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Why Saving Up Calories Doesn't work

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Manage episode 362200285 series 3399131
Content provided by Heather Beardsley. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Heather Beardsley or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Saving up calories is a restrictive strategy to push past hunger in order to eat less. It's about believing that you must put off eating as long as you can tolerate it.
Saving up calories as a strategy comes from a belief that you can't eat an amount that feels satisfying and still lose weight. If you believe that, then you can see it would make sense that you have to override normal hunger cues and allow overt hunger in order to lose weight. In this way, a practice of saving up calories allow generates feelings of chronic restriction, an uneasy relationship with physical hunger, and an over-desire for food you think you can't have if you want to lose weight.
Saving up calories also has a delayed response of deservingness and permissiveness to overeat later because you've 'been so good' by saving up calories and not eating on the front end of your day.
Paradoxically, chronically saving up calories can create physiological adaptions in the body to a food environment that is unpredictable that can work against your weight loss.
The best thing you can do is to create an environment of food safety and predictability if you are someone who has chronically practiced saving up calories or delaying eating by ignoring hunger.
Since every body is different is different gather data to see if saving up calories actually works for you to get you the long and short-term results you are looking for. Also gut check the practice - does it feel compassionate and helpful or disconnected and harsh?
Questions, comments, ah-has, or takeaways from this episode? Keep the conversation going on Instagram by commenting on the Episode 31 reel.

Support the Show.

Visit me @thriveinmidlife on Instagram and comment with your ah-ha's, takeaways, homework, and/or questions from this episode, and let’s keep the conversation going.
Want all of the best tips and strategies from the podcast in one place to help you lose weight? Order the Love Life And Lose Weight book and get the FREE 40 page companion workbook to complete all of the coach homework questions in each chapter.
Want to work with me? CLICK HERE to join the email list and find out how.
Audio engineering by Young Cub Audio.

  continue reading

57 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 362200285 series 3399131
Content provided by Heather Beardsley. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Heather Beardsley or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Saving up calories is a restrictive strategy to push past hunger in order to eat less. It's about believing that you must put off eating as long as you can tolerate it.
Saving up calories as a strategy comes from a belief that you can't eat an amount that feels satisfying and still lose weight. If you believe that, then you can see it would make sense that you have to override normal hunger cues and allow overt hunger in order to lose weight. In this way, a practice of saving up calories allow generates feelings of chronic restriction, an uneasy relationship with physical hunger, and an over-desire for food you think you can't have if you want to lose weight.
Saving up calories also has a delayed response of deservingness and permissiveness to overeat later because you've 'been so good' by saving up calories and not eating on the front end of your day.
Paradoxically, chronically saving up calories can create physiological adaptions in the body to a food environment that is unpredictable that can work against your weight loss.
The best thing you can do is to create an environment of food safety and predictability if you are someone who has chronically practiced saving up calories or delaying eating by ignoring hunger.
Since every body is different is different gather data to see if saving up calories actually works for you to get you the long and short-term results you are looking for. Also gut check the practice - does it feel compassionate and helpful or disconnected and harsh?
Questions, comments, ah-has, or takeaways from this episode? Keep the conversation going on Instagram by commenting on the Episode 31 reel.

Support the Show.

Visit me @thriveinmidlife on Instagram and comment with your ah-ha's, takeaways, homework, and/or questions from this episode, and let’s keep the conversation going.
Want all of the best tips and strategies from the podcast in one place to help you lose weight? Order the Love Life And Lose Weight book and get the FREE 40 page companion workbook to complete all of the coach homework questions in each chapter.
Want to work with me? CLICK HERE to join the email list and find out how.
Audio engineering by Young Cub Audio.

  continue reading

57 episodes

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