Why does everybody detest low carb diets? They are the only thing that works for me
Replies
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CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »You know, I was about to leap on here judging but your last sentence "it's the only thing that works for me" got me in the feels. I hate this expression but "at the end of the day" that's all that matters my friend. You take good care of you and ignore we haters . Do what makes you happy and what feels good to you. Right?
I had to give up dairy and meat. Heart disease is very real to me. I am at the age where my Cardiologist told me that I would have to have open heart surgery to repair a heart valve. I was a competitive runner until my mid-30's. You can't out exercise heart disease unfortunately. I read Dr. Esselstyn's book on how to over come heart disease and also Dr. John McDougall's stuff on how eating a high carb (plant carb) diet can heal the body and I was sold.
I wish you all the best , everyone's journey is personal and different. Who are we to judge?
I have a heart valve defect and was never told to avoid meat and dairy. did they tell you why? as for having OHS for the valve repair. for some its not needed. I was told the only way I would need the valve fixed or replaced was if I went into cardiac arrest,they said most people have no issues caused from it. it can mimic asthma symptoms I did learn though.some diets cannot cure or heal certain health issues.
Sounds like the Mitral valve?
Defective aortic valve here - half normal size and malformed. I had open heart surgery 3 years ago, when I started experiencing symptoms of heart pain. They replaced it with an artificial valve. They also expanded my left ventricular outflow tract.
I eat a balanced diet consisting of a wide variety of foods all within my calorie goal. Early on the nurses wanted me to restrict sodium. But I started hitting it so hard in the re-hab gym that I needed to take electrolyte supplements - e.g., sodium and potassium. They backed off on the low sodium stuff after that. My angiogram confirmed that I do not form cholesterol deposits. So, I have no specific dietary restrictions.
The valve replacement surgery has been the best thing that ever happened to me. I was able to become more active, dropped 95 lbs and now I am a gym rat. Finished a 10k run earlier this evening - my best time ever on the 10k, 1mi. and 1k. At 53, I finally discovered what it is like to be alive.7 -
no ones hates low carb... people dislike claims its the only way to lose weigh, and for just about every human a defict is all that is needed.
if going low carb works for you that is all that matters.8 -
What works now may not work later. Personally I don't like any diet that cuts out whole food groups, macros, or too many rules, too many horrors of yo-yo dieting since the 80's on every new fad. No thanks. A little of everything in moderation got me to lose 85 pounds and keep it off going on 6 years for now. Anyone can lose weight on any diet, it's keeping it off that is the real proof.4
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billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
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Here are my theories:
- They detest things they don't understand
- People foo foo anything that doesn't align with their own beliefs/ways
- When they see a low carb thread their eyes light up because they know a debate is forthcoming and want to be involved.
- They believe carbs affect EVERYBODY equally.
- They can not fathom reducing their carbs and thinks anyone who does this is cray cray
- They complain about the influx of low carb posts, but make sure they click on, and are involved in each and every one of those threads.
I'm not a supporter of veganism, vegetarianism, paleo, carnivorous diet, High carb/low fat yada yada, but if people want to follow those ways of eating it is none of my business or concern, and i wont be getting my knickers in a twist teaching them the error of their ways. To be honest, i rarely even click on those threads, because i have NO experience with any of them and have no interest in them either.7 -
billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". I dont think its always plain and simple, and I don't get my undies in a bunch if people do what they think works for them or when they say lchf is bad
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billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". just saying
Then they're consuming, their current weight's maintenance amount; which is still overeating because being overweight, means that at some point; they overate.5 -
billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". just saying
Unless they have a medical condition, they are eating more calories than they need. Do you see what they eat for every meal? I can eat my daily caloric allowance in one meal.4 -
billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". just saying
Unless they have a medical condition, they are eating more calories than they need. Do you see what they eat for every meal? I can eat my daily caloric allowance in one meal.
Even if they have a medical condition, if they're fat, they were eating more than their body needed to maintain their weight.
No Exceptions.
Physical laws reign supreme over all other sciences apart from pure mathematics.
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I chose my general practitioner years ago because his focus is on wellness and weight loss. Back then, he had cardio patients like myself on low fat diets. Most were not succeeding. So he did some research and decided to try low carb with his patients. They lost weight, and their cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure all improved. He recommended it to me and I was skeptical, but I tried it. It worked.
This is why I have a problem with low-carb diets - it is because the people following it attribute these improvements to eating low-carb. Yet there are people who do the same thing by reducing calories and eating plenty of carbs. I am one of them. I've lost 93 pounds from my highest weight and my cholesterol, triglycerides and blood pressure all improved immensely. I was on two blood pressure/heart rate meds, and a statin for cholesterol, and am now off of all of them. My blood pressure is normal to low-normal now. I don't exercise. I attribute these improvements to three things, with the most important being weight loss, followed by some (but not many) changes in what I ate (cutting out most mayo and eating more avocado and salmon for the cholesterol), and by cutting my sodium to 1500 mg. per day.
The diet profile that MFP gave me is 50% carbs, 40% fat and 30% protein, and I've followed that for 16 months. I am rarely below 150 carbs per day, and almost always well over. I can't digest most vegetables, so eat few, and really don't eat much fruit due to those same digestive problems, so my carbs are coming mostly from dairy, including ice cream, and bread/cereal. I'm always over my sugar. I'm 60 and have stuck to 1200 calories since I started MFP, and am not starving or hangry or anything like that. I get hungry basically when it's time for regular mealtimes, and that's it.
I don't post repeatedly on the forums that these improvements are a "miracle diet" and can only be achieved by CICO, but I see plenty of people doing low-carb saying their way is not only the only way these things can be achieved, but that it is superior and has better results than those who count calories, and that's why I think you see pushback - not hate - from others in low-carb threads.
Edited to add: I was also pre-diabetic for a number of years too - no longer pre-diabetic, even eating all those carbs and sugar.
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If it works for you then that's great
As long as its something you can consistently do long term then you won't regain. I've just seen too many slip back into old habits and re-gain what they'd lost...
We have to find something that works for us that we can consistently do for the rest of our lives imo.1 -
LaceyBirds wrote: »I chose my general practitioner years ago because his focus is on wellness and weight loss. Back then, he had cardio patients like myself on low fat diets. Most were not succeeding. So he did some research and decided to try low carb with his patients. They lost weight, and their cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure all improved. He recommended it to me and I was skeptical, but I tried it. It worked.
This is why I have a problem with low-carb diets - it is because the people following it attribute these improvements to eating low-carb. Yet there are people who do the same thing by reducing calories and eating plenty of carbs. I am one of them. I've lost 93 pounds from my highest weight and my cholesterol, triglycerides and blood pressure all improved immensely. I was on two blood pressure/heart rate meds, and a statin for cholesterol, and am now off of all of them. My blood pressure is normal to low-normal now. I don't exercise. I attribute these improvements to three things, with the most important being weight loss, followed by some (but not many) changes in what I ate (cutting out most mayo and eating more avocado and salmon for the cholesterol), and by cutting my sodium to 1500 mg. per day.
The diet profile that MFP gave me is 50% carbs, 40% fat and 30% protein, and I've followed that for 16 months. I am rarely below 150 carbs per day, and almost always well over. I can't digest most vegetables, so eat few, and really don't eat much fruit due to those same digestive problems, so my carbs are coming mostly from dairy, including ice cream, and bread/cereal. I'm always over my sugar. I'm 60 and have stuck to 1200 calories since I started MFP, and am not starving or hangry or anything like that. I get hungry basically when it's time for regular mealtimes, and that's it.
I don't post repeatedly on the forums that these improvements are a "miracle diet" and can only be achieved by CICO, but I see plenty of people doing low-carb saying their way is not only the only way these things can be achieved, but that it is superior and has better results than those who count calories, and that's why I think you see pushback - not hate - from others in low-carb threads.
Cosign. Lost about the same, no longer pre diabetic or hypertensive and my triglycerides are a fraction of what they used to be, all eating a "wherever they may fall" amount of carbs (which usually ends up on the higher end).3 -
CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »You know, I was about to leap on here judging but your last sentence "it's the only thing that works for me" got me in the feels. I hate this expression but "at the end of the day" that's all that matters my friend. You take good care of you and ignore we haters . Do what makes you happy and what feels good to you. Right?
I had to give up dairy and meat. Heart disease is very real to me. I am at the age where my Cardiologist told me that I would have to have open heart surgery to repair a heart valve. I was a competitive runner until my mid-30's. You can't out exercise heart disease unfortunately. I read Dr. Esselstyn's book on how to over come heart disease and also Dr. John McDougall's stuff on how eating a high carb (plant carb) diet can heal the body and I was sold.
I wish you all the best , everyone's journey is personal and different. Who are we to judge?
I have a heart valve defect and was never told to avoid meat and dairy. did they tell you why? as for having OHS for the valve repair. for some its not needed. I was told the only way I would need the valve fixed or replaced was if I went into cardiac arrest,they said most people have no issues caused from it. it can mimic asthma symptoms I did learn though.some diets cannot cure or heal certain health issues.
I was told to cut carbs to lower my cholesterol. Avoiding dairy and fat isn't necessarily helpful for cholesterol either.0 -
stevencloser wrote: »billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". just saying
Unless they have a medical condition, they are eating more calories than they need. Do you see what they eat for every meal? I can eat my daily caloric allowance in one meal.
Even if they have a medical condition, if they're fat, they were eating more than their body needed to maintain their weight.
No Exceptions.
Physical laws reign supreme over all other sciences apart from pure mathematics.
I took biology, chemistry, physics, and math.1 -
Is it bad? No. If the person can sustain eating that way consistently for their life, then they should do it. If not, then for many it's just a fad diet. The biggest issue I hear from low carbers it that they CAN'T moderate carbs, so they do low carb. Understandable, but it's not the carbs that are the issue. It's the mentality of not being able to moderate.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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If you're looking for validation for your diet then you're going to be rather frustrated no matter what diet you're on. If low carb works for you then go with it. Like any diet that works for any individual, it works because it creates a calorie deficit for that individual. We all have different habits and food cravings so what works for one may or may not work for another.
My advice? Stop talking about your diet with anyone who isn't following that diet. That is not to say to stop researching it or discussing it online, but I'd definitely stop taking about it with friends and family. Most people are FoS when it comes to this sort of thing.4 -
I listened to my doctor when she said - cut back on your fat and carbs. I had high triglycerides and a mild fatty liver reading. I did this for a month and lost 10 pounds and blood work came back normal. I am keeping up with it as I need to lose 30 pounds. I have 50 to 75 carbs per day and about 20 grams of fat. I don't feel deprived at all. I have occasional days where I eat a little more, but am consistently losing weight slowly. Now to start exercising!1
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LaceyBirds wrote: »The diet profile that MFP gave me is 50% carbs, 40% fat and 30% protein . . .
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sunnybeaches105 wrote: »My advice? Stop talking about your diet with anyone who isn't following that diet. That is not to say to stop researching it or discussing it online, but I'd definitely stop taking about it with friends and family. Most people are FoS when it comes to this sort of thing.
The OP and others coming across this thread should be aware there are low carb groups here where they can get support and info from others following it without getting arguments and absolutist statements from naysayers. Click on Groups up in the second line of the top menu to find them.
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billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". I dont think its always plain and simple, and I don't get my undies in a bunch if people do what they think works for them or when they say lchf is bad
Not sure what you mean by "fat" in quotes but if they are overweight, that means they are over eating. It is that simple, no one can escape the laws of physics.5 -
Here's an example of what I meant in my first post (taken from this thread - http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10426373/low-carb-does-work/p11 ):
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Here's an example of what I meant in my first post (taken from this thread - http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10426373/low-carb-does-work/p11 ):
Yeah there are several perfect examples in that thread...5 -
WinoGelato wrote: »Here's an example of what I meant in my first post (taken from this thread - http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10426373/low-carb-does-work/p11 ):
Yeah there are several perfect examples in that thread...
This is one of the problems with the forums in general.
Some people just want something that works for them. They don't care about the why and how. And, that's fine for them so long as they don't fall into the next group.
Others extrapolate their successful experiences to everyone else and think "if it worked for me then it must work for you" even if they don't understand the why and how.
Others view any sharing of experiences different than their own as attacks on their methods.
While the above and more do occur, there are certain fundamentals to dieting and fitness, such as "you must create a calorie deficit to lose weight." The method of producing that deficit is nearly limitless though, and while low carb, calorie counting, eating "clean," simply pre-planning (going so far as the famous "box diet" thread), Keto, etc. will work for some, they don't all work for everyone. The issue comes with the woo some proponents of these diets push, so while we can separate out the "it works for me" some do want to discuss the how and why in good faith. Others do just want to argue and we do have a bit of that here, but I think we all would do better to have good faith discussions and accept them as that rather than viewing them all as attacks.
As I said in my post above though, sometimes it's best to just not discuss one's own diet with people who aren't following the same diet. Fewer headaches that way, but it does run the risk of a myopic view.5 -
Re the "I know lots of fat people who didn't overeat" thing, I think the problem is that there's a stigma to overeating and for some people it means basically extreme gorging, "eating like a pig", eating huge portions of sweets or fast food, stuff like that. So if they don't (or if someone they know doesn't -- so far as they know, of course), they assume there's some non calorie related cause for the obesity -- I'm not one of those "fatties" who eat too much, it's not MY FAULT!
That's why there's such a desire to believe there's some other explanation for weight gain. Admitting it was eating to much to some much mean they were eating in a way that they have been taught to find shameful (this is especially true for women).
For me, on the other hand, it was empowering to acknowledge the truth -- that I must have been overeating -- and looking at the calculators and logging helped me understand this. If sedentary, my maintenance is quite low, so it was quite easy to overeat and gain weight over time without ever eating what seemed to be huge amounts of food (well, rarely, anyway) or like the unfortunate and often false stereotypes about how fat people eat.7 -
sunnybeaches105 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »Here's an example of what I meant in my first post (taken from this thread - http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10426373/low-carb-does-work/p11 ):
Yeah there are several perfect examples in that thread...
This is one of the problems with the forums in general.
Some people just want something that works for them. They don't care about the why and how. And, that's fine for them so long as they don't fall into the next group.
Others extrapolate their successful experiences to everyone else and think "if it worked for me then it must work for you" even if they don't understand the why and how.
Others view any sharing of experiences different than their own as attacks on their methods.
While the above and more do occur, there are certain fundamentals to dieting and fitness, such as "you must create a calorie deficit to lose weight." The method of producing that deficit is nearly limitless though, and while low carb, calorie counting, eating "clean," simply pre-planning (going so far as the famous "box diet" thread), Keto, etc. will work for some, they don't all work for everyone. The issue comes with the woo some proponents of these diets push, so while we can separate out the "it works for me" some do want to discuss the how and why in good faith. Others do just want to argue and we do have a bit of that here, but I think we all would do better to have good faith discussions and accept them as that rather than viewing them all as attacks.
As I said in my post above though, sometimes it's best to just not discuss one's own diet with people who aren't following the same diet. Fewer headaches that way, but it does run the risk of a myopic view.
LOL I totally forgot about the "box" diet. That was a doozy...
I agree, there are several ways to create the calorie deficit and it is up to the individual (and sometimes his/her doctor) to determine what the best approach would be. What drives me crazier than the evangelical fanaticism that surrounds some diets, is the false belief that some newcomers have when they first start out, that a certain "diet" is required. They have been told by someone, or they read online that xyz food group is bad, or you must give up abc in order to lose weight. Those are the people that I feel it is important to educate, so that they know that there are other options, that if they try one way and it doesn't work, they don't have to give up altogether. That there are many, many successful approaches and this process doesn't have to be painful and punishing.6 -
stevencloser wrote: »billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". just saying
Unless they have a medical condition, they are eating more calories than they need. Do you see what they eat for every meal? I can eat my daily caloric allowance in one meal.
Even if they have a medical condition, if they're fat, they were eating more than their body needed to maintain their weight.
No Exceptions.
Physical laws reign supreme over all other sciences apart from pure mathematics.
I did not know you were a medical expert.0 -
stevencloser wrote: »billglitch wrote: »billglitch wrote: »I am doing low carb high fat and have lost over 90 pounds since the end of January. I have thought about it logically and here is what i think. The high fat part keeps you from feeling hungry and makes it easy to reduce calories. Regardless of why it works its working for me, my son, my brothers gf and others that I have suggested it to. Low carb goes against what we have been told FOREVER. Its just like back in the day "they" thought the earth was the center of the universe. My question is if the way "they" say to eat is so good why are so many people fat? I know I will probably get a lot of crap for this but oh well.
Why, because people over eat, plain and simple. Our bodies are designed to survive on X amount of calories. Consume more calories than your body needs, and those excess calories will be stored as fat. It does not matter if those calories come from carbs, fat, or protien.
i know many people who dont over eat and are still "fat". just saying
Unless they have a medical condition, they are eating more calories than they need. Do you see what they eat for every meal? I can eat my daily caloric allowance in one meal.
Even if they have a medical condition, if they're fat, they were eating more than their body needed to maintain their weight.
No Exceptions.
Physical laws reign supreme over all other sciences apart from pure mathematics.
I did not know you were a medical expert.
Do you know of a medical condition that can destroy the very fabric of reality?5 -
I think anti-carb sentiments are caused by a number of things. One may be that people feel judged. They may feel that we have judged their diet to not work. To not be good enough for us and that may bother some people. I think this may be more true for those people who rely on less healthy carbs, and a fair bit of them, for their food energy. I don't know.
Possibly some of the problem comes from people who still think the old nutrition advice is still valid, and based on more science and experience than it actually was. I grew up in the era of the food pyramid with 5-7 servings of "healthy whole grains" every day, when table sugar was thought to be a fine substitute for fats for diabetics, and when eating cholesterol was thought to be bad for everyone. Those of us brought up with a "healthy balanced diet
, based largely on a non-essential macro, may have a hard time seeing where that could be an unhealthy diet for some people (not all). I know I did. I remember the days of eating rice, broccoli and lean chicken for dinner, with Special K and skim milk for breakfast, a mini bagel with veggies, one slice of cheese, and an apple for lunch. I laughed at Atkins in the early 90s too.
And I think some others around here have just seen too many fad diets go by. Maybe they have little patience left. Some think that knowing that CI must be less than CO (CI<CO) is all you need for successful weight loss. For them, and many others, it may be all that was needed. They don't understand that some people need to change their foods too. Walk a mile in their shoes and all that.
I don't think most are against low carb. I think the most vocal just don't want people to think they HAVE to do it in order to lose weight... Even if some people would benefit from trying it.
I think it's the combination of the bold, the lack of understanding of what low carb really is (this is especially true for those not into fitness community) and a lot of the claims that LCHF will cure diseases (this is also seen a lot in the vegetarian/vegan community).2 -
speedfreak75 wrote: »it's all a personal preference. I love low carb diets. Our bodies aren't designed to take in the amount of sure we normally consume. it's simply poison. when i'm trying to lean out i usually cut my carbs down in the 25-30 net carbs per day.
Your body is designed to store 300-400g of carbs; so 1200-2000 calories worth of carbs.0 -
Cyndi10612 wrote: »I feel like people freak out when you tell them you are on an extremely low calorie diet, Atkins, etc. I catch the wrath from friends and family, and even online communities, that low carb diets are so bad for you but honestly it's the only thing that works for me and I feel better so why not!
Why does it bother you when people freak out? IMO, let them freak out and go on your merry way...2
This discussion has been closed.
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