Common craving triggers to look for

Cravings can be affected by many things, including irregular meals, low protein, low fiber, poor sleep, stress, intense restriction, cycle timing, medications, and blood sugar swings.

For people with insulin resistance, balanced meals may be especially helpful because protein, fat, and fiber can slow how quickly carbohydrates raise blood sugar.

Meal timing can matter

If cravings hit hard in the afternoon or evening, look backward. Did breakfast happen? Was lunch mostly refined carbs? Did the day include a long gap without food?

A realistic experiment is to build one steadier meal earlier in the day, then track whether cravings feel different later.

Protein and fiber snack pairs

Greek yogurt + berriesProtein, fiber, and sweetness without needing a complicated recipe.
Apple + peanut butterFiber plus fat and protein for a more satisfying snack.
Hummus + vegetablesCrunch, fiber, and plant-based protein.
Eggs + whole-grain toastA simple mini-meal when a snack is not enough.

What to log in Vela

Log craving intensity, meal timing, sleep, stress, movement, symptoms, cycle timing, and whether the craving felt physical, emotional, or both. The pattern matters more than one isolated day.

When cravings feel extreme

If cravings feel intense, sudden, paired with dizziness or shakiness, connected to binge episodes, or difficult to manage, it is worth bringing that up with a clinician. Ask whether blood sugar, medications, sleep, stress, eating patterns, or other health factors should be reviewed.

Sources and safety note

This guide is educational. If cravings are extreme, distressing, or connected to disordered eating patterns, consider professional support from a clinician or registered dietitian.