an education[/QUOTE]
Ah she's just trying to exert her mental superiority through insults. Obvious troll.
And come on now, he's not JUST a fitness trainer... He's a "retired pro mma fighter" and spent YEARS learning how to a fitness/nutrition trainer. So... Legit and all :)
I tend to experience hunger when I have an unusually larger meal than normal. For the most part I keep my daily caloric intake roughly the same, and try to keep portions the same each for each respective meal of the day. For example I try to stay close in macros and portions everyday. But occasionally when I am invited to a party or go out to dinner and I eat a lot more than usual, while I feel very full at the moment for eating more than usual I often feel unusually more hungry the next morning.
Does anyone else experience this? I am not a scientist by any means so I can't formally explain it. One idea I have is just that my digestive system just goes into high gear trying to digest more food than normal and the result is I'm more hungry later? Like I said sorry I can't explain it better, just wondering if anyone else can.