Extreme Low Carb Diet
Replies
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melodicraven wrote: »Ok. So what I want to know is, for all responders who are so vehemently anti low carb - and for those of you who just generally don't think it makes a difference whatsoever - cico, cico, forever and ever, amen, etc ... why bother responding in the first place to keto/lowcarb/lchf/onlymeat4evah! threads? What is the payoff? Anyone who is doing low carb and getting good results is probably going to continue doing it. Same with people who are eating a more traditional, less restrictive woe. Different strokes for different folks.
Why is it necessary to be so combative about it?
If the OP ask for opinions on diets, you will get every side of the discussion, which is a good thing because you should understand a diet before going into a diet, especially a restrictive one (same would go for vegan or vegetarian). I join threads for a few reasons, 1. basic science (all diets must obey CICO, 2. there are a variety of options of getting there, you just have to find a method that works, 3. make sure people don't make wild claims (e.i - you burn more body fat if you follow XX diet, and 4. I like to follow diets I do not do myself to educate myself further so I can make more informed decisions. I would suspect others on this forum are big on # 3.
Additionally, a lot of new people (not necessarily the OP) will try to implement a diet without knowing the details (e.i. if you go LC it needs to be high fat, not high protein or if you go vegetarian you need to ensure you eat the right combinations of protein sources to get complete proteins). And if you don't do things correctly, you can end up sick or hospitalized. This can be true during Keto too as someone else pointed out with electrolyte imbalances. So a lot of times, even if I don't know all the details, I will at least try to make people aware that additional research is needed prior to just cutting "xx" food out of their diet.
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gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.0 -
gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
^ please substantiate that claim. Ideally both protein and cal intake will be held constant between groups0 -
gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
^ please substantiate that claim. Ideally both protein and cal intake will be held constant between groups
Holding calories constant to remove one of the benefits of the Keto arm ? LOL.
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gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
^ please substantiate that claim. Ideally both protein and cal intake will be held constant between groups
Holding calories constant to remove one of the benefits of the Keto arm ? LOL.
Oh, I didn't know you could only reduce your calories when doing keto, wow.0 -
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gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
^ please substantiate that claim. Ideally both protein and cal intake will be held constant between groups
Holding calories constant to remove one of the benefits of the Keto arm ? LOL.
If keto is actually better for fat loss, as claimed, then shouldn't you control for as many possible confounders as possible to show that it is?
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gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
How do you lose fat without losing weight?0 -
It is possible to do a low carb and high fat diet:
Eat butter, sour cream, oils, meat, nuts, fish, eggs, and lots of leafy greens and veggies like these: romaine, spinach, swiss chard, collards, kale, cabbage, bok choy, mushrooms, avocados, okra, cucumbers, green beans, cauliflower, broccoli, bell peppers, yellow squash, zucchini, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, broccoli, snow peas.
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All those vegetables include carbs. Are you counting them in your daily tally?0
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All those vegetables include carbs. Are you counting them in your daily tally?
Most people who low carb use "net carbs" which is essentially total carbs minus fiber, so you can incorporate more vegetables than you're thinking. I believe (although I've been known to be wrong) that most European countries only put net carbs on their food labels.0 -
gettingfitformywedding wrote: »My mom and co worker have convinced me that a low carb diet is what I should follow to reach my weight loss goals. I've read the other forums and am not interested in the debate on whether low calorie or low carb is the better of two.. I've tried low carb, I did well on it but constantly felt hungry. I know different diets work for different people, but these two people in particular have lost significant weight following extreme low carb diet. My coworker has lost 120 pounds since January of this year when he went to the doctor for the first time in awhile and found out he was diabetic and weighed over 300 pounds. These two people are following a diet similar to Atkins.. only eating 20-30 carbs per day. I suppose my question is.. is this realistic? 20 carbs is not a lot at all especially when you're used to eating 200-250 carbs per day. I feel that even if I lose the weight, or in my coworkers situation that when/if he stops following the low carb regime OR even goes back to eating a daily recommended amount of carbs that he will likely gain it back. Advice?
I've just done a 9 week stint on the New Atkins diet and this is what happened to me:
I lost 12 kilograms in 9 weeks
I got over my sugar addiction because no sugar is allowed
I learned to control my portions and be satisfied with less food - low carb, moderate protein and high fat is surprisingly filling.
I learned to eat vegetables because you HAVE to eat a certain amount per day
I learned to plan ahead, cook with the minimum of spices and appreciate flavors
I learned to drink water
All in all the diet really helped me and taught me a LOT.
BUT I am no longer on it because: I tend to be impulsive and on that diet you have to plan almost every meal. i also enjoy variety and that diet is very restrictive in the beginning. You can slowly add carbs, fruit, dairy etc back to your diet as you progress but I wasn't willing to wait that long.
Still, I'm sure it works for a lot of people. Why don't you try it and find out if it suits you or not?0 -
tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »queenliz99 wrote: »
Until it's proven incorrect!!!
Just so we're all on the same page here. Are you saying, that in the context of the conversation the picture was used, that the science is incorrect.
Or was this merely a drive by?
Drive by! it was a comment aimed at the picture!
OK, so to flame and derail.0 -
tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »queenliz99 wrote: »
Until it's proven incorrect!!!
Just so we're all on the same page here. Are you saying, that in the context of the conversation the picture was used, that the science is incorrect.
Or was this merely a drive by?
Drive by! it was a comment aimed at the picture!
OK, so to flame and derail.
Nope.
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tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »queenliz99 wrote: »
Until it's proven incorrect!!!
Just so we're all on the same page here. Are you saying, that in the context of the conversation the picture was used, that the science is incorrect.
Or was this merely a drive by?
Drive by! it was a comment aimed at the picture!
OK, so to flame and derail.
Nope.
Then what was the point, your comment had nothing to do with the thread or context the picture was used in. Looks like bait and derailing to me.
Or a funny way to agree with the poster who thinks the science is incorrect.0 -
It was merely a comment that the picture 'which was posted as a condescending comment' was only correct to the point that - science is true, but only until its proven incorrect.
That was all - not flaming, no derailing. The thread has continued on its merry way.
And it would appear that only one or two people got their knickers in a twist over it.
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All those vegetables include carbs. Are you counting them in your daily tally?
Most people who low carb use "net carbs" which is essentially total carbs minus fiber, so you can incorporate more vegetables than you're thinking. I believe (although I've been known to be wrong) that most European countries only put net carbs on their food labels.
Yes, many use net carbs instead of total carbs, though that is an individual choice.
I personally use total carbs because I was trained to use total carbs by my dietitian when I had Gestational Diabetes and I'm more comfortable with it. I think that the Atkins line of products use net carbs. I looked at the back of a box a few months ago because I was intrigued by the chocolate bars that only had 3 net carbs. When I looked at the back it gave total carbs and net carbs.
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gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
I was in keto for over a year and lost a lot of muscle along with my fat loss (including heart muscle). I'm not saying that's the default nature of it, just that being in keto doesn't put you in a magic state of being where you only lose fat.0 -
tennisdude2004 wrote: »It was merely a comment that the picture 'which was posted to be condescending comment' was only correct to the point that - science is true, but only until its proven incorrect.
That was all - not flaming, no derailing. The thread has continued on its merry way.
So you saw it as condescending, which I didn't, and appear to have tried to be condescending yourself via drive by. I think we're on the same page now.0 -
Oh brother... I'm out.0
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tennisdude2004 wrote: »It was merely a comment that the picture 'which was posted to be condescending comment' was only correct to the point that - science is true, but only until its proven incorrect.
That was all - not flaming, no derailing. The thread has continued on its merry way.
So you saw it as condescending, which I didn't, and appear to have tried to be condescending yourself via drive by. I think we're on the same page now.
I think so too
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gettingfitformywedding wrote: »Thanks to everyone who posted their opinion and advice! I read through everyone's response and have decided to follow the low carb for a couple of weeks and see how it goes. I'm on day two and feel lots of energy and don't feel hungry! As I had said before, I did low cal and did well on it, but am wanting to see how my body responds to something different. Sometimes it's good to shake things up a bit. Every person responds differently to different things. I will post my 15 day results.
Give it 3 weeks to be keto-adapted. (Below 40 grams/day). Remember, it's not about weight loss, it's about Fat loss and improving your blood and hormone profiles. In this regard Keto wins hands-down every time.
I was in keto for over a year and lost a lot of muscle along with my fat loss (including heart muscle). I'm not saying that's the default nature of it, just that being in keto doesn't put you in a magic state of being where you only lose fat.
Nor does it automatically improve blood and hormone profiles (any associated weight loss with it does that). If you wanted to test that theory, over-eat on keto to see if it has similar results as overeating on all other types of food.0 -
tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisduse2004 wrote:What like the WHOLE FOODS? Please!!!!
I do happen to think that limiting the amount of inflammatory foods in my diet is healthy.
I certainly do not want MY diet to lack in essential fats and protein.
For me and probably countless others Low Carb means I don't have to restrict my portion size, that I don't have to stop eating something when i'm still hungry or I still want more.
The the biggest benefit is I can eat the food I love and not have the ball-ache or worry about weighing it or logging it.
For me it's simplicity and taste at it's finest.
Its not just the low carbers that dont have to worry about portion size. I am like i have a tape worm and can still lose weight. I lost weight in my tenure without logging calories too. And i eat over 200g of carbs a day... i generally aim for 250g. But this has more to do with thr fact that i have a good amount of muscle, my tdee is about 3000 ish calories and i enjoy being active. And my diet doesn't lack essential fats or proteins because its actually pretty easy to hit both of those levels. Even high carbs can hit the essential levels. I actually exceed both levels and hit 45 to 50% of my calories from carbs.
I'm not saying it is only low carber's that can eat intuitively - I am merely siting my own experience.
If I switch to more carbs in my diet, I really struggle to control my appetite.
Besides my favour foods are mainly meat based
I'm just about to make a pancetta and Shiitake omelette (with a large glass of wine)!
Those statements sound contradictory.
In what way?
You're favorite foods are mainly meat, but you can't control your appetite with carbs.
I'm not saying it is necessarily contradictory, just they sound that way.
There's nothing contradictory in the least about my statement (if that's what you are comparing)!!!??
If you are comparing my experience with your own experience (as Lemurcat12 is) then our experiences are contradictory (to a fashion), but my statement in isolation does not fall under the definition of contradictory.
I think what seems weird about it is that you say you have trouble controlling your appetite with foods that you aren't that into. I'm not that into bread or rice or the like either, but that's why I decided it was silly to cut them out--I am not going to overeat rice, even before dieting I never kept bread around the house and if I had some I'd forget to eat it, the sauce has always been what I liked about pasta, etc.
But I do understand -- apparently some people (although not me) find that their hunger levels are different if they eat carbs and so cutting carbs ends up not being about tempting foods, but a hunger control mechanism.0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisduse2004 wrote:What like the WHOLE FOODS? Please!!!!
I do happen to think that limiting the amount of inflammatory foods in my diet is healthy.
I certainly do not want MY diet to lack in essential fats and protein.
For me and probably countless others Low Carb means I don't have to restrict my portion size, that I don't have to stop eating something when i'm still hungry or I still want more.
The the biggest benefit is I can eat the food I love and not have the ball-ache or worry about weighing it or logging it.
For me it's simplicity and taste at it's finest.
Its not just the low carbers that dont have to worry about portion size. I am like i have a tape worm and can still lose weight. I lost weight in my tenure without logging calories too. And i eat over 200g of carbs a day... i generally aim for 250g. But this has more to do with thr fact that i have a good amount of muscle, my tdee is about 3000 ish calories and i enjoy being active. And my diet doesn't lack essential fats or proteins because its actually pretty easy to hit both of those levels. Even high carbs can hit the essential levels. I actually exceed both levels and hit 45 to 50% of my calories from carbs.
I'm not saying it is only low carber's that can eat intuitively - I am merely siting my own experience.
If I switch to more carbs in my diet, I really struggle to control my appetite.
Besides my favour foods are mainly meat based
I'm just about to make a pancetta and Shiitake omelette (with a large glass of wine)!
Those statements sound contradictory.
In what way?
You're favorite foods are mainly meat, but you can't control your appetite with carbs.
I'm not saying it is necessarily contradictory, just they sound that way.
There's nothing contradictory in the least about my statement (if that's what you are comparing)!!!??
If you are comparing my experience with your own experience (as Lemurcat12 is) then our experiences are contradictory (to a fashion), but my statement in isolation does not fall under the definition of contradictory.
I think what seems weird about it is that you say you have trouble controlling your appetite with foods that you aren't that into. I'm not that into bread or rice or the like either, but that's why I decided it was silly to cut them out--I am not going to overeat rice, even before dieting I never kept bread around the house and if I had some I'd forget to eat it, the sauce has always been what I liked about pasta, etc.
But I do understand -- apparently some people (although not me) find that their hunger levels are different if they eat carbs and so cutting carbs ends up not being about tempting foods, but a hunger control mechanism.
I think you are making lots of assumptions, which is why your assumption my statement is contradictory is wrong.
My favorite food is meat (beef, game, chicken, lamb, pork etc), I will happily eat that for every meal - it's expensive so I don't.
Liking meat does not mean I do not like carbs. Eating low carb does not mean I do not like carbs.
I like carbs, I have never said I do not like carbs. My diet is low carb - it isn't no carb.
My favorite meal is chilli (I love chilli) - I will generally make it and eat it until I am full.
I also like pizza and when I eat pizza I eat it till I'm full, which is generally the whole pizza, there are a lot more calories in a whole pizza than there is in my big bowl of chilli (i have entered the recipe into MFP to see).
I like Doritios, I don't crave them and can happily go a month without them, but believe me if I open a big sharing packet I will eat from it until I am satisfied, which is general most of the packet.
I do not like having to stop eating until I am full or I feel I have eaten enough and am satisfied and with carbs the calories stack up quicker than with protein / fatty foods.
That is why for ME a low carb diet is perfect.
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tennisdude2004 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisduse2004 wrote:What like the WHOLE FOODS? Please!!!!
I do happen to think that limiting the amount of inflammatory foods in my diet is healthy.
I certainly do not want MY diet to lack in essential fats and protein.
For me and probably countless others Low Carb means I don't have to restrict my portion size, that I don't have to stop eating something when i'm still hungry or I still want more.
The the biggest benefit is I can eat the food I love and not have the ball-ache or worry about weighing it or logging it.
For me it's simplicity and taste at it's finest.
Its not just the low carbers that dont have to worry about portion size. I am like i have a tape worm and can still lose weight. I lost weight in my tenure without logging calories too. And i eat over 200g of carbs a day... i generally aim for 250g. But this has more to do with thr fact that i have a good amount of muscle, my tdee is about 3000 ish calories and i enjoy being active. And my diet doesn't lack essential fats or proteins because its actually pretty easy to hit both of those levels. Even high carbs can hit the essential levels. I actually exceed both levels and hit 45 to 50% of my calories from carbs.
I'm not saying it is only low carber's that can eat intuitively - I am merely siting my own experience.
If I switch to more carbs in my diet, I really struggle to control my appetite.
Besides my favour foods are mainly meat based
I'm just about to make a pancetta and Shiitake omelette (with a large glass of wine)!
Those statements sound contradictory.
In what way?
You're favorite foods are mainly meat, but you can't control your appetite with carbs.
I'm not saying it is necessarily contradictory, just they sound that way.
There's nothing contradictory in the least about my statement (if that's what you are comparing)!!!??
If you are comparing my experience with your own experience (as Lemurcat12 is) then our experiences are contradictory (to a fashion), but my statement in isolation does not fall under the definition of contradictory.
I think what seems weird about it is that you say you have trouble controlling your appetite with foods that you aren't that into. I'm not that into bread or rice or the like either, but that's why I decided it was silly to cut them out--I am not going to overeat rice, even before dieting I never kept bread around the house and if I had some I'd forget to eat it, the sauce has always been what I liked about pasta, etc.
But I do understand -- apparently some people (although not me) find that their hunger levels are different if they eat carbs and so cutting carbs ends up not being about tempting foods, but a hunger control mechanism.
I think you are making lots of assumptions, which is why your assumption my statement is contradictory is wrong.
I made no assumptions and was not claiming that your statement was contradictory. I was explaining why someone might read it as such, or at least a little weird. Based on what you'd said I actually thought it made sense, as I also said.0 -
Oh, also a bag of Doritos has 140 calories, 68 of which are from carbs, 63 of which are from fat. Again, seems weird to blame "carbs" for those calories. Pizza generally has a ton of calories from fat too, cheese, fatty meats (if you add them), olives, olive oil or whatever else is used depending on the pizza.
It's so weird how people write off high cal foods they tend to overeat as "carbs" when typically they are a mix.0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »Oh, also a bag of Doritos has 140 calories, 68 of which are from carbs, 63 of which are from fat. Again, seems weird to blame "carbs" for those calories. Pizza generally has a ton of calories from fat too, cheese, fatty meats (if you add them), olives, olive oil or whatever else is used depending on the pizza.
It's so weird how people write off high cal foods they tend to overeat as "carbs" when typically they are a mix.
i always find this interesting as well...
most of the carbs people seem to be "addicted" to and whatnot seem to be of this mix...i've yet to here about black beans giving anyone crazy cravings...0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisduse2004 wrote:What like the WHOLE FOODS? Please!!!!
I do happen to think that limiting the amount of inflammatory foods in my diet is healthy.
I certainly do not want MY diet to lack in essential fats and protein.
For me and probably countless others Low Carb means I don't have to restrict my portion size, that I don't have to stop eating something when i'm still hungry or I still want more.
The the biggest benefit is I can eat the food I love and not have the ball-ache or worry about weighing it or logging it.
For me it's simplicity and taste at it's finest.
Its not just the low carbers that dont have to worry about portion size. I am like i have a tape worm and can still lose weight. I lost weight in my tenure without logging calories too. And i eat over 200g of carbs a day... i generally aim for 250g. But this has more to do with thr fact that i have a good amount of muscle, my tdee is about 3000 ish calories and i enjoy being active. And my diet doesn't lack essential fats or proteins because its actually pretty easy to hit both of those levels. Even high carbs can hit the essential levels. I actually exceed both levels and hit 45 to 50% of my calories from carbs.
I'm not saying it is only low carber's that can eat intuitively - I am merely siting my own experience.
If I switch to more carbs in my diet, I really struggle to control my appetite.
Besides my favour foods are mainly meat based
I'm just about to make a pancetta and Shiitake omelette (with a large glass of wine)!
Those statements sound contradictory.
In what way?
You're favorite foods are mainly meat, but you can't control your appetite with carbs.
I'm not saying it is necessarily contradictory, just they sound that way.
There's nothing contradictory in the least about my statement (if that's what you are comparing)!!!??
If you are comparing my experience with your own experience (as Lemurcat12 is) then our experiences are contradictory (to a fashion), but my statement in isolation does not fall under the definition of contradictory.
I think what seems weird about it is that you say you have trouble controlling your appetite with foods that you aren't that into. I'm not that into bread or rice or the like either, but that's why I decided it was silly to cut them out--I am not going to overeat rice, even before dieting I never kept bread around the house and if I had some I'd forget to eat it, the sauce has always been what I liked about pasta, etc.
But I do understand -- apparently some people (although not me) find that their hunger levels are different if they eat carbs and so cutting carbs ends up not being about tempting foods, but a hunger control mechanism.
I think you are making lots of assumptions, which is why your assumption my statement is contradictory is wrong.
I made no assumptions and was not claiming that your statement was contradictory. I was explaining why someone might read it as such, or at least a little weird. Based on what you'd said I actually thought it made sense, as I also said.
Oh sorry I assumed you found my statement contradictory.
Maybe it was your comment 'I find this contradictory too'.???
Also a sharing bag of doritos is more like 1000 calories. nom, nom, nom0 -
tennisdude2004 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisduse2004 wrote:What like the WHOLE FOODS? Please!!!!
I do happen to think that limiting the amount of inflammatory foods in my diet is healthy.
I certainly do not want MY diet to lack in essential fats and protein.
For me and probably countless others Low Carb means I don't have to restrict my portion size, that I don't have to stop eating something when i'm still hungry or I still want more.
The the biggest benefit is I can eat the food I love and not have the ball-ache or worry about weighing it or logging it.
For me it's simplicity and taste at it's finest.
Its not just the low carbers that dont have to worry about portion size. I am like i have a tape worm and can still lose weight. I lost weight in my tenure without logging calories too. And i eat over 200g of carbs a day... i generally aim for 250g. But this has more to do with thr fact that i have a good amount of muscle, my tdee is about 3000 ish calories and i enjoy being active. And my diet doesn't lack essential fats or proteins because its actually pretty easy to hit both of those levels. Even high carbs can hit the essential levels. I actually exceed both levels and hit 45 to 50% of my calories from carbs.
I'm not saying it is only low carber's that can eat intuitively - I am merely siting my own experience.
If I switch to more carbs in my diet, I really struggle to control my appetite.
Besides my favour foods are mainly meat based
I'm just about to make a pancetta and Shiitake omelette (with a large glass of wine)!
Those statements sound contradictory.
In what way?
You're favorite foods are mainly meat, but you can't control your appetite with carbs.
I'm not saying it is necessarily contradictory, just they sound that way.
There's nothing contradictory in the least about my statement (if that's what you are comparing)!!!??
If you are comparing my experience with your own experience (as Lemurcat12 is) then our experiences are contradictory (to a fashion), but my statement in isolation does not fall under the definition of contradictory.
I think what seems weird about it is that you say you have trouble controlling your appetite with foods that you aren't that into. I'm not that into bread or rice or the like either, but that's why I decided it was silly to cut them out--I am not going to overeat rice, even before dieting I never kept bread around the house and if I had some I'd forget to eat it, the sauce has always been what I liked about pasta, etc.
But I do understand -- apparently some people (although not me) find that their hunger levels are different if they eat carbs and so cutting carbs ends up not being about tempting foods, but a hunger control mechanism.
I think you are making lots of assumptions, which is why your assumption my statement is contradictory is wrong.
My favorite food is meat (beef, game, chicken, lamb, pork etc), I will happily eat that for every meal - it's expensive so I don't.
Liking meat does not mean I do not like carbs. Eating low carb does not mean I do not like carbs.
I like carbs, I have never said I do not like carbs. My diet is low carb - it isn't no carb.
My favorite meal is chilli (I love chilli) - I will generally make it and eat it until I am full.
I also like pizza and when I eat pizza I eat it till I'm full, which is generally the whole pizza, there are a lot more calories in a whole pizza than there is in my big bowl of chilli (i have entered the recipe into MFP to see).
I like Doritios, I don't crave them and can happily go a month without them, but believe me if I open a big sharing packet I will eat from it until I am satisfied, which is general most of the packet.
I do not like having to stop eating until I am full or I feel I have eaten enough and am satisfied and with carbs the calories stack up quicker than with protein / fatty foods.
That is why for ME a low carb diet is perfect.
A quick search tells me that a slice of Dominos pepperoni pizza has 13 grams fat and 34 grams carbs
1 gram fat = 9 calories, 1 gram carbs = 4 calories, so this slice of pizza gives you 117 calories from fat and 136 calories from carbs
So why are you blaming the carbs and not the fat?
Why take pizza as an example of why you need to eat low carb and not e.g. oranges or tomatoes?
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tennisdude2004 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisdude2004 wrote: »tennisduse2004 wrote:What like the WHOLE FOODS? Please!!!!
I do happen to think that limiting the amount of inflammatory foods in my diet is healthy.
I certainly do not want MY diet to lack in essential fats and protein.
For me and probably countless others Low Carb means I don't have to restrict my portion size, that I don't have to stop eating something when i'm still hungry or I still want more.
The the biggest benefit is I can eat the food I love and not have the ball-ache or worry about weighing it or logging it.
For me it's simplicity and taste at it's finest.
Its not just the low carbers that dont have to worry about portion size. I am like i have a tape worm and can still lose weight. I lost weight in my tenure without logging calories too. And i eat over 200g of carbs a day... i generally aim for 250g. But this has more to do with thr fact that i have a good amount of muscle, my tdee is about 3000 ish calories and i enjoy being active. And my diet doesn't lack essential fats or proteins because its actually pretty easy to hit both of those levels. Even high carbs can hit the essential levels. I actually exceed both levels and hit 45 to 50% of my calories from carbs.
I'm not saying it is only low carber's that can eat intuitively - I am merely siting my own experience.
If I switch to more carbs in my diet, I really struggle to control my appetite.
Besides my favour foods are mainly meat based
I'm just about to make a pancetta and Shiitake omelette (with a large glass of wine)!
Those statements sound contradictory.
In what way?
You're favorite foods are mainly meat, but you can't control your appetite with carbs.
I'm not saying it is necessarily contradictory, just they sound that way.
There's nothing contradictory in the least about my statement (if that's what you are comparing)!!!??
If you are comparing my experience with your own experience (as Lemurcat12 is) then our experiences are contradictory (to a fashion), but my statement in isolation does not fall under the definition of contradictory.
I think what seems weird about it is that you say you have trouble controlling your appetite with foods that you aren't that into. I'm not that into bread or rice or the like either, but that's why I decided it was silly to cut them out--I am not going to overeat rice, even before dieting I never kept bread around the house and if I had some I'd forget to eat it, the sauce has always been what I liked about pasta, etc.
But I do understand -- apparently some people (although not me) find that their hunger levels are different if they eat carbs and so cutting carbs ends up not being about tempting foods, but a hunger control mechanism.
I think you are making lots of assumptions, which is why your assumption my statement is contradictory is wrong.
My favorite food is meat (beef, game, chicken, lamb, pork etc), I will happily eat that for every meal - it's expensive so I don't.
Liking meat does not mean I do not like carbs. Eating low carb does not mean I do not like carbs.
I like carbs, I have never said I do not like carbs. My diet is low carb - it isn't no carb.
My favorite meal is chilli (I love chilli) - I will generally make it and eat it until I am full.
I also like pizza and when I eat pizza I eat it till I'm full, which is generally the whole pizza, there are a lot more calories in a whole pizza than there is in my big bowl of chilli (i have entered the recipe into MFP to see).
I like Doritios, I don't crave them and can happily go a month without them, but believe me if I open a big sharing packet I will eat from it until I am satisfied, which is general most of the packet.
I do not like having to stop eating until I am full or I feel I have eaten enough and am satisfied and with carbs the calories stack up quicker than with protein / fatty foods.
That is why for ME a low carb diet is perfect.
A quick search tells me that a slice of Dominos pepperoni pizza has 13 grams fat and 34 grams carbs
1 gram fat = 9 calories, 1 gram carbs = 4 calories, so this slice of pizza gives you 117 calories from fat and 136 calories from carbs
So why are you blaming the carbs and not the fat?
Why take pizza as an example of why you need to eat low carb and not e.g. oranges or tomatoes?
Lots of assumptions going on here.
So for the record - go to pizza: Pizza Hut 'medium Pan Meat Feast - with a BBQ base'
Calories - 1904
Carbs - 179.2
My chilli (double serving because I'm generally hungry):
Calories - 788
Carbs - 26
I didn't use tomatoes or oranges as an example because I don't have issues with eating them:
1904 calories = 119 tomatoes
1904 calories = 30 oranges
I'm general satisfied and full before reaching those quantities of those particular fruit.
Good point with the fat in pizza by the way. Most of it is soaked into the carb base and is polyunsaturated (another good reason for me to limit this food in my diet). At least with my fatty meat I get mostly saturated fat.
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