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When you started Paleo...

So I've been crossfitting for a little over three months now. I love it. Now I want to really clean up my eating. My gym is having a paleo challenge in January, but I don't want to wait that long to get started. And I was wondering...

When you started paleo, who just went cold turkey and jumped right in, and who made small incremental changes to get there? What would you say the pros and cons of your method were?

Right now I'm thinking I want to make small changes until January, where I'll hit it full out for 30 days. (Likely, I see myself on the 80% paleo lifestyle, but we'll see. I want to give it a fair full, cheat-less 30 days!)

Replies

  • CRody44
    CRody44 Posts: 776 Member
    I made small changes, but it wasn’t with the idea of going primal, I hadn’t even heard of it. I just started by eliminating pasta, then bread, then all grains because they spiked my blood glucose. Then we started eating farmers market fruits and veggies. That let to cutting out all packaged food. Then I learned about paleo/primal and we cut out and bad oils and fats. I just started exercising primal.

    From what I have heard, one step at a time, so you don’t shock your system. I’d probably start with grains, and bad oils and fats, then work into the others.
  • jamk1446
    jamk1446 Posts: 5,577 Member
    I think it depends on your personality, eating habits and emotional or food triggers. I made incremental changes over the course of about 6 weeks, which in the grand scheme isn't a long time but the first week or two I concentrated on obvious wheat and sugars, then milk and other grains, etc. That worked for me. Some people I know are more successful just jumping in because a little of this or a little of that turned into binges and they were starting all over.

    Going in steps like that gave me time to seek out other food and meal sources and recipes and use up food I already had in my kitchen. This gave me time to prepare for the next elimination. It also allowed me to see the changes in how I felt as I eliminated my problem foods. I began this change just weeks before a week long family vacation. My nutritionist gave me permission (so to speak) to not worry about making any changes before my trip. But with that pressure off, I began to make the little changes and I challenged myself to see how successful I could be while on my trip. We stayed in a condo and bought most of our food which helped but even eating out, I looked at menus with different eyes and found foods that worked for me. I never felt deprived on the trip and it seemed easier to do this than I thought. And even though I still wasn't where I am now, I knew when I returned home that if I could do this on vacation, I could do this, period.
  • _Amy_Budd
    _Amy_Budd Posts: 378 Member
    I went full tilt, from day 1. I know some people do better with small, gradual changes, but I'm the type of person who does better when committing fully.

    It's been almost 6 months since I went Primal, and I'm still very, very happy about it.
  • monkeydharma
    monkeydharma Posts: 599 Member
    I kinda did both: went full tilt from the start, but cheated like crazy around the edges for a couple of weeks until I realized that I was actually feeling a lot better body-pain-wise. Then I settled down and got serious.

    How serious? I gave my bread machine (my most prized - and used - kitchen appliance) to my stepdaughter... :)
  • thecrossfitter
    thecrossfitter Posts: 424 Member
    Thanks for sharing all of your experiences! Very helpful. Fortunately, going paleo isn't a HUGE change for me, as I already eat real food (as I like to explain it). Mostly the only steps left to take are cutting out dairy and grain (which I don't eat a ton of to start with). I'm not so worried about cutting dairy, although I admit I'm not sure I'll ever totally giving up cream in my coffee. I'm concerned about cutting out grains though; I don't eat a ton of them, but man sometimes I'm just really craving a half a bagel or something haha
  • monkeydharma
    monkeydharma Posts: 599 Member
    ...although I admit I'm not sure I'll ever totally giving up cream in my coffee...
    Yeah, that was my wife's biggest concern as well. She stuck with the half 'n' half for a few months, then suddenly said one day "I want to try the coconut milk". She switched to that, and never switched back.

    I don't mean coconut milk beverage, but canned lite coconut milk. The best price/taste/creaminess we've found was at Trader Joes. The calories are similar to H'n'H, the creaminess is better.
    I'm concerned about cutting out grains though; I don't eat a ton of them, but man sometimes I'm just really craving a half a bagel or something haha
    I hear ya. I was a Cheezit addict and we went through a couple loaves of home made bread a week. But Diet Evolution's 'Phase 1' acts as a boot camp of sorts, letting one recalibrate their need for sweets and grains. After that, we just didn't have the urge anymore. And for those rare times when the 'binge-lust' still comes upon me, I get a bag of chicharrones (pork cracklins). All the crunch one could want - and absolutely no carbs.
  • Geer76
    Geer76 Posts: 31 Member
    ...although I admit I'm not sure I'll ever totally giving up cream in my coffee...
    Yeah, that was my wife's biggest concern as well. She stuck with the half 'n' half for a few months, then suddenly said one day "I want to try the coconut milk". She switched to that, and never switched back.

    I don't mean coconut milk beverage, but canned lite coconut milk. The best price/taste/creaminess we've found was at Trader Joes. The calories are similar to H'n'H, the creaminess is better.

    [/quote]

    I am so glad I saw your post! Creamer is my weakness as I cannot drink coffee black, just enough vanilla creamer to sweeten it a bit. I am starting this in another week but I am going to give this a try this weekend to see how it taste to get a start with my coffee.
  • GalaxyDuck
    GalaxyDuck Posts: 406 Member
    I definitely love coconut milk with my coffee, especially iced coffee. Other than that, I was actually surprised how easy it was to give up dairy/grains! I was already eating clean so cutting out those 2 things wasn't that much of a stretch. For me it just meant I no longer had yogurt and granola for breakfast hehe. My mornings are much easier to handle now!
  • jellerose
    jellerose Posts: 74 Member
    I did sort of a slide into the whole thing. Started when I did some research on coconut oil and oils in general and realized how wrong everything was that I'd read about coconut oil and other oils for the past 20 or so years. The same research also supported my thoughts that real butter was better than margarine. I started adding coconut oil and found out about pastured butter and switched to that. Started avoiding soy and canola and other veggie/seed oils. While reading about oils I was exposed to more info on the grains and then started avoiding those and processed foods in general. It was a few months process that culminated in a few weeks of trying to be really strict in order to get things aligned. And that's worked so far as long as I keep my "cheats" to a minimum. If I'd read more of the primal/paleo information earlier I might have gone the whole way faster.

    I don't drink coffee but if I did I would just use the best and most organic cream I could find ; ). Or use coconut milk.

    I think which way to approach it, easing in or jumping in, depends more on your personality and what would work better for you.
  • I too kind of fell into this... For years I have been in the process of eliminating foods that cause me to (literally) double over in pain, I was surprised at how many there were. Some foods were only problematic in combination with others, but fine on their own, which is what took so long to figure it all out. During the process I even had my gallbladder removed, to no avail (apparently that was also not working, but not the root of the problem).
    Then one day, I was googling away and ta dah! There was Mark Sisson and his Primal Blueprint!! So, I can't say that "going Primal/Paleo" was even something that I did, more that I finally found a group to which I belonged!

    PS, I have always taken my coffee black (and strong), so I can't attest to the coconut milk, sorry. I have to admit though that I am addicted to the flavored liquid Stevia in my water, so I do have some idea what you're going through.
  • thecrossfitter
    thecrossfitter Posts: 424 Member
    Alright, alright... so I'm pretty much all the way paleo minus this creamer business. Once my current creamer runs out I'm buying some coconut stuff to try!
  • missyyclaire
    missyyclaire Posts: 572 Member
    Coconut milk is soooo good.

    I made some awful pancakes this morning that were Paleo using coconut flour, coconut milk, eggs, nutmeg, cinnamon and baking soda. Sounds good. They weren't. They were dry and boring. BUT, I found out how delicious coconut milk is. I have the "Thai" brand organic canned milk. Just try to keep me away from it tomorrow!!!
  • thecrossfitter
    thecrossfitter Posts: 424 Member
    Coconut milk is soooo good.

    I made some awful pancakes this morning that were Paleo using coconut flour, coconut milk, eggs, nutmeg, cinnamon and baking soda. Sounds good. They weren't. They were dry and boring. BUT, I found out how delicious coconut milk is. I have the "Thai" brand organic canned milk. Just try to keep me away from it tomorrow!!!

    My friend has a recipe for pancakes with almond meal - once she sends it to me I'll let you know how it tastes. She loves them!
  • missyyclaire
    missyyclaire Posts: 572 Member

    My friend has a recipe for pancakes with almond meal - once she sends it to me I'll let you know how it tastes. She loves them!

    Please do. I have some Almond Flour just waiting to be used!