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I have another one, which I followed now for a while. My intention was less about weight loss, but I'd argue it still helps:

Eat breakfast, lunch and dinner like you'd normally do. But in between meals, follow a strict zero-calory intake. This way, you have 4-5 hours of zero calories between meals. Thus:

- only water is allowed

- if you want to drink coffee, drink it right with/after a meal

- if you want to eat chocolate or snacks, they have to come after a meal

I noticed that this has several effects:

1. For me, it's easier to do than intermittent fasting, because my family eats three meals.

2. Most people gain weight because they snack all the time or drink stuff with sugar (or coffee with milk).

3. I actually became hungry after 4-5 hours. A feeling I haven't had in a while.

4. I can't eat lots of snacks or chocolate, because I'm full from a meal.




If you drink your coffee black, you don't need to do it right after a meal :)


You're saying this based on what exactly? I've heard that coffee/caffeine is most effective at boosting sharpness when your stomach is not empty. (I'm under the impression now that there is more than one reason why coffee after a meal is the recommended way to take it, and not understanding how whether you take it with milk plays into it... could you elaborate?)


Not the parent poster, but I understood this as "black coffee has almost zero calories". This was the only restriction I explained in my post. This is not about boosting the effectiveness of coffee, but simply cutting out all calories between meals (except possibly for neglectible amounts as in tea or coffee).


Ah, thanks for the clarification. My understanding about the effects of caffeine is not based on anything other than hear-say from people who seemed to have done their research better than I have, but from what I did hear, caffeine on an empty stomach may have opposite the intended effects, making you actually more confused instead of boosting focus.

Anecdotally after hearing this myself, I have tried to make it a point to take coffee less often when on an empty stomach, and it does seem to help with focus-depletion.


Exactly. I was referring to the almost zero calories part.


Yeah, coffee black and tea is okay (without sugar and milk). But most people I know drink their coffee with milk :)




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