Bobby. wrote on Dec 20
th, 2020 at 1:06pm:
The tradition of 3 meals a day is completely false.
We only need about 2,000 calories a day
which we could easily get from even one small meal.
A Maccas hamburger is already over 2,000 calories
and that's without the fries and the coke.
Some people would call that a snack.
No wonder people weigh too much.
I don't really do 'meals' if I can help it beyond participating with others who do so or to put on for visitors.
I mostly just nibble along the way these days.
Small amounts of food in a continuous nibble.
As we get older, our metabolism slows.
Many men who continue to eat like a younger male of -35 years of age, tend to develop quickly that 'pudge' and over-weight look. They also look more tired as their digestion takes more energy to consume.
The 'nibbling' came from Nursing. Taking a 1/2 hour break even, could put my entire duties behind in regards to patients and I only reserved any breaks to click my little battery alarm clock to wake me as I close my eyes and zone out - especially on long Graveyard shifts and Doubles (16hr). Also, nothing worse than that 'full' feeling of a 'meal' that makes me want to roll over like a lion under a tree after a feed, rather than getting back up to work. Unlike a more 'rested' feeling of using the break to just 'rest' body and mind. Occassionally when passing my Nursing Station or doing paperwork there - I would 'nibble'. Many fellow Staff did the same. It's a more efficient way of working.
Couldn't really do it in Construction. Always harder to get back to work that way than feeling refreshed.
If I get distracting hunger pains (like thirst) - I don't wait 3 hours to break time. I take another break of a block of chocolate or a few foil wrapped treats from a box as I'm walking past the 'stash' - mostly provided as a thankyou from Patients and Visitors. Perpetual motion and Cruise control - never stopping, never wilting from hunger. Never feeling 'over-tired' from a Meal and the digestive energy to deal with it as it also raises body temperature like coal to a furnace.