Keto diet

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Replies

  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member
    as you may hear 1200 may be to low if you are active. And keto is low carb high protein. The Atkins diet is high in fat.

    keto is low carbs,high fat and moderate protein but there are other forms of keto.
  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member
    1200 calories is way too low. For a male the minimum is 1800. Slowing down metabolism due to low calories is a thing and will lead to a yo-yo effect, once you go back to what your normal meals look like. Women can go lower, but not below 1200. Drastic caloric restrictions do not work long term. Try increasing activity level instead to create a caloric deficit. To lose 25-30 pounds while keeping your sanity give yourself enough time, 1-2 pounds per week.

    well the OP is female and the minimum for a male is 1500 and 1200 for a woman and those are calories for someone very short,sedentary,elderly or a combo of those things.as for 25-30 lbs to lose 2 lbs a week is not recommended . 2 lbs is for those with more than 75 lbs to lose. .5 lb to maybe 1 lb per week would be safe. until op got down to the last 15 or less
  • GottaBurnEmAll
    GottaBurnEmAll Posts: 7,722 Member
    edited January 2019
    psuLemon wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Keto does not mean unchecked eating. You will still gain weight if you are in caloric surplus. Many find themselves feeling more satiated or with less appetite, so they don't eat as much and as often on keto. Stable blood sugar levels makes you less prone to ravenous hunger that typical caloric restriction tends to cause.

    You can try intermittent fasting in lieu or together with keto for a few weeks and see how you feel on it. If you find it is not your cup of tea, you don't have to stick with it. Just give it a go.

    MFP suggestion is a tad too low. It suggested I eat 1500 calories, but I am losing weight on keto while eating 1800. I skip breakfast so my first "meal" - BP coffee or bone broth is at 10 AM. Next meal is around 3-4 PM and I wrap my day at 6 PM. So it is 16 hours of fasting and 8 hours of eating.

    Not disputing your overall points, but simply replying to the bolded.

    For many/most of us, calorie counting, with a sensible weight loss target, does not make us "prone to ravenous hunger" because of "typical caloric restriction".

    Some people find keto-style eating to be very satiating, and that's great. I don't question them about that. But please don't try to convince people that those of us who choose simple calorie restriction are "typically" white-knuckling our way through ravenous hunger.

    With any change in habits oriented toward weight loss, there may be a short adaptation of a week or two, where the old habits die hard for one reason or another, or new ones throw up challenges. Some people will be a little crave-y at first, some people will need to fine-tune electolytes to eliminate "keto flu", some adjust the timing and proportion of their foods, etc.

    There may be a few people who experience "ravenous hunger" at any level of calorie restriction. I don't know. I do know that lots of people here don't experience that once they've adopted a sensible weight loss rate, and found a combination of foods/timing that keeps them satiated.

    For some, that combination involves very structured plans like IF or keto; for some, like me, we just happily eat less of pretty much the same foods we always ate, within pretty much the same meal/snack timing. (I was quite contented during a year of weight loss, and 3 years of maintenance since, using just that strategy.)

    The bolded is a misrepresentation.

    I am one of those who are revenous while doing low carb or keto. Fat doesn't satiate me, which is why i went off of UD2 and went back to 3 meals with a focus on protein and fiber (the universal satiating nutrients).

    Fat doesn't satiate me either. When I did keto, I was eating at maintenance (close to it), so I wouldn't quite say I was ravenous. But I certainly wasn't satisfied.
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    Two to three months is only enough time to get to the good stuff. A fabulously successful and buff weight loser here does keto 9 months a year and eats all the wonderful things from October 1 to January 1.

    You'll have to count carbs, net carbs especially. You may find yourself being satisfied with barely 1000 calories in a day. You'll have to eat a lot more salt. You may spend more of your nights sleeping. I know not every busy dude has time for that. You could find your libido more active.

    Above and beyond what any kind of normal weight loss would cause?
    At first guess, I would think keto diets would be associated with infertility simply for the fact that male gametes are one of the few human cells that can directly use fructose for fuel, which is going to be in low supply on a keto diet.

    Those who have issues with low sex hormones sometimes find the added fat on the diet helps with hormone regulation. Others may find steadier blood glucose levels help, and yet others experience improved cardiovascular health helps.

    These are possible benefits that some may experience, and they are not exclusive to keto.... gotta get those disclaimers in. ;)
  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member
    Somatotypes are dubunked as the attempt to associate appearance with character, but they are usable for describing the body's shape. I use it in that context only. It is funny how people take on one word of a paragraph and run with it

    they arent usable to describe body shape because many people fall into more than one category. I fall into all 3(which means squat) because I believed the hype back then too,. it has noting to do with anything someone just took the idea and applied it to diets and so on to make a buck or two. had I believed that my body type meant I had to eat a certain way I would still probably be obese
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    edited January 2019
    kimny72 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Video is not a strong way to argue, 'cause likely no one will watch it.

    Guessing at what it might say, I posted links explaining why you need more protein on low carb, not less (although it might have been in another keto thread where we were discussing this, I'm confused between the various keto threads).

    15% protein can be enough for muscle maintenance depending on total calories eaten and size, but I suspect it's mostly not for the average person just starting keto.

    And just to add, in addition to 45 minutes of video, the videos are from Dr. Berg (chiropractor), Dr. Axe (chiro and "natural medicine"), a self-professed celebrity trainer, and an athlete.

    And I'm not really sure how any of this affects the OP, since she is looking to do keto for 2 months at unnecessarily low calories in order to lose weight fast. Low protein or not would be the least of her worries IMHO.

    Also, there was only one video when I posted.

    Remember, my comments were a response to this advice to the OP:
    Started keto myself.
    Do's:
    1. Eat plenty of healthy fats (like 80%) - MCT Oil, Coconut Oil, Ghee or Butter, Avocados, nitrate-free bacon, eggs, Macadamia nuts, Beef Bone broth, Kalamata Olives, Sardines, Herrings, Salmon (in moderation due to high mercury unless wild-caught). Look for foods whose fat contents surpasses the combined protein and net carbs.
    2. Use plenty of Himalayan pink salt;
    3. Use a complete multivitamin;
    4. Eat one Brazil nut a day (source of Selenium);
    5. Start your day with a glass of water with 1tbsp apple cider vinegar and 1 tbps lemon juice.
    6. Drink coffee (black or bulletproof, with Stevia if you have to), imperial or ceremonial grade matcha tea or green tea (can drink decaf in the afternoon).
    7. Count calories and macros - it helps you avoid overeating, since fatty foods are very calorie dense. And it also allows you to adjust if you go over on protein.
    8. Keep protein moderate - about 15% of your calories. You want your body to burn fat, not convert protein to glucose.
    9. Drink plenty of water - a gallon would be great.
    10. Once you get fat adapted (about 3 weeks if you never did keto before) you can mix in Intermittent fasting (16:8).
    11. Keep your carbs to 5% or 20 grams net carbs. Focus on leafy greens like chards, kale, spinach, asparagus, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, broccoli. Fruits are not your friend, especially while you are getting fat adapted (making the transition from carbs to fats).
    12. You can use 100% unsweetened baking chocolate or Cacao powder if making fat bombs to deal with cravings. It has some carbs, so make room for it.

    It is reasonably likely OP is on around 1200 -- she in fact said she was. 15% is unlikely to be a good idea, certainly not a good idea for a one-size fits all list of rules telling her what she should do.
  • magnusthenerd
    magnusthenerd Posts: 1,207 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Two to three months is only enough time to get to the good stuff. A fabulously successful and buff weight loser here does keto 9 months a year and eats all the wonderful things from October 1 to January 1.

    You'll have to count carbs, net carbs especially. You may find yourself being satisfied with barely 1000 calories in a day. You'll have to eat a lot more salt. You may spend more of your nights sleeping. I know not every busy dude has time for that. You could find your libido more active.

    Above and beyond what any kind of normal weight loss would cause?
    At first guess, I would think keto diets would be associated with infertility simply for the fact that male gametes are one of the few human cells that can directly use fructose for fuel, which is going to be in low supply on a keto diet.

    Oh, dear, that could be abused -- I don't need to use protection, I'm on keto!

    Perhaps like endurance runners, swimmers can become fat adapted too? It is a pretty long marathon, when considering the scale.

    Though "I'm in ketosis" might be birth control for some people regardless.

    Speaking as a person who's pretty strongly sapiosexual, and based on the moving average of what I see in threads around here . . . if someone said it, it might well reinforce my leaning toward abstinence.

    P.S. This is a joke. Not all of you on keto, for heaven's sake.

    I find sapiosexuality very wrong - it should be sophosexual. The other typical prefixes, homo and hetero are Greek, and with homo being a different word in Latin, it just gets confusing. The switch to Latin makes it sound like sapiosexuals only are interested in modern humans, but a homosexual would be attracted to neanderthals, cro magnons, and maybe even h. erectus.
  • Fatty_Nuff
    Fatty_Nuff Posts: 273 Member
    Forgive me for going off topic, but sapiosexual? I've never heard this word. Is that having a thing for maple trees? :o
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