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Home»Miscellaneous Problems»How Your Weekend can Make You Fat
Miscellaneous Problems

How Your Weekend can Make You Fat

VadiBy VadiSeptember 16, 2010Updated:July 19, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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weekend foodDo you work on night shifts? If it is so, then more than any other person on earth, you desperately wait for the arrival of the weekend. And why? Well to sleep for some more hours than the usual time slot. May be in this way, you convince yourself of providing enough physical and mental rest. Unfortunately, neither our body nor our mind is pleased with such treatment. Why is it so? Then, read on.

How Your Weekend Can Make You Fat?

Our body’s pattern of sleep is controlled by the inner biological clock called the Circadian clock. Right from our childhood we get used to the habit of sleeping at night and waking up in the morning. This natural pattern of sleep encounters a transition when we enter into a job life with night shifts.

The body takes it time to adjust the new time slot of sleeping enforced upon it. There are several bodily functions closely associated with the sleep pattern which also require to undergo change. While some of these functions manage to get adjusted, other functions start working erratically. From this point the health concerns begin to originate.

Research studies have found that people who compensate for their sleep debt on weekends are three times more at risk of being overweight than those who sleep and wake up as per a definite schedule. The degree of risk increases as the difference between the sleeping and waking time increases. These observations are subjects of intense worldwide research as the mechanism behind them are yet to be figured out.

Apart from following erratic sleeping patterns, many mess up their diet on the weekend as well. As they get up late in the morning, the body is deprived of the breakfast. A lavish midday meal is planned to compensate for the morning meal. The body which is newly attuned to go to sleep in the afternoons is suddenly compelled to consume heavy food and initiate the process of digestion.

Soon after this harsh treatment against the body, it is subjected to further stress as we spend some leisure time in front of the television or the computer. In both these cases, lack of any physical activity for a long period of time leads to the accumulation of body fat.

Moreover, our busy schedule on weekdays do not allow us to spend some quality time with the loved ones and weekends are designated times to catch with them in the privacy of our homes and unwind. All these bottled up activities for the weekends compel the body and the mind to function differently than they would on weekdays.

By 2030, 30% of Americans will be obese and 11% of them will come under the category of being severely obese. Unfortunately, people from all the age groups are prone to the weight gain threat and the above mentioned weekend torture has a big role to play for this statistic to become a reality.

A timely intervention from all the family members, changes in the personal and professional priorities, realizing the importance of striking a balance between the physical, mental and spiritual lives can eventually save us from this impending health catastrophe.

Weekend Habits and Their Long-Term Health Impact: A Data Insight

Behavioral Pattern Observed Effect Supporting Research / Source Potential Long-Term Outcome
Weekend Sleep “Binge” Disruption of circadian rhythm, metabolic slowdown
University of Colorado Boulder, Current Biology (2019)
↑ Risk of obesity, insulin resistance, and fatigue
Skipping Breakfast on Weekends Leads to overeating at lunch, impaired glucose response
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2017)
Weight gain, digestive issues, impaired energy balance
Late-Night Screen Time Reduces melatonin, disrupts sleep quality
Harvard Health Publishing (2020)
Sleep deprivation, hormonal imbalance, cravings
High-Calorie “Reward” Meals Increased calorie intake without activity offset
Journal of Obesity (2018)
Fat accumulation, higher BMI, digestive stress
Weekend Social Jetlag (variable sleep/wake time) Alters hormone secretion (leptin, ghrelin)
Current Biology (2015)
↑ Appetite, ↓ Satiety, emotional eating
Reduced Physical Movement Estimated 60% drop in step count on weekends
Stanford University Wearable Study (2021)
Sluggish metabolism, fat retention, reduced endurance
Delayed Sleep-Wake Shift Shifts body clock by 1–2 hours per weekend
Sleep Medicine Reviews (2019)
Weekday insomnia, morning fatigue, irregular eating
Weekend “All-in-One” Socializing Overstimulates mind, limits relaxation
Psychology Today (2016)
Mental fatigue, burnout, emotional overeating
Vadi

I am a dedicated and seasoned health writer passionate about transforming complex medical jargon into accessible, actionable information. Leveraging extensive research and a knack for distilling complicated topics, my work is a reliable resource for a diverse online audience.

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