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Day 2 No white diet - bad headache
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don't you hate it when the white food does that to you?
word. you don't even what to know what happens if i even *look* at a head of cauliflower or box of powdered sugar.0 -
word. you don't even what to know what happens if i even *look* at a head of cauliflower or box of powdered sugar.
I am banned from publix for snorting sugar in the aisles...those were dark, dark, days...0 -
You can still eat potatoes and pasta but lay off the sweet stuff. That or slowly lower your added sugar intake. Make it past two weeks and you'll be fine.0
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Also, if potatoes are white, does that mean bananas and apples are also off the list? Colored peel, white flesh...0
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HeidiHirtle wrote: »Good for you for giving up what's basically junk food, especially the "white" stuff (and common sense prevails here that it doesn't include white vegetables etc., LOL!).
Technically, a potato is a "white" vegetable, so I see no reason why it would be obvious that it includes potatoes but not turnips. It's based on this idea that being "white" makes a food bad for you, which is not particularly sensible. Brown sugar is no better for you than white sugar (and both are fine anyway--if I'm more likely to eat rhubarb with some sugar, why does that make the rhubarb unhealthy?).
I've dropped sugar and flour for a time, and never gotten a "detox" headache, that seems crazy. Probably it's a reaction from going from high to low carb or, in the OP's case, caffeine withdrawal.
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HeidiHirtle wrote: »Good for you for giving up what's basically junk food, especially the "white" stuff (and common sense prevails here that it doesn't include white vegetables etc., LOL!).
I don't commonly eat such foods and although there's always that dreaded "detox headache" from quitting those foods if I've let them sneak back in, it's so worth kicking their butt to the curb it in the end. I'll never understand the general attitude around here that it's not wise to restrict foods that don't contribute to your health, and that restricting such foods is "extreme". Eating for optimal health is extremely gratifying.
Keep up the great work, you'll feel so much better physically and emotionally in no time!
Wow someone with common sense around here. Thanks!
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fearlessleader104 wrote: »Are you mocking Christianity by using lent as an excuse for your fad diet?
Cutting out excess high carb, sugars is a fad? Get real. I use lent to stop my gluttonous eating habits as well as improve other facets of my life. Isnt that the purpose of lent?
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Using Lent to aid a diet seems wrong to me. But your business.0
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I've been trying to think of a balanced diet using nothing but white food.
So far I've got rice for carbs, fish for protein, cauliflower and parsnip for fiber+vitamins, milk and white beans for supplementation.
Kind of stuck on fats though... non-coloured margarine?herrspoons wrote: »Don't mention it, oh Queen of Facetiousness.0 -
Add some chicken and make the dairy full fat. Although really oil seems colorless enough. I had a weirdly all white plate not terribly long ago (chicken, turnips, cauliflower, I believe were the main players, plus some cottage cheese). It was a poor choice from a playing POV but a perfectly decent dinner.0
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lemurcat12 wrote: »Add some chicken and make the dairy full fat. Although really oil seems colorless enough. I had a weirdly all white plate not terribly long ago (chicken, turnips, cauliflower, I believe were the main players, plus some cottage cheese). It was a poor choice from a playing POV but a perfectly decent dinner.
I'm so confused. Chicken breast is white meat. Allowed or not allowed? What about pork, "the other white meat"? And coke zero is not allowed but it isn't white. Is there a Visio process flow I can refer to? Definitely not seeing the Lenten connection either. Didn't Jesus want us to love unconditionally? I don't think he would be down with all this food demonization...
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Wookinpanub wrote: »
Cutting out excess high carb, sugars is a fad? Get real. I use lent to stop my gluttonous eating habits as well as improve other facets of my life. Isnt that the purpose of lent?
Which sugars are low carb?
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Wookinpanub wrote: »
Cutting out excess high carb, sugars is a fad? Get real. I use lent to stop my gluttonous eating habits as well as improve other facets of my life. Isnt that the purpose of lent?
The traditional purpose of Lent is the preparation of the believer through prayer, penance, repentance of sins, almsgiving, atonement and self-denial. Dat google doe.0 -
so cauliflower is bad, because white?
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I bet you have the 'atkins flu'. Eat some sugar.
^ This, except the advice to eat sugar.The first week of switching to a low carb (which essentially you're probably doing if you're cutting out "white foods") can often cause a "Atkins flu" as your body goes through carb withdrawals and balances itself out. Increasing your salt intake helps (I put soy sauce on just about everything for a day or two and that helped) if your intent is to go low carb.
If your intent is not to go low carb, eat some non-white carby foods, like sweet potatoes, apples, bananas, pears, raisins...0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »
Technically, a potato is a "white" vegetable, so I see no reason why it would be obvious that it includes potatoes but not turnips. It's based on this idea that being "white" makes a food bad for you, which is not particularly sensible. Brown sugar is no better for you than white sugar (and both are fine anyway--if I'm more likely to eat rhubarb with some sugar, why does that make the rhubarb unhealthy?).
I've dropped sugar and flour for a time, and never gotten a "detox" headache, that seems crazy. Probably it's a reaction from going from high to low carb or, in the OP's case, caffeine withdrawal.
And who would think that brown sugar is good for you because it's not white?
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HeidiHirtle wrote: »Where oh where is the common sense here? Silly me for thinking that it would be obvious to all that when one is talking about bad white carbs, they are referring to sugar, flour, refined stuff, maybe potatoes (though I think they are fine for you if plain baked).
And who would think that brown sugar is good for you because it's not white?
Only ignorant idiots talk about bad white carbs.-1 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »Using Lent to aid a diet seems wrong to me. But your business.
So at New Years it's OK but at Lent it's sacrilegious?0 -
Only ignorant idiots talk about bad white carbs.
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HeidiHirtle wrote: »I was referring to some above statements that eliminating white foods would include caultiflower, eggs, dairy....which is silly thinking. Of course cauliflower isn't included, it's a cruciferous vegetable and is awesome for you.
I see what you did there0 -
I think it's crazy how MFP threads are full of people bashing any lifestyle except "everything in moderation." By cutting out refined carbs, sugars, and over-processed food stuffs, I am eating everything in moderation. I'm just saving up my allotment of sugar & white flour to be used at thing like birthdays on a piece of cake, and making room for more delicious and nourishing food that's got a better nutritional bang for my calorie buck in my daily diet.0
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HeidiHirtle wrote: »Where oh where is the common sense here? Silly me for thinking that it would be obvious to all that when one is talking about bad white carbs, they are referring to sugar, flour, refined stuff, maybe potatoes (though I think they are fine for you if plain baked).
And who would think that brown sugar is good for you because it's not white?
FWIW, I have literally had people on these boards tell me that they only eat brown sugar because it's healthier. There are a lot more misguided people on the internet than you realize.
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TopazMermaid wrote: »
So at New Years it's OK but at Lent it's sacrilegious?
Is New Year's a religious season of penance, etc.? I did not know that.0 -
I'm not bashing anyone's "lifestyle."
(Also, if you are saving it up, I hate to tell you, but you aren't cutting it out. You are eating it in moderation, just based on what works for you as moderation.)0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »
Is New Year's a religious season of penance, etc.? I did not know that.
Pretty sure New Year's is about drunken debauchery, so ... point made! I think a lot of people use Lent to give up something that's bad for them anyway, much like making New Year's resolutions, though. Not saying it's right/wrong but, as they say, "it is what it is."0 -
Don't get me started on that stupid movie about the guy who gave up one-night stands for Lent (or something like that). But anyway I'm pretty sure we aren't supposed to talk about Lent--Lent as a diet aid is just a personal pet peeve even though it's none of my business, I know.0
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