Paleo Diet/Way of Life
Replies
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People like to argue about Paleo.
I did it for new year's last year, and I lasted until somewhere in March. The thing was, I could not WAIT to have a cheat day. I love bread. And corn. And beans! So for me, it was not sustainable. If you find that you can sustain it well, good for you.
If you find you cannot, it's not the end of the world. Calorie deficit will allow you to lose weight. If you look at my weight loss history, I lost a bunch with Paleo at the start of this year, gained it back when I re-discovered cake, and now I'm doing a calorie deficit, happy, not deprived of anything in the world, and losing weight. In a way I can sustain.
Friend me. You can do this, paleo or not.0 -
hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
I laughed out loud!
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neanderthin wrote: »tracylbrown839 wrote: »So...my diet has been like a rollercoaster ride. It has had it's ups and it's downs...and now I am looking for a change in my eating habits. I have googled the Paleo Diet and this is something that I am interesting in doing.
If any of you MFPers have changed to the Paleo way of life, can you give me some pointers/advice? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated
So, even though this response may draw a number of negative comments, I'm going to post it anyway.
Paleo diet ranks "last" on a list of diets when a group of nutritionists and dieticians got together to look at diet styles.
Why is this? One of the reasons is that it is very restrictive and so long term compliance with this diet is quite difficult.
That said, some people have done very well on this diet and swear by it.
However, you specifically say that your diet has been like a rollercoaster ride and so "sticking with" an eating plan has been very difficult for you.
In your instance, thus, I would not recommend it.
It's a popular diet at the moment, to be sure, but few scientists and dieticians recommend it.
Likely, you would be better off to simply stick with your calorie budget, to start with, and if you are interested in changing your "diet style", do so slowly, over time, by simply trading something that you normally eat for something more nutritious. (eg. if you normally drink a cola every day, try trading that cola for a glass of water 3 times a week). Slowly, altering habits, over time, can gradually lead you to better nutritional habits.
Here is a ranked list of diets from a panel of people who make nutrition and food their specialty. So, if you feel that you really need a plan to follow, I would go with one of their top 5 or 6 recommendations, personally, rather than a diet that ranks last on their list. This should provide some good reading for you to follow up on.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/07/best-diets-worst-us-news_n_4549208.html
It's really hard to beat the advice of top notch places like the Mayo Clinic, and the Mediterranean diet, which are very well proven and accepted, over time.
I think you will find that in spite of variation, depending on location, a "Mediterranean diet style" encompasses some general eating principles in common that can easily be expressed in a food pyramid. The fact that so much variety exists within this style, is one of the very things that recommends it as a long term strategy - it's not remotely boring!
Most health professionals would find it a totally suitable style of eating and well backed up by generally better health results than North Americans.
This link to the mayo clinic outlines the general diet style - and as such - it is more of a style of eating, rather than any sort of strict prescription.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/mediterranean-diet/art-20047801
(In general, Europeans, not just those from the Mediterranean, eat less meat, especially red meat, than North Americans do. And certainly, portion sizes in Europe are also much smaller than a standard American diet, too)
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Lady_violet_ wrote: »If you think that eating 1200cal of a diet fo vegs, fuits and meat is the same as one of diet shakes and diet cola, well... It's not just calorie defecit that matters, it's also the quality of the food
For health, of course that's so. No one is saying people shouldn't care about the quality of their food.
But who, specifically, is saying that people should eat 1200 calories of diet shakes and diet cola? I've never seen anyone recommend that, at least no one who usually argues for moderation. More commonly I see that kind of strategy criticized as not sustainable. The bigger question is whether adding a 0 calorie diet coke to some reasonable number of calories of mostly nutrient dense foods chosen based on personal preferences and goals somehow makes the overall diet unhealthy. Seems silly to say so, to me.
And in that there are lots of ways to not eat 1200 calories made up of diet shakes and diet cola other than being paleo and giving up dairy, grains, legumes, and maybe nightshades and potatoes, I'm not quite sure what the relevance is.
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This is my way of life. I'm not going to read the responses here, but I'm always up for Paleo/Primal/Real Food friends.0
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tracylbrown839 wrote: »neanderthin wrote: »tracylbrown839 wrote: »So...my diet has been like a rollercoaster ride. It has had it's ups and it's downs...and now I am looking for a change in my eating habits. I have googled the Paleo Diet and this is something that I am interesting in doing.
If any of you MFPers have changed to the Paleo way of life, can you give me some pointers/advice? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated
So, even though this response may draw a number of negative comments, I'm going to post it anyway.
Paleo diet ranks "last" on a list of diets when a group of nutritionists and dieticians got together to look at diet styles.
Why is this? One of the reasons is that it is very restrictive and so long term compliance with this diet is quite difficult.
That said, some people have done very well on this diet and swear by it.
However, you specifically say that your diet has been like a rollercoaster ride and so "sticking with" an eating plan has been very difficult for you.
In your instance, thus, I would not recommend it.
It's a popular diet at the moment, to be sure, but few scientists and dieticians recommend it.
Likely, you would be better off to simply stick with your calorie budget, to start with, and if you are interested in changing your "diet style", do so slowly, over time, by simply trading something that you normally eat for something more nutritious. (eg. if you normally drink a cola every day, try trading that cola for a glass of water 3 times a week). Slowly, altering habits, over time, can gradually lead you to better nutritional habits.
Here is a ranked list of diets from a panel of people who make nutrition and food their specialty. So, if you feel that you really need a plan to follow, I would go with one of their top 5 or 6 recommendations, personally, rather than a diet that ranks last on their list. This should provide some good reading for you to follow up on.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/07/best-diets-worst-us-news_n_4549208.html
It's really hard to beat the advice of top notch places like the Mayo Clinic, and the Mediterranean diet, which are very well proven and accepted, over time.
I think you will find that in spite of variation, depending on location, a "Mediterranean diet style" encompasses some general eating principles in common that can easily be expressed in a food pyramid. The fact that so much variety exists within this style, is one of the very things that recommends it as a long term strategy - it's not remotely boring!
Most health professionals would find it a totally suitable style of eating and well backed up by generally better health results than North Americans.
This link to the mayo clinic outlines the general diet style - and as such - it is more of a style of eating, rather than any sort of strict prescription.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/mediterranean-diet/art-20047801
(In general, Europeans, not just those from the Mediterranean, eat less meat, especially red meat, than North Americans do. And certainly, portion sizes in Europe are also much smaller than a standard American diet, too)
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neanderthin wrote: »tracylbrown839 wrote: »neanderthin wrote: »tracylbrown839 wrote: »So...my diet has been like a rollercoaster ride. It has had it's ups and it's downs...and now I am looking for a change in my eating habits. I have googled the Paleo Diet and this is something that I am interesting in doing.
If any of you MFPers have changed to the Paleo way of life, can you give me some pointers/advice? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated
So, even though this response may draw a number of negative comments, I'm going to post it anyway.
Paleo diet ranks "last" on a list of diets when a group of nutritionists and dieticians got together to look at diet styles.
Why is this? One of the reasons is that it is very restrictive and so long term compliance with this diet is quite difficult.
That said, some people have done very well on this diet and swear by it.
However, you specifically say that your diet has been like a rollercoaster ride and so "sticking with" an eating plan has been very difficult for you.
In your instance, thus, I would not recommend it.
It's a popular diet at the moment, to be sure, but few scientists and dieticians recommend it.
Likely, you would be better off to simply stick with your calorie budget, to start with, and if you are interested in changing your "diet style", do so slowly, over time, by simply trading something that you normally eat for something more nutritious. (eg. if you normally drink a cola every day, try trading that cola for a glass of water 3 times a week). Slowly, altering habits, over time, can gradually lead you to better nutritional habits.
Here is a ranked list of diets from a panel of people who make nutrition and food their specialty. So, if you feel that you really need a plan to follow, I would go with one of their top 5 or 6 recommendations, personally, rather than a diet that ranks last on their list. This should provide some good reading for you to follow up on.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/07/best-diets-worst-us-news_n_4549208.html
It's really hard to beat the advice of top notch places like the Mayo Clinic, and the Mediterranean diet, which are very well proven and accepted, over time.
I think you will find that in spite of variation, depending on location, a "Mediterranean diet style" encompasses some general eating principles in common that can easily be expressed in a food pyramid. The fact that so much variety exists within this style, is one of the very things that recommends it as a long term strategy - it's not remotely boring!
Most health professionals would find it a totally suitable style of eating and well backed up by generally better health results than North Americans.
This link to the mayo clinic outlines the general diet style - and as such - it is more of a style of eating, rather than any sort of strict prescription.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/mediterranean-diet/art-20047801
(In general, Europeans, not just those from the Mediterranean, eat less meat, especially red meat, than North Americans do. And certainly, portion sizes in Europe are also much smaller than a standard American diet, too)
My recommendation to the op stands. I provided a list of diets and their rankings, based on a panel. Paleo ranks last - for a number of reasons that are worth considering.
The op has had difficulty moving away from SAD, or staying on any reasonable diet plan. As such, she's going to try to select a style of eating to follow. As such, Paleo is one of the more controversial styles she could select. Highly restrictive - Gee, let's start with no alcohol - (I prefer a glass of red wine with a meal, from time to time, even though I'm not a big drinker or even a daily consumer of alcohol) - and so I think the "long term prospect" of her following this diet, is probably minimal. (I could also be wrong - maybe she tries this diet and finds it to be her personal panacea)
The point is there are many diet styles - many approaches to eating, all perfectly acceptable. What a person choses to eat is clearly their own business. So, I provided her with a list that she can draw a few ideas from.
Which diet style is the "best"??? One that works for you, keeps your weight and health in good nick and that you can follow - not for six weeks but forever.
I, personally, eat a bit of everything, with a focus on "real food" and enjoy menus and flavors from many countries.
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GuitarJerry wrote: »
Are you also going to eat grubs? Because Paleo people ate a lot of grubs.
OK, best quote of the day!
My husband jokes that he invented the Paleo diet accidentally. He basically eats that way -- well, not the list of "no nightshades" or whatever, but he eliminated grains 3-4 years ago, we don't really eat processed, etc. Like others say, he feels better, it keeps the lid on weight, etc. I've largely cut out grains too now, and I also find it's easier, mainly because ...
- wheat is the base of all kinds of processed crap that I'd end up eating, so no wheat = no stuff I didn't need anyway
- it's easier to Just Say No than to Just Say Maybe A Little
- the calories (many) vs the benefits (slim)
- we live in South Asia, so it's the perfect way to avoid eating a mountain's worth of rice any time we go to someone's house, relatives, etc . ("Just give me a little" does not work here culturally at all.)
I'll make exceptions, though. Like if I feel like it at a restaurant. Or for pizza. Or beer. If Paleo people had pizza and beer, they'd have made exceptions too. Although maybe they'd have liked the pizza with grubs on it.
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hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
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hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
Exactly!! I have had a really bad habit of not sticking to my diet when I am doing a calorie deficit and exercising. I am looking for a lifestyle change not a diet. I know this will be hard but I have to do something.
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hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
Exactly!! I have had a really bad habit of not sticking to my diet when I am doing a calorie deficit and exercising. I am looking for a lifestyle change not a diet. I know this will be hard but I have to do something.
so it is easy to restrict entire food groups, but it is hard to eat the foods that you like in a moderate calorie deficit.....all righty, then....0 -
hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
Exactly!! I have had a really bad habit of not sticking to my diet when I am doing a calorie deficit and exercising. I am looking for a lifestyle change not a diet. I know this will be hard but I have to do something.
so it is easy to restrict entire food groups, but it is hard to eat the foods that you like in a moderate calorie deficit.....all righty, then....
For some of us yes it is.0 -
There is a lot of back and forth on this type of eating. It is because with the Paelo lifestyle you do cut out some things that your body needs0
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hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
Exactly!! I have had a really bad habit of not sticking to my diet when I am doing a calorie deficit and exercising. I am looking for a lifestyle change not a diet. I know this will be hard but I have to do something.
so it is easy to restrict entire food groups, but it is hard to eat the foods that you like in a moderate calorie deficit.....all righty, then....
For some of us yes it is.
I understand that. I think it easier for some people, at least for a while. I think without a medical reason for the restriction you will eventually start eating things on the forbidden list. But that is okay. If your diet is really nothing but processed foods now, you probably will come out of it with better eating habits. This will force you to learn to cook your own meals from fresh ingredients, though for the life of me I don't know how or why anyone would ever want to cook without tomatoes and peppers.
Best of luck to you, whatever diet you choose.0 -
-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!0 -
Peanutmanak47 wrote: »GuitarJerry wrote: »La5Vega5Girl wrote: »
It is helpful because the reasons for eating paleo are important. Some people are not aware that it's just a different way of creating a deficit. It's not magic. And, this is really an important point, for the vast majority of people, it is NOT sustainable. And, every time I say that, 20 people come in and say they've been doing it for X years. Awesome. But, MOST people cannot keep it up. It's far too restrictive for normal everyday life.
Most people that are successful with it, have to do it due to dietary reasons. Like they can't eat diary or gluten, or something. But, people who can eat all that stuff have a really hard time with it.
If you simply, instead, prioritize protein and minimize carbs, without calling it anything but healthful eating, it's easier. Much easier. And, if you eat carbs, or corn, who cares. I love corn, and I think the reasoning is stupid. And, I dislike the name. There are no paleo foods in todays world. So, it's not the same thing.
Also, the idea of it is lame. Paleo people ate what was available to them. They didn't eat a specific diet, and the people from different regions had different diets, due to the food that was available.
Are you also going to eat grubs? Because Paleo people ate a lot of grubs.
I agree with this.
I agree with this too ..... I make it a goal but don't beat myself up if I slip in this or that on occasion. My biggest goal is to remove processed foods and minimize grains/sugars. I'm a cross really between Clean Eating and Paleo. I like yoru quote - "it's healthy eating".0 -
-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
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Need2Exerc1se wrote: »hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
Exactly!! I have had a really bad habit of not sticking to my diet when I am doing a calorie deficit and exercising. I am looking for a lifestyle change not a diet. I know this will be hard but I have to do something.
so it is easy to restrict entire food groups, but it is hard to eat the foods that you like in a moderate calorie deficit.....all righty, then....
For some of us yes it is.
I understand that. I think it easier for some people, at least for a while. I think without a medical reason for the restriction you will eventually start eating things on the forbidden list. But that is okay. If your diet is really nothing but processed foods now, you probably will come out of it with better eating habits. This will force you to learn to cook your own meals from fresh ingredients, though for the life of me I don't know how or why anyone would ever want to cook without tomatoes and peppers.
Best of luck to you, whatever diet you choose.
Sensible post.
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-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
because caveman for sure had caesar salads....LOL0 -
La5Vega5Girl wrote: »La5Vega5Girl wrote: »
so you are saying it is not helpful to tell the OP to just create a calorie deficit and get a moderate amount of exercise????
what is more reasonable; 1) create a calorie deficit, restrict nothing, and work out/move more; 2) try to replicate a way of eating that has been extinct for over 10,000 years...?
i would say try to replicate a way of eating that has been around for over 10,000 years, not extinct. it is only in the very recent history of people that we have started eating overly processed foods, grains, etc. and have gotten extremely obese as an american culture.
In for when @neandermagnon shows up to school everyone of what the paleolithic diet actually consisted.
thanks @auddii
it depends which palaeolithic populations... the palaeolithic era spans more than 2 million years and several different species of human
lower palaeolithic diets involved raw meat, especially brains and bone marrow, seeing as the first stone tools were made to extract those things from animal carcases. I'd guess that they probably also ate insects and various edible plant parts and fungi.
middle palaeolithic diets saw the introduction of cooked food. But probably still included insects, edible plant parts and edible fungi
BTW edible plant parts would include wild wheat and wild legumes
BTW #2 - wheat has been cultivated for 10,000 years, and the first neolithic people didn't just suddenly wake up and say "I know, let's take this plant that *no-one's ever eaten before* and start growing it in large quantities and depending on it to get through the winter"...... which means that wheat consumption (and the consumption of other grains) actually dates back even further
BTW #3... I recently read about scientific research that showed neanderthals ate some kinds of grains. They went extinct (the neanderthals, not the grains) 28,000 years ago, so that clearly pushes back the consumption of grains to way earlier than 10,000 years
BTW #4... post-agricultural societies have been eating grains in large quantities since pretty much the invention of agriculture as that seems to be one of the earliest forms of agriculture............. but none of them got fat until recent decades, because they had to do exercise to get their food, which is the same reason why hunter-gatherers are not fat (they too have to do exercise to get their food)... modern western people can sit on their fat arses and have food delivered through their living room window while they never leave the sofa if they so will..... and people wonder why there's an obesity epidemic.0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
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neandermagnon wrote: »La5Vega5Girl wrote: »La5Vega5Girl wrote: »
so you are saying it is not helpful to tell the OP to just create a calorie deficit and get a moderate amount of exercise????
what is more reasonable; 1) create a calorie deficit, restrict nothing, and work out/move more; 2) try to replicate a way of eating that has been extinct for over 10,000 years...?
i would say try to replicate a way of eating that has been around for over 10,000 years, not extinct. it is only in the very recent history of people that we have started eating overly processed foods, grains, etc. and have gotten extremely obese as an american culture.
In for when @neandermagnon shows up to school everyone of what the paleolithic diet actually consisted.
thanks @auddii
it depends which palaeolithic populations... the palaeolithic era spans more than 2 million years and several different species of human
lower palaeolithic diets involved raw meat, especially brains and bone marrow, seeing as the first stone tools were made to extract those things from animal carcases. I'd guess that they probably also ate insects and various edible plant parts and fungi.
middle palaeolithic diets saw the introduction of cooked food. But probably still included insects, edible plant parts and edible fungi
BTW edible plant parts would include wild wheat and wild legumes
BTW #2 - wheat has been cultivated for 10,000 years, and the first neolithic people didn't just suddenly wake up and say "I know, let's take this plant that *no-one's ever eaten before* and start growing it in large quantities and depending on it to get through the winter"...... which means that wheat consumption (and the consumption of other grains) actually dates back even further
BTW #3... I recently read about scientific research that showed neanderthals ate some kinds of grains. They went extinct (the neanderthals, not the grains) 28,000 years ago, so that clearly pushes back the consumption of grains to way earlier than 10,000 years
BTW #4... post-agricultural societies have been eating grains in large quantities since pretty much the invention of agriculture as that seems to be one of the earliest forms of agriculture............. but none of them got fat until recent decades, because they had to do exercise to get their food, which is the same reason why hunter-gatherers are not fat (they too have to do exercise to get their food)... modern western people can sit on their fat arses and have food delivered through their living room window while they never leave the sofa if they so will..... and people wonder why there's an obesity epidemic.
neander for the win again!0 -
neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
I was refering to the diet, not the people, since the thread is about the diet.
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Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
I was refering to the diet, not the people, since the thread is about the diet.
the meaning of "paleolithic diet" is the diet that was eaten by palaeolithic people. there is no other sane meaning of "palaeolithic diet" - so you can't talk about palaeolithic diets without talking about the food eaten by palaeolithic people.....
0 -
-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
because caveman for sure had caesar salads....LOL
Told you, I'm 98%! Maybe I'm less after reading all of your posts. I ate a ceasar chix salad last night and ait 1 Tbs Chez and I lost .8 lbs yesterday after eating well, no grains and spinning for 1 hr at the gym. I'll keep doing what I do I guess....maybe I'm Paleo like, but not exact. LOL0 -
neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
I was refering to the diet, not the people, since the thread is about the diet.
the meaning of "paleolithic diet" is the diet that was eaten by palaeolithic people. there is no other sane meaning of "palaeolithic diet" - so you can't talk about palaeolithic diets without talking about the food eaten by palaeolithic people.....
Yes, I do think that. We all know there is a diet out there named the Paleo Diet. I can talk about it if I want. You can poo-poo my doing so if you want. Such is the internet.0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
I was refering to the diet, not the people, since the thread is about the diet.
the meaning of "paleolithic diet" is the diet that was eaten by palaeolithic people. there is no other sane meaning of "palaeolithic diet" - so you can't talk about palaeolithic diets without talking about the food eaten by palaeolithic people.....
Yes, I do think that. We all know there is a diet out there named the Paleo Diet. I can talk about it if I want. You can poo-poo my doing so if you want. Such is the internet.
I'm not poo-pooing you. I'm pointing out that this diet that calls itself the "paleo" diet has no basis whatsoever in palaeoanthropology. The way the diet is marketed is extremely dishonest. It says you're supposed to eat like a caveman/palaeolithic person/your ancestors - then the actual diet that you're told to eat bears no resemblence to that eaten by any actual palaeolithic people.
If you're fine following a diet based on pseudoscience that's up to you, but if you discuss it on a public forum (or any other diet based on fairy tales and myths) then you can expect people to come into the threads and state that, mostly because they care about people basing their dietary choices on correct information rather than myths and pseudoscience.0 -
hollydubs85 wrote: »I'm just waiting for someone to write a book on the "peasant diet." Where you can eat all the bread and vegetable soup you want! Just don't eat fruits, meats, or dairy because peasants couldn't afford that kind of stuff back in the 17th century.
My kinda diet!! LOL I, for one, am totally into trying the Paleo diet even if it's temporary because I'm used to eating nothing but processed foods. It's not the deficit that we are focusing on with the diet it's the quality of what we are eating. If you're not into it fine you don't have to but we are looking for guidance from people who ARE trying it.
Exactly!! I have had a really bad habit of not sticking to my diet when I am doing a calorie deficit and exercising. I am looking for a lifestyle change not a diet. I know this will be hard but I have to do something.
There is a fundamental flaw with both of these statements. The first is the word "temporary" . Temporary measures lead to... temporary results, and you really have to be aware of this.
This is not to say that I don't think you should try a Paleo style of eating, if it appeals to you. Go for it!! But no matter what diet style is adopted, success IS dependent on your ability to create long term and permanent change in your dietary and activity habits.
The very unfortunate statistic is that 80% of all people who lose weight, put the weight back on within a relatively short period of time - a couple of years. This is reality. It's important to be aware of reality - not in order to bring you down - but to realize, fully, that "habits" are difficult to change.
And that's what's contained in the second post - the word "habit". Dietary patterns are just that - "habits" - changing them requires conscious effort, over time, - forever! Because the real truth of the matter is - health and well being and attention to those things simply does not ever end..... even for people of normal weight. (So, because it's Paleo - it isn't going to magically change your "habit" of not sticking to a diet style or plan that you set out. This is what you actually have to address - no matter what diet style you choose.)
I don't want you to construe my post as being negative nor pessimistic. I am both a realistic and optimistic person by nature. Part of being successful means meeting reality head-on, and grasping what needs to be done - on an ongoing basis. From this respect, Paleo - just like any other diet - will only yield results if what you consume, calorie-wise, is less than what you expend. No diet style is "easy", per say. Losing weight, maintaining weight, eating nutritious foods (which usually means cooking and not eating out of package of some type) is "work", creating good eating habits is "work". There is absolutely no "magic" answer.
So, even though you may feel that this thread has been rather negative, rather than a string of posts praising this particular diet style, people have offered their honest responses and sighted what they believe the potential pitfalls are.
I do know some people who have successfully lost weight eating in a Paleo style and have maintained their weight loss for a considerable period of time. So, there is no doubt, if you choose this style, are able to stick with it, and if eating this way creates a calorie deficit - you'll lose weight.
As for processed food in general - almost all good diet styles limit or eliminate highly processed foods - and favor fresh vegetables and fruits (some in more moderation than others). In this respect, Paleo is not remotely unique at all.
I wish the best to you both. I'm sure, in fact, there's probably a Paleo community here that would be worth joining to provide specific support and advice on day to day questions.
0 -
neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
I was refering to the diet, not the people, since the thread is about the diet.
the meaning of "paleolithic diet" is the diet that was eaten by palaeolithic people. there is no other sane meaning of "palaeolithic diet" - so you can't talk about palaeolithic diets without talking about the food eaten by palaeolithic people.....
Yes, I do think that. We all know there is a diet out there named the Paleo Diet. I can talk about it if I want. You can poo-poo my doing so if you want. Such is the internet.
I'm not poo-pooing you. I'm pointing out that this diet that calls itself the "paleo" diet has no basis whatsoever in palaeoanthropology. The way the diet is marketed is extremely dishonest. It says you're supposed to eat like a caveman/palaeolithic person/your ancestors - then the actual diet that you're told to eat bears no resemblence to that eaten by any actual palaeolithic people.
If you're fine following a diet based on pseudoscience that's up to you, but if you discuss it on a public forum (or any other diet based on fairy tales and myths) then you can expect people to come into the threads and state that, mostly because they care about people basing their dietary choices on correct information rather than myths and pseudoscience.
I don't care whether cavemen ate this way or not. The diet is not science based because there is no science to back up the claims that things like beans and tomatoes and peppers and corn and grains are bad for us humans.
If cavemen thought they were, they were wrong. If dudes writing books and blogs think they are, they are wrong.0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »neandermagnon wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »-Get the cookbook - Against All Grains. It's fabulous!
- I totally believe in the what Paleo is all about. I'm 98% Paleo. If I have a ceasar salad with chicken, I may sprinkle 1 Tbs of parm chez on it but I skip the crutons. If I really crave a glass of milk once a week, I drink it. I do my very bust however to stay away from grains, processed foods and sugars.
- I just plan meals with protein and 2 veggies instead of 1 starch and 1 veggie. You'll get the hang of it.
- I'm not a huge veggie lover but have found salads during the day great and roasted veggies (broc, caulf, peppers, green beans) a great alternative, especially if you roast with garlic too!
- I incorporated this gradually over a week....I didn't pull everything and go cold turkey.
Good luck!
Peppers are a nightshade and not Paleo. Green beans are a legume and not Paleo.
But this seems to be pretty common, from what I've seen on these boards. Eating paleo, but not really. Which is fine. I imagine that is true of any restrictive diet.
Palaeolithic people ate legumes.
And peppers may be native to the Americas, but the first humans in the Americas had an upper palaeolithic level of technology, and therefore you can't say that any edible plant native to the Americas wasn't part of any palaeolithic diet.
I was refering to the diet, not the people, since the thread is about the diet.
the meaning of "paleolithic diet" is the diet that was eaten by palaeolithic people. there is no other sane meaning of "palaeolithic diet" - so you can't talk about palaeolithic diets without talking about the food eaten by palaeolithic people.....
Yes, I do think that. We all know there is a diet out there named the Paleo Diet. I can talk about it if I want. You can poo-poo my doing so if you want. Such is the internet.
I'm not poo-pooing you. I'm pointing out that this diet that calls itself the "paleo" diet has no basis whatsoever in palaeoanthropology. The way the diet is marketed is extremely dishonest. It says you're supposed to eat like a caveman/palaeolithic person/your ancestors - then the actual diet that you're told to eat bears no resemblence to that eaten by any actual palaeolithic people.
If you're fine following a diet based on pseudoscience that's up to you, but if you discuss it on a public forum (or any other diet based on fairy tales and myths) then you can expect people to come into the threads and state that, mostly because they care about people basing their dietary choices on correct information rather than myths and pseudoscience.
I don't care whether cavemen ate this way or not. The diet is not science based because there is no science to back up the claims that things like beans and tomatoes and peppers and corn and grains are bad for us humans.
If cavemen thought they were, they were wrong. If dudes writing books and blogs think they are, they are wrong.
if cavemen thought they were what? They just ate whatever was edible that grew or could be caught where they lived
why are you following a diet that you know isn't based in science?0
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