Scientists Discover Hunger's Timekeeper
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Scientists Discover Hunger's Timekeeper
Interesting research confirming what I've noticed anecdotally- I'm LESS hungry on N-days, up until a little before regular meal-times.
http://www.physorg.com/news170688849.html
"Researchers at Columbia and Rockefeller Universities have identified cells in the stomach that regulate the release of a hormone associated with appetite. The group is the first to show that these cells, which release a hormone called ghrelin, are controlled by a circadian clock that is set by mealtime patterns."
http://www.physorg.com/news170688849.html
"Researchers at Columbia and Rockefeller Universities have identified cells in the stomach that regulate the release of a hormone associated with appetite. The group is the first to show that these cells, which release a hormone called ghrelin, are controlled by a circadian clock that is set by mealtime patterns."
- NoelFigart
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You'd think that some bright entrepreneur would figure out a way to market a product that would basically be a meal schedule combined with portion control.TexArk wrote:BUT isn't it interesting that the response to the research is to try develop a DRUG for dieters!
Hmmm....
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My blog https://noelfigart.com/wordpress/ I talk about being a freelance writer, working out and cooking mostly. The language is not always drawing room fashion. Just sayin'.
My blog https://noelfigart.com/wordpress/ I talk about being a freelance writer, working out and cooking mostly. The language is not always drawing room fashion. Just sayin'.
This is encouraging news! I've been back to No-S-ing for about 10 days now, after a hiatus. I'm pretty sure that my problem last time was that I wasn't strict enough with the rules at the outset, and I didn't give my body time to adapt to a new schedule. I'd find myself starving in the mid-afternoon, so added a "mini-meal" (which in my case was just a euphemism for "snack") and then gradually slipped off track.
I'm hoping that this time, I'll be able to form new habits so that I won't have to continue expending so much mental energy worrying about weight control. That habit thang is HUGE.
I'm hoping that this time, I'll be able to form new habits so that I won't have to continue expending so much mental energy worrying about weight control. That habit thang is HUGE.
Mom of 4
Yep, just what we need -- another drug for people who don't need it. That's pretty much what the pharmaceutical industry is based on.NoelFigart wrote:You'd think that some bright entrepreneur would figure out a way to market a product that would basically be a meal schedule combined with portion control.TexArk wrote:BUT isn't it interesting that the response to the research is to try develop a DRUG for dieters!
Hmmm....
"That which we persist in doing becomes easier for us to do. Not that the nature of the thing itself has changed but our power to do it is increased." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
"You are what you eat -- so don't be Fast, Easy, Cheap or Fake."
"You are what you eat -- so don't be Fast, Easy, Cheap or Fake."
When I first started No-S, I spent every night wondering if I would feel this hungry for the rest of my life. I toughed it out and stayed strict with myself. After 2 months, I can say that it is amazing how little real hunger I have - especially during my worst time before bed. (I'm still working on the emotional hunger.) From the third week on, the hunger got less and less and now I only feel a faint whisper of hunger at night.
In the beginning, I NEEDED my nightly glass of milk and now I haven't had one for at least a week and a half. I am a true believer that snacking hunger can be tamed (without a drug).
In the beginning, I NEEDED my nightly glass of milk and now I haven't had one for at least a week and a half. I am a true believer that snacking hunger can be tamed (without a drug).
This is great, bookman -- I would have cited this in the book if I'd known about it (was going on mere common sense).
A particularly choice bit:
Great to see you here again, Noel!
Sorry I've been keeping such a low profile here recently -- dayjob is nuts.
Reinhard
A particularly choice bit:
TexArk wrote:The new research suggests that the stomach tells the brain when to eat and that establishing a regular schedule of meals will regulate the stomach’s release of ghrelin. “If you eat all the time, ghrelin secretion will not be well controlled,†said Silver, the paper’s lead author and the principal investigator of the study. “It’s a good thing to eat meals at a regularly scheduled time of day.â€
Yeah, the most obvious solution isn't always the most marketable oneI find this intriguing. Our three regularly scheduled meals can set our hunger clock. BUT isn't it interesting that the response to the research is to try develop a DRUG for dieters!
Great to see you here again, Noel!
Sorry I've been keeping such a low profile here recently -- dayjob is nuts.
Reinhard