For a long time before taking resveratrol, I was a buffet enthusiast. Every weekend, I'd hit some hotel or buffet restaurant, and have a satisfying pigout. But this practice came to an abrupt end soon after I started on 500mg (now 1g) of resveratrol daily. The reason is that, since I take it in the morning on an empty stomach, it seems to suppress my appetite, to the point that a buffet is no longer an economical proposition (unless I don't eat for 40+ hours, which is not practical).
So now, I'm on 1/23 intermittant fasting. By late evening, I'm ready to eat the paint off the walls. But by morning, my brain has acquiesced to my hunger, and I'm less hungry. So after a dose of resveratrol on an empty stomach, I'm not really interested in breakfast at all. So then, I sometimes undereat during my feeding hour, which just makes the evening hunger worse.
Suddenly (OK, after like 18 months of this) I figured out that I could use resveratrol as a hunger control tool. I've switched my dosing schedule. Now, instead of taking 1g in the morning on an empty stomach, I just get up and eat my monomeal for the day. Then later, when hunger comes, I take my resveratrol. Today, I took 1g during intense hunger around 2pm. It killed my hunger in minutes, replacing it with that slighly nauseous feeling that you get when you overeat. I went from dreaming about bread-and-butter the way that most guys dream about porn stars to "hmm, let's lift weights and get to work." Cool!
I plan to cut up my dose into 2x500mg parts tomorrow, so hopefully I can (1) control my hunger for longer, until the brain gives up on it anyway, as it does at night and (2) stretch out my 1g dose, so it gets absorbed a bit better, resulting in a higher effective dose for the same price.
My question is... has anyone else noticed this effect? (No, I'm not asking about whether resveratrol lowers fasting sugar or generally suppresses carb cravings. I'm pretty much convinced of that. I'm asking about using it as a "big hammer" to kill hunger entirely for a few hours at a time.)
If my experience is reproducible, then merely by changing dosing schedule, we should be able to use resveratrol to achieve deeper caloric restriction (or equivalently, more strenuous intermittant fasting) than would otherwise be physiologically tolerable.
The herb, hoodia, allegedly suppresses hunger extremely well. But I don't know enough about it to take it on a regular basis. Anyway, it's another idea, for those who know more about it.
By the way, my mention of CR/IF in conjunction with resveratrol isn't by chance. I'm admonished by the murine results which showed that resveratrol only extended life for (1) CRed mice and (2) pig-out mice, but not mice who ate a normal healthy full-calorie diet. In other words, I'm using IF to make sure that my resveratrol is worth the money. (Of course, resveratrol may operate differently in humans. Perhaps it still helps humans with a full-calorie healthy diet, but I'm ignorant of any evidence to that effect.)