Two Weeks In

Most of us made some resolutions two weeks ago. And, if history is any indicator, it’s likely a majority of us have given up swimming against the current and are back to our old ways. (Hey, there’s always next year!)

But not us, right? We’re the Cool Kids. We’re going to hang in there. Sure we ate a bit more during December than we wanted to. Maybe we didn’t get on the scale for a month. But we’re still bound and determined to make 2009 the year we see our toes again.

Have you had trouble though? I know I have. You already saw what happened that first week. Fully expecting to drop that weight I put on that last week of 2008, I instead did nothing but crave carbs all the live long day. I’m used to having a “hungry day” once in a while but an entire week was too much.

Do you feel it too?

Well, guess what I found out. Overeating makes you gain weight. And I don’t mean it in the obvious way. Sure, there’s the very direct result of taking in more calories than you burn getting stored. The part we don’t realize is that the act of overeating actually causes you to want to eat even more. In some ways, it’s like building up a tolerance to a drug. The cycle feeds itself.

According to a story run on NPR, mice on different diets were studied:

“If mice eat a high-fat diet, they actually wake up during what is nighttime for them and eat,” says Dr. Joe Bass, a Northwestern University endocrinologist and molecular biologist who has published numerous studies about the body clock and mice. […] Bass found that among the mice who got fat, the weight gain resulted directly from food consumed during what would normally be their sleeping time. This suggests that people who eat less fat will sleep better, and they are not likely to engage in nighttime bingeing, he says.

Why are these mice waking up, sneaking down to their refrigerators, and eating tubs and tubs of Ben & Jerry’s Cake Batter Original Ice Cream? If you think the answer is “free will” think again. The holiday eating we do causes our metabolism to go into a state that doctors call “crazy bonkers.” Basically your body doesn’t know what to do with all this extra energy. Worried you might spontaneously combust, it immediately converts everything you eat into cottage cheese and sends it down to your thighs for long term storage. It really wanted to put it all on eBay first, but you ate so much you just didn’t give it time.

This then triggers the Evil Cycle. Blood sugars never get the chance to even out, insulin floods the body, false-hunger signals are sent to your eyeballs, which scan every square inch of your surroundings for potato chips and monkeyball sandwiches. Anything to satisfy your body’s near-permanent hormonal imbalance. Now wasn’t all that Chex Mix worth it?

Fortunately there’s a way out of this. Unfortunately, I’m going to keep it to myself until next Monday. I need to finish this experiment and see if it really works or not. In the meantime, I sure could go for some potato chips and a monkeyball sandwich…



15 Responses to “Two Weeks In”

crazylady said
on
January 15, 2009 at 2:17 am

Oh I hear you ! I’m craving sugar all bloody week… it’s just crazy. Hope the experiment works!

maggieapril said
on
January 15, 2009 at 5:18 am

Yes, last week, back on plan after two weeks of bingeing, I was hungry every single day. This week I haven’t been. Hadn’t really thought about it before.

Looking forward to the results of your experiment, Dr. Fridge.

MaryBe said
on
January 15, 2009 at 6:17 am

Don’t keep us in suspence!

Deborah said
on
January 15, 2009 at 6:38 am

Ahh, the suspense….

Charlie said
on
January 15, 2009 at 6:41 am

Sorry, kids. Blogger’s prerogative. 🙂

johngl said
on
January 15, 2009 at 7:02 am

I love experiments. I picture Charlie tucked away in his lab closely observing his mice and seeing what happens when they notice the tiny little chains and locks on their refrigerators.

Meg said
on
January 15, 2009 at 7:15 am

I can’t wait to hear the results of the experiment!

Tom Rooney said
on
January 15, 2009 at 7:30 am

The official medical term is “crazy bonkers”? I wonder if there are people now in doctor offices across the country being told that they have a case of “crazy bonkers?” I can just see tons of people standing in line at the pharmacy waiting for their “crazy bonkers” medicine. I’m sure you could overdose on this too.

Mara said
on
January 15, 2009 at 7:35 am

I’m very interested to hear the results!

Biz said
on
January 15, 2009 at 8:56 am

I like the technical wording “crazy bonkers!”

Mmm. Monkeyball sandwiches. I’ll have to make them again soon!

Charlie said
on
January 15, 2009 at 10:08 am

Oh yeah, how’d they turn out, Biz? Did Tony like them?

Tuscanystone said
on
January 15, 2009 at 1:17 pm

Yeah, I know that hungry feeling. Happens after overeating and drinking alcohol. No wonder I’m teetotal now (well, for Jan. 😀

Can’t wait to hear your secret. Mine is just pure willpower and protein!

Tusc 😀

Helen said
on
January 15, 2009 at 4:02 pm

Well Charlie you could be meeting your goals like I am right now: by getting massively sick. Sinus infection, and either acute bronchitis teamed with the flu – or – Pneumonia. I don’t feel like eating at all. I AM looking forward to reading Mondays’ blog tho…

Quix said
on
January 16, 2009 at 10:32 am

I’m interested as well! I definitely know the crazy bonkers of a day after drinking – you want to eat so healthy because you were probably over your calories the day before, but your body just neeeeeeeds food.

My secret this month just involves some willpower, and telling myself “only a few more months of this crap” because I was totally happy eating at straight maintenance level. Kicking my butt working out on less calories than I’m supposed to is just not fun.

Anonymous said
on
January 18, 2009 at 1:47 pm

This is funny, my friend just sent me a link to the NPR site for this story on the overeating mice. I guess many of us areon the same page, trying to figure out how we got so FAT and what to do about it. (Have you noticed how fat the entire country is? Watching the crowds of “real people” in the background during the political speeches in the run upto the election, I was struck by the evidence of the obesity epidemic.)