Fruit: is it necessary?

13

Replies

  • sgt1372
    sgt1372 Posts: 3,976 Member
    FWIW: There's a Livestrong article that points to scurvy, anemia, heart disease and cancer as possible effects of NOT eating enough fruit in your diet.

    See: http://www.livestrong.com/article/39658-vitamins-zucchini/
  • sarahthes
    sarahthes Posts: 3,252 Member
    Fruit is a huge part of my diet. I'm about to have my dessert: bran buds, yogurt, fresh strawberries and blueberries.
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 17,956 Member
    sgt1372 wrote: »
    FWIW: There's a Livestrong article that points to scurvy, anemia, heart disease and cancer as possible effects of NOT eating enough fruit in your diet.

    See: http://www.livestrong.com/article/39658-vitamins-zucchini/

    But you can get all of the vitamins and nutrients we need from sufficient veggies
  • bbell1985
    bbell1985 Posts: 4,572 Member
    I veer away from fruit too. It doesn't fill me up and I'd rather get my carbs elsewhere. I don't find it "low calorie". I don't want a banana to be 120 calories.

    Sometimes I worry about my micronutrients though...
  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,160 Member
    I have Oral Allergy Syndrome and cannot eat most fruits. So no it's not necessary for weight loss or life.

    Learned something new again from reading MFP forums. While I do not have that syndrome but because of gum damage over the years now that I have been off sugar for about three years eating fresh fruit will make me aware that my teeth are sensitive when I brush them.
  • Stockholm_Andy
    Stockholm_Andy Posts: 803 Member
    Personally I don't eat much fruit at all with the exception of tomatoes and occasionally a few berries.

    I do however eat a LOT of vegetables of all sorts and as varied a selection as I can.

    I'd say that usually most of my plate was made up of veg although most of my calories probably come from protein.
  • Christy1977Z
    Christy1977Z Posts: 4 Member
    Give me my bananas, and no one gets hurt.
  • FireTurtle75
    FireTurtle75 Posts: 2,014 Member
    Yep, look at all of the fruit Eskimos used to eat before modern technology & advancements in engineering could bring it to them.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    I said above that fruit is not necessary, and I still think that (assuming you get adequate vegetables, of course), but for myself I added fruit back in because there's so much wonderful fruit in the summer (after a LCHF experiment), and was surprised at how positive the effect on my mood and how well I feel is. I didn't feel bad before, but I do feel better now.
  • VintageFeline
    VintageFeline Posts: 6,771 Member
    Mice rarely =/= humans.
  • OliveGirl128
    OliveGirl128 Posts: 801 Member
    edited July 2017
    Fruits should essentially be treated like candy because of the sugar content, and only consumed when locally available in season and properly ripened because of the lectin content in fruit picked while unripe to ship long distances.

    If you drastically cut carbs, you body will shift to burning ketones (which is MUCH easier on your mitochondria) and that will trigger fat burning. I can tell you from my own personal experience having gone full keto this past week and a half, I feel a steady sense of energy, started losing a lb a day, and I feel satiated with little to no snacking and I don't miss the carbs one bit.

    I decided to try this for a few reasons. The first is I wanted to cut out all grains, legumes and nightshades due to the dangerous lectins they contain. That right there cuts out a huge source if calories in our western diet. What was I going to replace them with?

    The 2nd was finding a way to fix a problem my mitochondria have. For the last 11 years, something has been very wrong. At times its been like having fibro, chronic fatigue syndrome and MS all rolled into one. 2 years ago, I found some phenomenal research by Dr Sinclair at Harvard in life extension involving NMN (nicotinamide mononucleotide) a special and VERY expensive form of Vit B3 and 2 year old mice. By giving the mice NMN he hoped to raise NAD+ and thus increase mitochondrial output and utilization of ATP, the energy our cells run on, to youthful levels, and by doing so actually reverse aging. Research in this area is leading researchers to conclude that all disease and even aging itself, is, at the root, caused by mitochondrial dysfunction. They have even started calling aging a disease.

    A week after he gave them this compound, he checked their cellular age markers and they now essentially had the cells of 6 month old mice. NR (nicotinamide riboside) is the precursor of NMN and has a similar effect. It is only available under the name Niagen. I decided to try the Niagen and with the very first dose I felt like someone had plugged me into a nuclear power plant. I was up walking with little difficulty and doing things that had been very difficult to impossible for the previous 9 years. But as soon as it wore off, my symptoms would come crashing back in. So I have been very dependent on Niagen on a daily basis.

    However, I recently learned that eating a diet rich in fresh fruits and vegetables year round can actually exhaust our mitochondria over the years as turning glucose into ATP us harder for mitochondria than using ketones to make ATP. In the last 50 years or so we went from a cyclic diet to one in which summer foods are available all year round.

    So I decided to try the keto diet and see what happens. It's been a week and a half and I have grown less and less dependent on the Niagen for energy. I wake up in the morning with energy and feeling stable and strong.

    (And yes, I am seeing signs of age reversal too. :) )

    A week and a half is nothing. But, it would be great it you were able to check in after a few years of successfully maintaining your weight loss and share how it's going for you :)
  • Jeffagner2
    Jeffagner2 Posts: 23 Member
    I think you can be healthy without eating fruit every day. Historically, ripe fruits and berries were only available for a few weeks in either the spring or the fall. I eat fruit after I exercise to replenish glycogen and to get the vitamins and minerals but I'm sure I could manage without eating them.
  • 04hoopsgal73
    04hoopsgal73 Posts: 925 Member
    Cost prohibits fresh fruit in my area (for me). I take a multi along with a vit C w/ flavonoids from Costco.
    Why does the government subsidize corn and wheat but not fruit?
    I simply will not pay $1.50 for an apple. Not worth it.

    I agree, wait for it to fall off the tree.
  • 04hoopsgal73
    04hoopsgal73 Posts: 925 Member
    I enjoy seasonal fruits. Berries r one item I want year round and pay dearly for blueberries in the winter.
    I eat more veggies now so I'm eating less fruit. Seasonally things change, watermelon in the summer is dessert to me. Baked apples with cinammon in the Fall is dessert to me and so on.
  • Clawsal
    Clawsal Posts: 255 Member
    edited July 2017
    I love fruit. I have a sweet tooth and fruit provides a low-cal snack. Just by switching cookies, ice-cream, chocolate, cake etc for fruit, I decrease my calorie intake by quite a bit. Today I ate a pound of watermelon.
    I don't believe sugar in fruit is bad for you.
    Do you need to eat it? No, eat what works for you.

    Edit: tasty fruit does get a bit expensive though