What keeps you motivated to continue this WOE?
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@glossbones! Lol!0
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Jbarnes1210 wrote: »For me, first it's the weight loss, but also being able to eat good food, and eat until I'm full. I like reading other low carb success stories and looking at before and after photos. How about you?
Being able to look down and see my belt buckle
When I take a few flights of stairs, I don't need an AED!!
I don't want to go back.
And the way I eat now is satisfying and sensible!
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Food no longer controls me. I used to have a full on addiction for all things junkie - particularly sweets and salty foods. Now, I can find a eating plan compatible snack, or pop a piece of trident (find a gum you can barely tolerate - not one you love - to prevent craving triggers!). Loud angry rock music helps, too.
Oreos, ice cream, candy bars, and chips - all manner of junk can sit on my counter, in my pantry, or in the fridge/freezer - and they no longer call to me. Or they call, but the number has changed. What used to be an insane screaming voice in my head that would not let me do a single thing until I fed the addiction is now a dim whisper in the back of my head that is easily ignored. Like most addicts, the urge is still there on occasion (bad day, FEED ME, etc.), but I can ignore it or feed it with fuel my body can actually use.
That is the biggest one.
Others:
Mental clarity - I never knew I was in a fog until I wasn't
Energy - I didn't know it was possible
Food Narcolepsy (also called Postprandial Somnolence) - gone unless I mix up my supplements or have really bad sleep days several days in a row.
Gastro Distress - I'm with @glossbones as well as no more sprinting to the bathroom for the runs or trying every position/caffeine to move things along
Food - I can literally eat anything I want. It's nice to not feel like I'm dying if I want something bad for me. For the most part, I simply don't want those things anymore. Anything with sugar triggers an instant migraine, and chips taste like paste and glue to me now.
Sleep - I'm sleeping better and feeling rested in the same very short amounts.
Waking - I was always a night person - I'd rather go to bed at 5 am than be getting up - and I no longer need a forklift (or a dozen alarms) to get me out of bed.
Clothes - I'm down 2 full clothing sizes (and quickly running out of clothes that fit!) LOL
Amorous Adventure - More adventure and more easily achieved...goals
Medical - better reports across the bored
Mood Stabilization - I've always had hormonal issues (I have PCOS, among other issues) and these days I'm far more level and manageable
Fitness - I can do things I haven't done in 20 years
Life - I feel better overall than I EVER have as an adult. Period.
Potential - While life had gotten blase and felt hopeless, lately I've started to dare to dream again....it's quite scary and exciting at the same time.0 -
KnitOrMiss wrote: »Food no longer controls me.
This! I loved all of these, but especially relate to this one.
Ten years ago (to the day on 5-16-15), I quit smoking, having been a pack-a-day smoker since my teens. I had tried and failed to quit many times. I kept a list of reasons why I wanted to quit smoking in my wallet, things like, "I don't want to die a smoker," and "I don't want to be a smoker when I get pregnant". The list of benefits of quitting smoking for me was a long one, but my favorite one was that I was no longer a slave to smoking. I knew a relapse, even one cigarette, would put me back there. When I quit, I freed myself from "the cigarette clock". I no longer timed every event of my day around smoking.
Fast forward ten years, and I was looking back on a year jam-packed with major life stressors (more on that later, if we have a "get to know you" thread around here somewhere). I coped along the way by eating way too many carbs and Dove dark chocolates. Yeah, those things aren't lacking in sugar. I have an addictive personality (hello, cigarettes!) and apparently I'm highly addicted to bread and chocolate. I would get raging hunger. Hunger headaches. I didn't have gestational diabetes, but one of my test results was borderline. The third score was close to the hypoglycemic range.
Since coming back to the LCD (I had tried Primal briefly in the past), I am finding myself free of the raging hunger cycle! That alone is worth so much.
Of course, rapid weight loss is da bomb. But I don't expect that to last forever. Even if my weight stalls where it is, I feel a hell of a lot healthier and saner than I was. And I can also look at cupcakes and smell fresh baked bread, smile, and walk away.
I have this nostalgia for cigarettes, but smoking isn't really a temptation at all anymore. And the nostalgia is bound up with the pride I take from having successfully quit. I hope to reach that feeling with processed carbs one day.
Love this thread!
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I feel better eating this way. My blood sugars are stable. I'm a reactive hypoglycemic and if I go on a carb binge I will "crash" 1 1/2 hours after eating. I've fainted from low blood sugar. I've seen it as low as 28 once. With this WOE, I feel good. My sugars stay in the low 70's.0
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While I don't meet many people's definition of low carb, I'm certainly lower carb than SAD eaters.
Why do I keep doing it? I went on ONE diet in my life. It was a mishmash of mediterranean and south beach (south beach wasn't a real "thing" yet, no books, no recipes, just something being discussed a bit on the news). I lost all the weight I wanted without much of any hunger or misery.
And I've kept it off 14+ years by doing the same thing.
As I've hit menopause, the carb level has certainly gone down, but the principles I followed remain the same.
It worked. It continues to work with some tweaking for menopause (I firmly believe, and evidence supports me, that menopause changes carbohydrate metabolism in many women, including me).
I have no qualms going lower carb as needed. And I KNOW it's sustainable.
Keep doing what you know works for YOU.0 -
my belly is the first to go and not my BOOBS0
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fancyroberts wrote: »my belly is the first to go and not my BOOBS
Preach.0 -
fancyroberts wrote: »my belly is the first to go and not my BOOBS
So many women say that!
As guys we lose the shed built over the tool as Larry The Cable Guy said
The first thing I found when I started losing weight was that I had a lap!
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I love the fact that I don't need to eat at a specific time. I can breeze through lunch and have no ill effects.0
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@glossbones ....lol, I was thinking that, but didn't want to post it.......0
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fancyroberts wrote: »my belly is the first to go and not my BOOBS
YES, whatever fat was on my stomach moved upwards. I love it!
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I'm relatively new to low-carb, but I chose it because Type 2 diabetes runs in my family, so I know that, genetically, I'm at risk.
My mom has it, some of her brothers do, a cousin is pre-diabetic, and my maternal grandmother and ALL SEVEN of her siblings -- regardless of weight -- were T2 diabetics. So was my maternal great-grandfather. And he was slender. I even have a brother who is very slim and pre-diabetic. Extra weight certainly doesn't help, but if I can avoid crazy blood sugar altogether, I'd rather do so. I also believe that I am already carb sensitive and that's why I've been struggling with weight creep and so much difficulty getting it off.
The reduction in food cravings is certainly a good side effect.0 -
glossbones wrote: »I haven't farted in 100+ days.
OMG...yes! How could I forget. My IBS-D is so much calmer. To heck with "whole grains" and "legumes" and other medieval forms of torture.0 -
This week was at the doc. We talked about testing for gluten intolerance. She said I'd had to eat gluten for minimum 4 weeks. I realized instantly that losing FA state was NOT a trade off I was willing to pay for a diagnose atm.
Lowcarb has changed my life in so many ways:
- IBS gone.
- No hyper bloodsugar right after eating, followed by carb coma after another 15 mins.
- No more hangry. Moods are more stable, things that used to upset me terribly, are now more like «Yeah, that happened. Bummer.»
- Very practical. Food does not dictate my life. Before I had to eat every ca 4 hrs. Now I can go almost all day. Doing IF + lowcarb is match made in heaven.
- I get more energy. In a medical lecture I watched recently, the doc said glucose metabolism yields 34 ATP per molecule, but when mitochondria is adapted to fat as primary fuel it gives 51 ATP! I'd say that is a compelling reason to stay in FA.
- Less inflammation. Less injury prone. Knees better.
- I «never» run out of energy at the gym anymore. Can train longer and harder. Haven't tested the upper limits. But did a 4.5 hrs cycling session which I finished with an anaerobic sprint! Nutrient partitioning gives me the best of two worlds, the endurance of fat energy with explosive power of fast GI when I wish to use it.
- Hair glossy, nails seldom break, skin less prone to acne (inflammation).
- «Recomp» is natural. I eat what I want since November 2014 with a full diet break. I bought some undies in size 38 in January. They're falling off. Now I use size 34 in undies, which is a new alltime low for me. Goal jeans are verging on getting too big. As long as I crush it in the gym, my body rewards me.
- «Healing» metabolism ? I suspect my adrenals and hormones were out of whack. Less than 1 year ago I sat in my apt with ballooned, bloated feet, burning soles, unable to walk. Desperate times. I was slowly gaining at ca 1200 kcal (weighing everything) and BMI over 27. BMI atm is 21.3. Now, I'm cautiously testing upping calories to 1500-2000 NET. Maintaining at lower end of scale weight so far, 54.5-55 kg. So looks promising. FYI: I also exercise a lot and I truly believe that exercising works synergistically with diet macros. I've f.ex. experimented with trying to upregulate mitochondrial biogenesis.
I surely forgot something, but these are the main reasons that for ME, the trade offs eating lowcarb are worth the results. Lowcarb/keto might not suit everyone or give dramatic results, but for some of us it really is a lifechanger.
Edit: Added BMI numbers.0 -
Jbarnes1210 wrote: »@glossbones ....lol, I was thinking that, but didn't want to post it.......
Wait... you're telling me you're not farting, and you want everyone to think you still are?
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glossbones wrote: »I haven't farted in 100+ days.
I fart non-stop. But I did that before this WOE. I blame the brussel sprouts! We eat a ton of those!
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DaliaMaria73 wrote: »To heck with "whole grains" and "legumes" and other medieval forms of torture.
Love this ^^^^
(I still eat legumes, but still!)0 -
With this WOE I don't have the blood sugar crashes that I had before. Plus it seems like I'm not a slave to eating anymore--I can go longer without eating, it takes fewer calories to satisfy me, and I can look at sweets and not be terribly tempted. Weight loss has been slow but has been trending downward. Regardless, I don't think I'll ever go back to the higher-carb diet ever again.0
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I feel better now in my forties than I did in my twenties and my weight hasn't been this low since 1996. I stil have weight to lose but this WOL makes staying under calories a breeze!!0
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