Whole 30??

Any information, meal tips, your experience???

Replies

  • 613sweetpea
    613sweetpea Posts: 40 Member
    I've done a couple of rounds and loved it. Warning that it is tough in the beginning but get over the inital hump and you can feel amazing. I suggest reading / listening to It Starts With Food - a great place to start. The Whole 30 cookbook is also a great resource, as well as Well Fed and Well Fed2. The website www.whole30.com has a ton of tips and templates / lists and it's all free.
  • victoria_1024
    victoria_1024 Posts: 915 Member
    Some people at work were doing it together. It seemed terrible to me. It's been months since I was hearing about it and none of them have lost any weight that I've noticed.
  • mikehull14
    mikehull14 Posts: 8 Member
    I've done a Whole30 in the past and soon after became curious about the scientific research provided in the book, It Starts With Food. As I am a student studying nutritional science and currently work as a researcher, I decided to review the citations the authors provide for each chapter of the book and see if the science matched up with the claims being made.

    Unfortunately, I found that a majority of the cited claims were very misleading or completely false. This book can substantially mislead people about what a proper healthy diet looks like due to this inaccurate information. You can read some of my chapter reviews of the book here:
    http://nutritionasiknowit.com/whole30/

    The Whole30 approach to elimination and reintroduction of foods is also not appropriately designed in a way that would allow accurate and reliable identification of food sensitivities. For a more evidence-based approach to an elimination diet, you might want to try the one set out by Precision Nutrition found here:
    http://www.precisionnutrition.com/elimination-diet-infographic
  • Asher_Ethan
    Asher_Ethan Posts: 2,430 Member
    My experience; I gained weight at the end of 30 days. I was eating more than I burned, even though I ate all the "right" foods.

    MFP is 100x better. I can still eat pizza and French fries.
  • cindytree
    cindytree Posts: 3 Member
    I did Whole30 at the recommendation of my doctor. I stayed with it for nearly 6 months. My results: lost 36 pounds, am no longer pre-diabetic, triglicerides came down to normal and other labwork showed improved numbers.

    I'm pretty much sticking with it 90% of the time now. At age 59, nothing else I tried gave me these good results.
  • ReaderGirl3
    ReaderGirl3 Posts: 868 Member
    edited May 2016
    cindytree wrote: »
    I did Whole30 at the recommendation of my doctor. I stayed with it for nearly 6 months. My results: lost 36 pounds, am no longer pre-diabetic, triglicerides came down to normal and other labwork showed improved numbers.

    I'm pretty much sticking with it 90% of the time now. At age 59, nothing else I tried gave me these good results.

    Do you think your results are because of the program, or because you started eating at a calorie deficit and lost the extra weight? Genuinely curious, because my own experience saw similar results as you had (I lost over 50lbs though), and I didn't eat any special way/eliminate foods. I just focused on eating at the correct calorie deficit for my weight loss goals.
  • cindytree
    cindytree Posts: 3 Member
    edited May 2016
    Do you think your results are because of the program, or because you started eating at a calorie deficit and lost the extra weight? Genuinely curious, because my own experience saw similar results as you had (I lost over 50lbs though), and I didn't eat any special way/eliminate foods. I just focused on eating at the correct calorie deficit for my weight loss goals.


    Yes, I do think weight loss in general will improve those things for most people but I tried "calorie deficit" programs many times in the past three decades with no success so for me the difference with Whole30 did seem to be what I ate more than how much I ate. I never weighed or measured food or counted calories on Whole30 so I don't know if it was true calorie deficit or not, but I was never hungry.