80 carbs/10 protein/10 fat ___Fruitarian diet
Replies
-
pinkraynedropjacki wrote: »Freelee the banana girl does this whole fruit thing... claims to eat 30 bananas a day....... I tried it for 3 days...... got so sick that it took me months to recover. Others have gotten way worse than I did..... we are talking kidney problems. She claims it can cure everything..... including cancer. Other people just simply got fatter, and she just told them they were doing it wrong.
It's basically an eating disorder nothing more.
I think she's a fraud, and bulimic or anorexic. Or some combination of the two. She's not eating that much fruit for realz.0 -
I love fruit. But my stomach would be all kinds of tore up if that was most of my diet. I'll get those little "personal" sized watermelons and eat the whole thing...and regret it later. It's just so tasty. But that doesn't make it good lol.0
-
I didn't read all the responses, but I figured I'd chime in.
I did the whole "hclf, rawtill4" 80/10/10 thing to a T for a little over a month. Even read the 80/10/10 book by Dr. Graham. It sounded great to me because all the followers tout being able to eat as much as you want and still lose weight. I was naive. I lost 5lbs during that month, but I think it was mostly water weight because when I started eating normally again, my weight pretty much shot back up. Now I just eat whatever I want in a calorie deficit and I've lost 13 of the 20lbs I want to lose. I actually felt that I had quite a lot more energy than normal. Obviously carbs are good for that. The reason I stopped is because I started getting horrible nausea from bananas (maybe some type of intolerance? Idk) and bananas are cheap and were what I was basing all of my smoothies and a lot of my meals with.
So I guess what I'm trying to say is, it's not the worst thing you could do, but you aren't going to lose anymore weight doing it than you would just eating whatever and being in a deficit.0 -
HeySwoleSister wrote: »Here's why a bunch of misguided people are going to think this is a great diet:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/food/article-3069294/New-book-reveals-Beyonce-really-got-Met-Gala-body.html
There is no way that balance of macros could be healthy. What a crock.
Oh, no.
Should we start a pool as to when we'll see the first meeting of the "Beyonce fruit diet" and "waist cincher" threads?
Channel surfing last night and came across a TV ad for one of those things. Anyone seen it? Lord. That thing looks painful. Some sort of double velcro wrap thing. And, people will buy them.
0 -
I would pass out. I don't even think I eat fruit unless someone reminds me.0
-
-
Here's why a bunch of misguided people are going to think this is a great diet:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/food/article-3069294/New-book-reveals-Beyonce-really-got-Met-Gala-body.html
There is no way that balance of macros could be healthy. What a crock.
Doing something like that for 22 days isn't a big deal, assuming you actually can do it. The kicker is what the average person would do for the next 22 days.
I don't know, I would think going that low in fat and protein and that heavy in carbs would make you feel fairly badly within a few days. It would me, I know. I couldn't eat like that for 1 day. Then again, I do low-carb and I'm speaking for myself only. To each their own!
Same for me. But I was talking more along the lines of long term physical/metabolic changes. In only 22 days, you're aren't going to do irreparable damage to yourself. So there isn't a significant inherent danger to it. Then, after the 22 days are over, most people will experience some sort of rebound. After which, are they really ahead of the game?
Sorry I wasn't clear... I wasn't arguing against your post/point.
No worries! I agree with you. 22 days isn't long enough to do long-term damage.
The whole aspect of a celebrity endorsing something so unhealthy knowing that people of all ages idolize you is a whole other topic, but that's what gets to me. Many times Beyonce is praised for her body image and promotion of a healthy ideal and then this type of thing happens. Doesn't make sense.0 -
HeySwoleSister wrote: »Here's why a bunch of misguided people are going to think this is a great diet:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/food/article-3069294/New-book-reveals-Beyonce-really-got-Met-Gala-body.html
There is no way that balance of macros could be healthy. What a crock.
Oh, no.
Should we start a pool as to when we'll see the first meeting of the "Beyonce fruit diet" and "waist cincher" threads?
Channel surfing last night and came across a TV ad for one of those things. Anyone seen it? Lord. That thing looks painful. Some sort of double velcro wrap thing. And, people will buy them.
I'm not the type of person who could actually pull this off, but wouldn't it be great to respond that yes, you'd like a waist cincher, but you plan to use it wrapped around your head to cover your mouth. That will help you stop eating. And you'd like a bottle of green coffee bean pills, but you'll be using them as suppositories because you heard they work faster that way.0 -
From my research, a fruitarian diet, in order to give you all the proper nutrients, would need to be extremely high in calories - in the range of 3000 Cal/day or higher. Even if you could stand eating that amount of fruit, it's only suited for endurance athletes who train at that level, otherwise, you will just end up gaining weight (or if you don't eat enough to have all the calories, then end up with a nutritional deficiency).
I have lost about 25 lbs since the 3rd week of January, and I do consider myself somewhat of an endurance athlete, but not a professional. I do vigorous swimming for an hour (one day a week), do a spin class for an hour (one day a week) and ride my bike between 50 and 55 miles every week (Satudays and Sundays), average speed of 15-15.5 mph for the entire rides including with wind resistance and climbs. But even I couldn't sustain myself on a fruitarian diet. What I do is I load up on fruits and occasionally other carbs before my rides on the weekends. They keep me fueled through the rides and keep me healthy.
But otherwise, I have a good intake of fruit (frankly, I'm a sweet freak and fruits are the healthiest way to give my body what it wants), but nothing crazy. I do that in moderation, just as everything else. I eat rice, lentils, meats, fish, eggs, nuts, mixed vegetables, and even cookies and ice cream when I want (but in moderate amounts). I simply couldn't get my nutritional and calorie needs met from fruit alone or fruit primarily,0 -
HeySwoleSister wrote: »Don't Fruitarians live off the fruit that grows on trees in people's yards but are on branches overhanging the sidewalk? I saw some documentary about some people that did that, and "Fruitarians" are what they called themselves. They had groups in LA an San Diego, and urged it as a "lifestyle" for everyone.
My New England-dwelling self laughed my glutes off at the notion.
They suggested a lifestyle eating fruit off of other ppls trees? Round here that's called robbery.
Meh, I'd rather be a freegan!0 -
Is also like to point out that there is no way that we evolved to eat a raw fruit diet. Humans created the fruit seen today through artificial selection. The fruit from the early years of our evolution would have been unsuitable for a complete diet.
For a fine example of this Google "Ray Comfort, atheist's nightmare"0 -
Man, if it is like the Ashton Kutcher linked article has and you can still eats nuts and seeds for proteins/fats and olives and avocados for even more fats (delicious fats.. just had guacamole with olives in it) well I'd love to eat that much fruit but I'd probably mess it up with too many of the protein-y/fatty items. Mmm. I doubt I'd lose weight, the only time I did as a vegan was when I was too busy to eat regular, full meals and instead drank only water and exercised all the time, so it was definitely not just the vegan part, more so the calorie deficit.0
-
crazyjerseygirl wrote: »HeySwoleSister wrote: »Don't Fruitarians live off the fruit that grows on trees in people's yards but are on branches overhanging the sidewalk? I saw some documentary about some people that did that, and "Fruitarians" are what they called themselves. They had groups in LA an San Diego, and urged it as a "lifestyle" for everyone.
My New England-dwelling self laughed my glutes off at the notion.
They suggested a lifestyle eating fruit off of other ppls trees? Round here that's called robbery.
Meh, I'd rather be a freegan!
They were very careful to say that it was only the branches of the mango/avocado/orange trees that passed over the public sidewalk that provided their food.
And, again, new England resident laughs. Because, seriously. This "fresh avocados falling in the streets" thing happens for maybe 50 people per year worldwide?0 -
HeySwoleSister wrote: »crazyjerseygirl wrote: »HeySwoleSister wrote: »Don't Fruitarians live off the fruit that grows on trees in people's yards but are on branches overhanging the sidewalk? I saw some documentary about some people that did that, and "Fruitarians" are what they called themselves. They had groups in LA an San Diego, and urged it as a "lifestyle" for everyone.
My New England-dwelling self laughed my glutes off at the notion.
They suggested a lifestyle eating fruit off of other ppls trees? Round here that's called robbery.
Meh, I'd rather be a freegan!
They were very careful to say that it was only the branches of the mango/avocado/orange trees that passed over the public sidewalk that provided their food.
And, again, new England resident laughs. Because, seriously. This "fresh avocados falling in the streets" thing happens for maybe 50 people per year worldwide?
Ahh ok, well they aren't thieves, but they are still a tad misguided. Not that i wouldn't nom a free avocado but still.
I'm in NY and all we get is acorns and pine cones and I suspect that we would have to fight the squirrels for those.0 -
crazyjerseygirl wrote: »HeySwoleSister wrote: »crazyjerseygirl wrote: »HeySwoleSister wrote: »Don't Fruitarians live off the fruit that grows on trees in people's yards but are on branches overhanging the sidewalk? I saw some documentary about some people that did that, and "Fruitarians" are what they called themselves. They had groups in LA an San Diego, and urged it as a "lifestyle" for everyone.
My New England-dwelling self laughed my glutes off at the notion.
They suggested a lifestyle eating fruit off of other ppls trees? Round here that's called robbery.
Meh, I'd rather be a freegan!
They were very careful to say that it was only the branches of the mango/avocado/orange trees that passed over the public sidewalk that provided their food.
And, again, new England resident laughs. Because, seriously. This "fresh avocados falling in the streets" thing happens for maybe 50 people per year worldwide?
Ahh ok, well they aren't thieves, but they are still a tad misguided. Not that i wouldn't nom a free avocado but still.
I'm in NY and all we get is acorns and pine cones and I suspect that we would have to fight the squirrels for those.
And, that's maybe a month a year? I mean...we've only seen GRASS over the last month or two....the foraging life...it's not for us.0 -
HeySwoleSister wrote: »crazyjerseygirl wrote: »HeySwoleSister wrote: »crazyjerseygirl wrote: »HeySwoleSister wrote: »Don't Fruitarians live off the fruit that grows on trees in people's yards but are on branches overhanging the sidewalk? I saw some documentary about some people that did that, and "Fruitarians" are what they called themselves. They had groups in LA an San Diego, and urged it as a "lifestyle" for everyone.
My New England-dwelling self laughed my glutes off at the notion.
They suggested a lifestyle eating fruit off of other ppls trees? Round here that's called robbery.
Meh, I'd rather be a freegan!
They were very careful to say that it was only the branches of the mango/avocado/orange trees that passed over the public sidewalk that provided their food.
And, again, new England resident laughs. Because, seriously. This "fresh avocados falling in the streets" thing happens for maybe 50 people per year worldwide?
Ahh ok, well they aren't thieves, but they are still a tad misguided. Not that i wouldn't nom a free avocado but still.
I'm in NY and all we get is acorns and pine cones and I suspect that we would have to fight the squirrels for those.
And, that's maybe a month a year? I mean...we've only seen GRASS over the last month or two....the foraging life...it's not for us.
Pine needles duh.
But yeah, there's a reason why the freegans around here don't look for falling fruit.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions