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To stop overeating, eat with a small spoon. This will slow down eating and may make you look weird. After finishing a meal, wait 15-20 minutes before eating again. These two things will allow your body's hunger signals to catch up to your brain, reducing snacking and overeating. If still hungry after waiting, drink water. If still hungry after that, have a Coke Zero. If still hungry after that, have a low-calorie jelly.

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Ultra processed food is engineered to hijack your biology, leading to addiction, weight gain, and sickness. It causes chronic inflammation, insulin resistance, and nutrient deficiencies. The combination of refined carbs, fats, and sugar in these foods doesn't exist in nature, and the brain isn't wired to handle it. This combination lights up the brain's reward center, causing overeating and cravings. These foods are unfilling; a person can eat thousands of calories and still feel hungry. Some processed foods contain additives that suppress hunger and fullness signals, so people don't know when they've had enough. To feel better, have more mental clarity, and jump start health, one should start with cutting processed foods.

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Insulin resistance prevents weight loss because elevated fasting insulin constantly signals fat cells to store more fat, inhibiting lipolysis. To lose weight, insulin levels must be lowered through diet, exercise, drugs, or surgery, starting with dietary changes. Insulin levels rise primarily due to refined carbohydrates and sugar. While fat doesn't significantly raise insulin, amino acids do, especially leucine. Leucine is found in corn-fed beef, chicken, and fish, which is a reason to avoid ultra-processed foods. A diet with 15-20% protein is acceptable, but the source of amino acids should be considered.

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To address a sugar addiction, reframe it as having trained the body to crave sugar and expressing a desire to train it differently. Microbes and fungus in the gut send signals to the brain, dictating cravings to stay alive. To detoxify the bacteria that crave sugar, fats, or carbs, starve them out by incorporating daily fasting windows. This deprives the microbes, causing them to die off. The longer the fasting period, the more microbes die, leading to changes in food choices.

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High insulin levels can block leptin, a hormone that signals fullness, leading to constant hunger. This is due to a hormone issue in the brain. To address this, one should reduce sugar intake and increase protein and fats, such as fish, chicken, turkey, avocado, olive oil, and nuts. Adding vegetables is also important because they decrease inflammation. This combination slows digestion, promotes longer-lasting fullness, and reduces insulin resistance, which is the cause of leptin blockage.

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Red meat like grass-fed steak, beef, lamb, salmon, or tuna can promote satiety and prevent nighttime awakenings caused by blood sugar dips and cravings. Waking up hungry indicates insufficient daytime food intake and blood sugar regulation issues. The body wakes you up to consume food and stabilize blood sugar levels, preventing a coma during sleep. It's not simply about addiction.

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Burning fat is about hormones, not just cutting calories. Understanding fat-burning versus fat-storing hormones is key. Insulin, made by the pancreas, is a main hormone that helps you store fat. If insulin levels are too high, you cannot burn fat. Elevated insulin nullifies all other fat-burning hormones, preventing weight loss.

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But in today's world, we can get a high fat and sugary meal on any corner at any hour. The problem is, the instinct and desire still remains and so we struggle to stop eating these meals. Recently, it's been discovered that the continual intake of fat and sugar overrides the regulatory system of ghrelin and leptin. The signaling pathway is insufficient to control our new diet and so our initial evolutionary desire now plagues our ability to choose wisely and eat healthy. It's a self perpetuating problem. The more unhealthy food you eat, the more you desire food.

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Another factor that's very important is the frequency of eating. If you're snacking, if you're eating between meals, if you're even eating three meals a day, that can slow things down. Because one of the triggers for insulin, the fat storing hormone, is eating in general. So the less you eat, the better. The less you snack, the better. Any food, will stimulate insulin, and then that will make you a little bit more hungry. So we want to get you in a state where you're, burning your own fat and you're satisfied and you're not hungry anymore. So we wanna combine the low carb with eating less frequent, like two meals a day or even one meal a day. That will produce huge effects, and because you're not craving, it'll make it easier to do.

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The hormonal response differs when eating foods with equal calories. Eating white bread and jam causes an insulin spike, directing energy into body fat and leaving none for daily use, leading to increased hunger. Refined carbohydrates cause insulin spikes, signaling the body to store energy as fat. Conversely, eating an egg does not cause an insulin spike, allowing the body to use the calories as energy throughout the day, promoting satiety. Consistently directing calories to fat storage through refined carbohydrates leads to increased body fat over time. Without an insulin spike, the body doesn't store energy and it remains available for use, reducing hunger.

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Vitamin D helps leptin, which tells the brain you're full, work better. Without enough Vitamin D, insulin doesn't work as well, leading to hunger because insulin allows nutrition to enter cells. Vitamin D can improve insulin sensitivity, allowing more fuel and nutrients to reach the cells. To address Vitamin D deficiency, start taking Vitamin D. Also, take magnesium, vitamin K2, zinc, and B6 as cofactors to prevent issues and improve its effectiveness.

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People gain weight because of hormones, not calories. The body doesn't respond to calories, but to hormonal signals. Insulin is the main hormone involved in fatness or weight gain. When you eat, insulin tells the body to store food energy. When you fast, insulin levels fall, signaling the body to release stored energy. Balancing feeding and fasting leads to equilibrium. Constant eating or consuming foods that highly stimulate insulin keeps insulin levels high, instructing the body to store fat.

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Obesity is characterized by fat around the brain, neck, and heart, potentially causing sleep apnea, as well as marbled muscle mass. Visceral fat and energy problems can occur in both obese and relatively skinny individuals. A person who is 100 pounds overweight carries an extra 350,000 calories, while someone ten pounds overweight carries 35,000, but both may experience fatigue, hunger, cravings, and mental fog due to hijacked hormones. Both may have hyperinsulinemia, preventing fat burning. The location of fat storage differs, but the root cause is the same. Lowering insulin levels allows the body to burn stored fat, improving energy levels and reducing hunger. The food industry focuses on calories, but controlling blood sugar and insulin is key. A meal that doesn't spike blood sugar leads to less insulin production, putting the body in burning mode and promoting satiety, which reduces cravings and allows the body to burn stored fat.

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You just ate, but you're already starving. And if you're always hungry, insulin resistant might be the thing that's tricking your brain. Here's one of the things that are happening. High insulin actually blocks a hormone called leptin, and that helps you feel full. But because it's being blocked by the high levels of insulin, now you're constantly getting the message to eat and feel hungry. So when you thought it was your problem, it's actually a hormone issue in your brain. But there's an easy fix. Get rid of the sugars. And by doing this, you add more protein and fats to your meal, like fish, chicken, turkey, fats like avocado, olive oil, and nuts. And don't forget those veggies because they decrease inflammation. This slows your digestion and will keep you full longer and decrease insulin resistance that's blocking leptin that doesn't let you feel full.

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One of the best ways of staying satiated, cutting down, and curbing your cravings is by staying hydrated. When people are thirsty, not only do they feel thirsty, they also feel hungry. When the body needs hydration, it essentially turns on all of the ghost signals for anything that goes past your lips. When you're thirsty, you might not realize it, you start to get hungry as well. So one of the best ways in keeping hunger down is by staying hydrated.

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Frequent snacking can negatively impact health because the body expends energy on digestion, diverting blood flow. Snacking on carbohydrates causes blood sugar spikes and insulin release, hindering fat burning. Stable blood sugar and low fasting insulin are preferable for health and energy. Frequent snacking can increase ghrelin production, leading to increased hunger and potential overeating. An afternoon snack is acceptable, but snacking every two to three hours is not ideal. It's better to allow the body to digest meals fully, waiting three to six hours between eating. Intermittent fasting or a classic meal schedule are preferable to constant snacking.

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- Is lack of sleep causing you to store belly fat? If you're getting less than seven hours of sleep a night, it's very possible. - Cortisol, your body's main stress hormone increases. - And high levels of cortisol, particularly over long periods of time, directly increases belly fat gain. - Ghrelin, known as the hunger hormone increases too. - Ghrelin tells your body when you're hungry, so higher levels means you're hungry more often. - And this could lead to late night snacking, over consuming calories, which directly leads to fat gain. - On the other hand, leptin known as the satiety hormone actually decreases. - Leptin increases your metabolic rates. With low leptin levels, your metabolism is slower and you're hungry more often. - So keep your hormones in check by getting seven hours of quality sleep each night. - This one small tweak can have a massive impact on your metabolism and body fat levels.

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Obesity is a biochemical problem, not a behavioral one. The common belief that eating necessitates burning calories to avoid storage is incorrect. It's more accurate to say that storing calories and expecting to burn them requires eating. Gluttony and sloth, behaviors associated with obesity, are secondary to the biochemical process of rising insulin levels. Insulin drives these behaviors, and this has been proven. Factors that elevate insulin levels trigger these behaviors regardless of individual choices. Many of these insulin-raising factors are environmental and unrelated to personal behavior.

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Insulin determines whether the body stores or burns fat. When you eat, insulin levels rise, signaling the body to store calories as fat. High insulin prevents the body from burning stored fat for energy. Only when insulin levels decrease can the body access and burn stored fat.

Genius Life

The SHOCKING SCIENCE On Preventing Disease, Diabetes & LOSING WEIGHT! | Ben Bikman
Guests: Ben Bikman
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Three macronutrient-based rules govern carbohydrate intake: avoid processed carbs, prioritize whole fruits and vegetables, and focus on protein and fat. Insulin resistance is the foundation of type 2 diabetes, which can be reversed through dietary changes rather than medication. A study showed that 11 women with diagnosed type 2 diabetes reversed their condition in 90 days through a dietary intervention aimed at lowering insulin without medication. To reduce insulin levels, fasting is the most effective method, as it allows insulin to drop quickly. When eating, focus on fats and proteins to keep insulin low. The conventional dietary paradigm, which emphasizes carbohydrates, is flawed; humans do not need essential carbohydrates. Instead, prioritize nutrient-dense animal proteins and healthy fats. Insulin resistance develops when fat cells become hypertrophic, leading to the release of free fatty acids and pro-inflammatory molecules that disrupt insulin signaling. To combat this, a low-insulin approach—controlling carbohydrates and prioritizing protein and fat—is recommended. Meal timing is also crucial; eating earlier in the day is more beneficial for metabolic health.

Dhru Purohit Show

How to Reset Your Hunger Hormones and Stop Over-Eating | Dr. Jason Fung
Guests: Dr. Jason Fung
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The episode centers on reframing weight gain as a consequence of hunger and its hormonal regulation rather than simply counting calories. Dr. Fung argues that reducing calories without addressing underlying hunger is unsustainable because it keeps triggering hunger signals. He explains that drugs like Ozempic illustrate that lowering hunger can be more powerful for weight loss than reducing calorie intake alone, because hunger itself drives eating behavior. The discussion then delves into the concept of a body fat thermostat, a homeostatic system controlled by hormones. When this thermostat is pushed upward by hormones such as insulin and cortisol, hunger rises and metabolism can slow, making weight loss harder to maintain. Conversely, activating satiety pathways with GLP-1 and related hormones can help lower the thermostat and facilitate weight loss, though the effects may be temporary if the root hormonal drivers are not addressed. The conversation moves beyond a simplistic calories-in, calories-out model to emphasize the importance of the type of hunger people experience: physical homeostatic hunger, hedonic hunger driven by pleasure, and social or conditioned hunger shaped by environmental cues. These distinctions explain why ultra-processed foods, rapid food delivery, and pervasive food cues can produce strong desires to eat even when not physically hungry. The guests discuss how ultra-processed foods are engineered to maximize dopamine response and minimize satiety signaling, making restraint more difficult. They compare different foods with identical caloric content but different hormonal responses, arguing that nutrition is not just about calories but about how foods affect hormonal patterns and energy partitioning. The conversation also covers the role of the environment, culture, and social norms in shaping eating behavior, suggesting that structural guardrails—such as mindful eating, planned meals, and reducing snacking—can help people manage hunger more effectively. Throughout, Dr. Fung references his books, notes the significance of sleep, stress management, and physical activity as modulators of hunger, and argues for a holistic approach that combines behavioral, hormonal, and environmental strategies to achieve sustainable weight management without blaming individuals for their biology.

The Dhru Purohit Show

NO BS Guide For Losing Fat & Building Muscle At The SAME TIME | Stan Efferding
Guests: Stan Efferding
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Weight management is often misunderstood as solely a matter of discipline, but genetic factors significantly influence hunger signaling and satiety. Hormones like ghrelin and leptin affect individuals differently, leading to varying experiences with hunger and dieting. Many struggle with "food noise," which can hinder successful dieting. New medications like GLP-1 agonists (e.g., semaglutide) effectively suppress hunger signals, leading to greater weight loss success compared to traditional dieting methods. To manage hunger, it's recommended to consume whole foods over ultra-processed options, as the latter can lead to overeating due to their calorie density and lack of satiety. Higher protein and fiber diets are beneficial, along with mindful eating practices. There are three main dieting strategies: calorie restriction (CR), dietary restriction (DR), and time restriction (TR), each with its pros and cons. Long-term adherence to any diet is crucial for success, and no single diet is universally superior. Exercise plays a role in weight management but should not be relied upon solely for weight loss. Instead, finding enjoyable activities and incorporating resistance training is essential for maintaining muscle mass and overall health. The Vertical Diet emphasizes the importance of sleep, consistent eating habits, and stress management as foundational elements for achieving health and fitness goals. Ultimately, understanding calorie content and making informed food choices are vital for sustainable weight management.

Huberman Lab

How to Control Hunger, Eating & Satiety | Huberman Lab Essentials
Guests: Robert Lustig
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In this episode, Andrew Huberman discusses how hormones and the nervous system regulate hunger and satiety. Key brain areas include the ventromedial hypothalamus, which can paradoxically increase or decrease appetite, and the insular cortex, which processes sensory input from food. Hormones like ghrelin stimulate hunger, while melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) and cholecystokinin (CCK) suppress it. Ghrelin acts as a hormonal clock, prompting hunger at regular meal times. Highly processed foods, particularly those containing emulsifiers, disrupt gut signals that regulate appetite, leading to overeating. Insulin and glucagon manage blood glucose levels, with metformin and the ketogenic diet being effective for blood sugar regulation. Huberman also highlights the benefits of yerba mate for appetite control and blood sugar management.

Keeping It Real

Why Your Brain is Sabotaging Your Weight Loss
Guests: Dr. Joey Munoz
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Jillian Michaels speaks with Dr. Joseph Munoz about why the brain seems to sabotage weight loss, arguing the issue is nuanced and not a fate worse than failure. They note that weight loss triggers subconscious brain signals aimed at restoring a prior status, but emphasize that environmental and behavioral factors also play major roles. The conversation separates “vanity” weight from unhealthy obesity, acknowledging that sustainable change is possible through nutrition and exercise, even if challenging. They discuss common messages that oversimplify weight loss, and they explore realistic strategies to avoid feeling helpless while pursuing healthier bodies. The discussion dives into hunger and metabolism: ghrelin and leptin dynamics, insulin and leptin resistance, and how weight loss alters hunger signals. The experts debunk the across-the-board doom narrative, stressing that metabolism shifts are modest and largely tied to size and activity. They highlight the impact of calories, food quality, and the environment, referencing Kevin Hall’s comparisons of minimally vs. ultra-processed diets, where ultra-processed options tend to drive 500 extra calories daily. Practical guidance centers on lean proteins, fiber, and high-volume vegetables, plus sleep, stress management, and consistent activity. They advocate lifting weights, tracking steps, and choosing whole, minimally processed foods to improve satiety and support lasting fat loss. []

No Lab Coat Required

Could THIS be what's stopping us from losing weight?
reSee.it Podcast Summary
America is getting fatter, and while diet debates dominate, this stream emphasizes root mechanisms. Sleep deprivation is presented as a major driver, tied to circadian rhythm and hormones that decide whether energy is stored or burned. The speaker describes the endocrine system as glands that secrete hormones to regulate metabolism, with receptive tissues adjusting energy use in real time. He contrasts the two autonomic branches—parasympathetic 'rest and digest' and sympathetic 'fight or flight'—and stresses that balance is a continual readjustment, not a fixed state. Insulin anchors the fat story. 'Insulin is the chief executive of storing fat. Insulin is the fat storing hormone.' It regulates blood glucose, but its action includes storing energy as glycogen. The hunger hormones ghrelin and leptin figure into appetite control; leptin is triggered by distension of the GI tract as food fills the stomach. The 'dial' model is introduced: nothing in the body is simply on or off; processes run along a continuum with amplifications and inhibitions. Insulin resistance is explained with a dull knife analogy: tissues stop listening, so more insulin is needed, risking hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia. Sleep timing and circadian alignment are central. Circadian rhythm is the 24-hour cycle guiding hormone release; the sun’s cycle is the master signal. The talk highlights 'money time sleep'—the deep sleep window around 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.—as a key recovery period. Slow wave sleep is described as playing the most important role in metabolic, hormonal, and neurophysiological changes. Disruptions to timing—late-night light, screens, shift work—throw leptin, ghrelin, and insulin off balance, increasing appetite and promoting weight gain. Evidence is presented. An interventional study shows partial sleep restriction for a single night reduces insulin sensitivity by 19 to 25% for hepatic and peripheral glucose metabolism. Observational meta-analysis across nine studies finds short sleep (often five hours or less) raises relative risk of type 2 diabetes; for example one sample shows 1.19 times the risk, another reports up to 180% increase in some comparisons, and seven hours or less yields mixed results. Averaging across studies, short sleep is linked to about a 28% increased risk of type 2 diabetes versus eight hours. Practical takeaways emphasize sleep hygiene: remove phones from the bed, keep the room dark and cool, and limit blue light exposure; blue light blocking glasses are discussed as partially effective and partly a cash grab. The sun remains the reliable regulator; timing aligned with the sun sustains hormonal balance. Chronotypes and sleep quality versus duration are acknowledged. The narrator urges practical steps to improve sleep and notes that improving sleep timing can support metabolic homeostasis and potentially aid weight management, without becoming obsessively anxious about every moment of sleep.
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