BrightAngel check-in

Counting carbs/calories is a drag. Obsessive scale stepping is a recipe for despair. If you want to count something, "days on habit" is a much better metric. Checking off days on a calendar would do just fine, but if you do it here you get accountability and support. Here's how. Start a new topic in this forum called (say) "Your Name Daily Check In." Then every N day post a "reply" to that topic as to whether you stayed on habit. A simple "<font color="green">SUCCESS</font>" or "<font color="red">FAILURE</font>" (or your preferred euphemism if that's too harsh) is sufficient, but obviously you're welcome to write more if you want. On S-days just register that you're taking an S-day. You don't have to do this forever, just until you're confident you've built the habit. Feel free to check in weekly or monthly or sporadically instead of daily. Feel free also to track other habits besides No-s (I'm keeping this forum under No-s because that's what the vast majority are using it for). See also my <a href="/habitcal/">HabitCal</a> tool for another more formal (and perhaps complementary) way to track habits.

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Christmas Gift Suggestion

Post by BrightAngel » Thu Dec 16, 2010 9:49 pm

Image Today my hairdresser and I got into a discussion about diets.
As a result he expressed an interest in trying out the No S diet in January.
So I went to Amazon and had them mail him a book as a Xmas gift. Image
I’ll be interested in hearing an update when I see him again in February.
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Changing Brain Patterns.

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Dec 17, 2010 1:44 pm

Image Good Advice from a No S forum Member.
oolala53 wrote:It really is going to be somewhat a matter of deciding
that this is important enough for you to go through some times of toughing things out.
But sometimes, having the right motivation can help.
Down deep, you want to do this, but in your moments of temptation,
the present urges outweigh the long-term desire.
This is actually natural. There is a perfectly good biological basis for it.
This doesn't mean it should be an excuse,
but knowing about it can give one the impetus to muster the effort to thwart it.

One idea that might help to know, is that reports of successful losers on the National Weight Loss Registry
show that learning to stop a slide off one's plan right away
was considered to be the turning point for many maintainers.
It can be easy to get on a roll, but sooner or later, most losers hit a point at which it's not particularly easy
to stick with their restrictions, whatever they are, and they eat too much.
They say they just stop right as they realize it, and just wait until the next appropriate time to eat.
Many were not successful at this many times before they got determined enough to stick with it.
Even two or three times of doing this can reinforce a sense of control.
As one of the other posters said, "Yes, you can".
Hard to hear, but actually, when you do it, it's exhilirating!
And it starts creating new memories of new habits, which is what this is all about.

it can be the same decision to just stick to say,
a 3-hour time frame of not eating in the morning between your 9 a.m. breakfast and a noon lunch.
While you are working up to compliance, you might allow yourself a mid-morning tea break.

You'll notice that much of the time you want to eat, you are not actually empty-stomach hungry.
The urges to eat when we are not hungry are very similar to the thoughts of obsessive compulsives
in that there is a specific brain pattern that reinforces the strength of the urges,
and there is a strong, false sense that something terrible will happen if the urges are not obeyed.

When OC-ers acknowledge that the urge they experience to wash their hands or whatever
is not actually an emergency and they then turn their attention over and over to another activity,
it was found that their brain patterns changed
and they experienced a great decrease in the intensity and frequency of the urging thoughts
over a period of weeks.

The same brain change happens with food impulses.
Participating in the urg-ent behavior reinforces and strengthens the cycle,
in fact more so the more they eat; resisting it greatly decreases it,
but not usually before the urges get stronger!
(That's when people usually give in; then the cycly gets reinforced again,
and they think it is impossible to end.)
And they reduce in cycles.
It is not a linear change and certainly not a big drop off for most people.

I'm sure that you see this matches your own experience,
and dovetails with what Reinhard tells us about habit change,
though he doesn't use all the chemical foundations.
It FEELS as if you can't do anything
because your brain is sending very powerful messages to other parts of your body and your mind.
But they are false emergencies, and mostly represent habit.
Plain old habit!
Not immorality, slovenliness, emotional weakness, or the like,
though the urges are often paired with certain emotions,
and not always negative ones.

The bottom line is that if you don't do something to thwart these habits,
they will likely continue.

Others have made very good suggestions about behaviors;
I've tried to give one about the reasonable motivation to adhere to those behaviors.
It is worth the effort! it will become easier!
The greater your adherence to moderation, the easier it will be sooner,
but do expect it to take more than a few weeks to feel relatively solid.
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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Dec 19, 2010 2:44 pm

Copied from the General Thread
OlderandNotWiser wrote:BrightAngel,

This is unrelated to the overall topic here, but I just had to jump in and say
that I was fascinated by your use of the term "hobby" in regards to dieting.
I have often stressed over the fact that dieting was one of my main "hobbies"
and thought other people would not consider it a valuable use of time
(compared with other hobbies, I guess).

In fact, that is partly why I cling to No S despite the fact that I have some difficulties with it.
My understanding is that No S has the "benefit"
of putting dieting into the background of your life and making it less of a hobby.

But maybe I shouldn't worry so much about having dieting as a hobby.
When you say it, it sounds legitimate and reasonable.
Maybe dieting as a hobby is just a fact of my life,
just like stamp collecting is a fact of someone else's life.

Thanks for helping think about this in a new light!
ImageOlderandNotWiser,
Dieting as a Hobby is part of my Basic philosophy.
I've never read anything about the concept, just figured it out myself,
and will be writing more about that in the future.
In fact, I am in the process of...(sometime in 2011)....
creating a Blog at my brand new Domain, DietHobby.com,
which I bought specifically for that purpose.
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Post by connorcream » Sun Dec 19, 2010 8:47 pm

BrightAngel wrote: In fact, I am in the process of...(sometime in 2011)....
creating a Blog at my brand new Domain, DietHobby.com.
which I bought specifically for that purpose.[/color]
Yeah, hallejuah, amen sister, way to go, fantastic, awesome, rock on :D :D :D
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

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Christmas Video

Post by BrightAngel » Thu Dec 23, 2010 11:02 pm

Image
Here is an amusing Christmas video done by Byron Richards who wrote "Mastering Leptin"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8i1gGcOR ... r_embedded
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Post by BrightAngel » Sat Dec 25, 2010 2:23 pm

Image

Personal Diet Modifications have their place,
but making any food plan into a Habit, requires Consistency and Patience.

It is impossible to successfully make a Food Plan into a Habit,
if one changes the Plan every time one fails to meet its Guidelines.
No one is successful all of the time.

To build a successful eating Habit it is necessary to:

Recognize a failure,
Accept that failure,
Resolve to reduce future failures,
Continue working to follow that Food Plan.

Overcoming obstacles one at a time

Our goals may not come easy.
There is no accomplishment without work,
and no "win" without something to beat.

It's easy to get discouraged when roadblocks appear--
--in fact, it's only natural.
We've invested time and emotion into creating the perfect plan,
and then something has to come along and muck it all up.

Sometimes, though, all we have to do to beat that barrier
is to get back up and move forward again.
Obstacles are like the Wizard behind the curtain—
--they're a lot less intimidating once we see them up close.

Next time we take a step back,
don't let guilt pile it on top of our previous "stumbles."
Just take two steps forward
and we're still farther along than we were before.

It doesn't matter how many walls we face.
We only have to get the better of that last one.

Fall seven times. Stand up eight.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Japanese Proverb
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Sugar makes me Stupid.

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Dec 26, 2010 4:31 pm

ImageThis morning I saw this post on a Low Carb Thread,
and it reflected some of my own current Thoughts.
I’m posting it here to remind me.

Obviously I’m Stupid
...because I've learned nothing over the past year.
For the last week I have been eating pretty much whatever
and however I've wanted...and it is reflected on my scale.
How can it take a month or more to *lose* 10 pounds
and a week to put it right back on?

All I can think looking back at this last week is that sugar makes me stupid.
Even by yesterday when I was obviously feeling the effects of this added weight,
not to mention the carbs and sugar running through my body,
I was still eating that crud and thinking,
"I can't wait until tomorrow so I can stop eating this junk."

After breakfast this morning I'm going to be cleaning out the pantry
and all the junk...and stuff to make junk...is going into the trash.
Stick a fork in me because I'm 'done' and so ready to get back to my low carb eating.

***
Start Weight: 330
Current Weight: 236
Future Goal Weight 130
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Post by BrightAngel » Mon Dec 27, 2010 2:24 pm

ImageNow that December is ending and the New Year is almost here,
I have decided to keep most of my future posts on other personal check-in Threads short,
and to post those quotes that I find Thought-Provoking, Image
along with my own comments,
here on my own personal Thread.
In this way, readers can choose to access them or not
and this will make my presence less intrusive on other personal Threads.
I welcome postive comments here on my personal Thread, Image
and I prefer that any negative comment be made to me by PM.
If anyone wishes to make a public negative comment,
or make a long comment about any of my posts,
I ask them to do this by posting my quote along with their comment on the General Thread for discussion.
ImageHere is a recent quote I found interesting,
because it appears to agree with points that I've recently made.
Kathleen wrote:I found an entire chapter on fasting in Rediscover Catholicism by Matthew Kelly.
Here is the first sentence I found on fasting:

"As I have observed it, people want a diet
that will allow them to eat whatever they want, whenever they want,
yet still allow them to look great, feel great, and lose that undesired weight.
Basically what we are looking for is a miracle product
that will remove the need for any discipline in our eating and exercise habits
so that we can continue to indulge in the hedonistic ways
that violate the-best-version-of-ourselves at every turn."
(p. 251).

Later in the chapter on fasting, the author writes:

"Our lives change when our habits change.
Our habits change when we make resolutions,
remind ourselves of those resolutions,
hold ourselves accountable for them,
and perform them.
Sometimes we fail,
but there is no success that isn't checkered with failure.
Don't give up. Press on, little by little."
Last edited by BrightAngel on Mon Dec 27, 2010 2:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Cultivate habits that result in being thin

Post by BrightAngel » Mon Dec 27, 2010 2:30 pm

ImageThose who have been following the posts between Kathleen and me on her Thread
know that there is much that she and I do not agree on.
However, I do agree with the below-quoted statement that she posted today. Image
Kathleen wrote:...the brilliance of The No S Diet is not in the specific rules of the diet.
Instead, the brilliance of the diet is in the philosophy
of cultivating habits that are sustainable for life and that result in weight loss.

It is so obvious that it almost seems like a tautology, but it is not:
the way to be thin is to cultivate habits that result in being thin.
Although Kathleen and I do not agree on what those particular Behaviors are...
.....i.e. those Behaviors that, when solidified into Habits, will result in becoming thin......
I do agree with the above-quoted statement.
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Today I feel encouraged.

Post by BrightAngel » Tue Dec 28, 2010 3:15 pm

Image Every year so far, I've promised myself
that I wouldn't overeat between my birthday and Christmas Day,
but so far... I've always been unsuccessful with that Effort.
In fact, I'd say that overeating during that week is a HABIT.Image
Image
But Today I feel encouraged.
I love the week after Christmas,
because during that week my pattern is to get back on my path of weight-loss or maintenance eating,
and this is what I'm doing...
It's my HABIT. No waiting until the New Year for me.

Today is going to be a really great day for me,
because my husband is back at work, and my chores are completed,
and I get to sit in front of the fire
and read Gary Taubes' new diet book Image
that was published TODAY.
ImageReading new diet books is part of my Hobby,
but I'm especially interested in this one, because
Taube's 2007 "Good Calories Bad Calories" is one of my all-time favorites.
I pre-ordered this book from Amazon a long time ago,
The Title is: "Why we get Fat and What to do about it"
I understand it is primarily supposed to be an easier version of GCBD.

However after I pre-ordered my book, Image
I decided I didn't want to wait till it was shipped to me to read it,
and gave myself the luxury of ALSO pre-ordering a Kindle version.
It arrived on my Kindle around mid-night last night,
and today I get to read it.
No doubt my hard copy will arrive in a few days,
and maybe then I'll use my my pink highlighter while I read it again.
Some might find that a bit "Obsessive",
but as I've said before....
“Obsessed†is what the weak and lazy call the dedicated."Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Tue Dec 28, 2010 3:51 pm

Image Some Very Good Advice.
TexArk wrote:Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Wed Dec 29, 2010 2:18 pm


ImageRe Gary Taubes' new book "Why we get fat and what to do about it"
Although I've never been a "low-carb" person, I loved the book.Image

Since I've already read Good Calories Bad Calories several times,
and watched all of his University Lectures on YouTube,
I was worried that Taubes' new book would just seem like old info.
However, this was not the case.

He did a GREAT JOB.
His use of less detail made his concepts far more understandable
for someone like me, who is not a scientist or a medical professional.
I found it very motivating, Image
and I recommend it to every open-minded person
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Post by connorcream » Wed Dec 29, 2010 10:29 pm

Thanks for the review. My book is on order. I too wondered if it would a rehash of topics. I am extrememly interested in this research both for my DS with Crohn's and myself with maintenance. There is a lot of overlap in our needs.
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10/6/2009
start/current
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Post by BrightAngel » Fri Dec 31, 2010 4:17 pm

Image Many of you who follow my Thread know that for the past 6 months or so,
I've been studying the Low Carb Way of Eating,
and doing a bit of occasional minor experimentation with it.

As a believer in being an ongoing "Experiment of One"
I have been inspired by Gary Taubes' new book :
"Why we get fat and what to do about it",
and I have decided that in 2011, I'm going to make a real Effort
to do an ongoing, long-term, personal experiment with the low-carb way of eating.

Image Behavior Goals:
  • Continue to eat about the same amount of food, but make it low-carb;
    Continue to track and log all my food, working to keep my calories at my normal maintenance level;
    Continue working on other eating Behaviors that I'd like to make into Habits.
Image Result Goals: (Any or all of these would be great.)
  • Maintain my current weight with less cravings and hunger;
    Drop my weight lower into my Maintenance Weight Range, while eating the same calories;
    Maintain my weight lower in my Maintenance Weight Range, while eating the same or more calories.
While I've become open to the Idea of Low-Carb,
I still have many personal reservations. Image
But as Samuel Johnson said:
Nothing will ever be attempted
if all possible objections must first be overcome.
so I'm going for it NOW. Image
Last edited by BrightAngel on Sat Jan 01, 2011 2:23 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by Kathleen » Fri Dec 31, 2010 6:10 pm

BrightAngel,
I did find the Taubes book interesting but I came away from reading it thinking that fasting is similar to low carb in that you can reduce caloric consumption without much hunger. I'm wondering why you have gone down the path of experimenting with low carb. What has your experience been with fasting? Thanks.
Kathleen

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Post by BrightAngel » Fri Dec 31, 2010 7:53 pm

Image Kathleen,

I believe you are referring to your quick review
of Good Calories Bad Calories, by Gary Taubes, published in 2007.
That is an excellent book, however, it is about 500 pages long
with more than 100 reference pages,
which was written geared primarily to medical professionals.
I’ve read it at least 5 times, and I still haven’t absorbed it all
because it is really hard. I have a doctorate in law,
with an extensive history in legal research, but I still found it to be difficult reading.
There was almost nothing about “fasting†in the book,
and the fact that you discovered a statement on that issue shows
how we tend to gravitate toward our individual interests.
This new book by Taubes, Why we get fat and what to do about it", Image
was just released last Tuesday. I got it on that day because I had pre-ordered it,
and I also bought it on my Kindle.
It was written geared to people like me…those who are not medical professionals.
It is 250 pages and is a far easier to read.
Although it isn't what I would call a quick read.
If you want more info on that after reading my post,
let me know and I’ll do my best to fill you in.

Image I am experimenting with Low-Carb because I have not yet found
a Way of Eating to maintain my weight-loss
that I enjoy enough to continuing doing for the rest of my life.
Low Carb is one of the few ways of eating that I have very little personal experience with.
As I’ve told you previously, my body desperately wants to regain its lost weight,
and maintenance takes constant vigilance.
I’m hoping that low-carb will help eliminate some of my food cravings,
as well as some of my hunger.
Like many other diets…as well as calorie counting…
a low-carb diet can fit well into the principles of No S.

You asked about my experience with fasting,
and I’ve shared some of that with you previously.
I see that you just bought Brad Pilons’s e-book, Eat Stop Eat. Image
I own that as well; have read it thoroughly several times;
and think it is probably the best book around that addresses Intermittent Fasting.
I suggest you read it carefully and thoroughly more than once.

Personally, I’ve spent a lot of time experimenting with Intermittent Fasting,
and much of it was specifically the 24 hr fasting method suggested by Brad Pilon.
I will probably do more of that in the future.
Fasting and Low-Carb are not mutually-exclusive,
and neither are Fasting and No S, or Low-Carb and No S.
A 24 hr fast is one way to further reduce insulin,
and many low-carb people use it for that purpose.

My primary purpose for Intermittent Fasting has been to reduce my calories
for one to three days a week, in order to drop my calorie averages.
For me, the primary difficulty with Eat Stop Eat, or any Intermittent Fast,
is not keeping my calories low on a fast day. I can do that.
On Fast days my practice is to eat dinner only, around 350 to 400 calories,
with no snacks after dinner.

However, on “normal†days, the days before and after an intermittent fast,
I do have great difficulty eating only normal amounts, and not compensating
by eating more food than my normal calorie allotment,
and sometimes those fasts will trigger binge behavior for me. Image
This might not be the case IF I were eating low-carb,
since it is the sugars --refined carbs, and starches—complex carbs
that trigger those cravings and binges.

Low-carb eating is different for everyone, and in his new book,
Taubes clarifies the reasons for this on page 204 and 205.
“The fewer carbohydrates we consume, the leaner we will be. This is clear. But there’s no guarantee that the leanest we can be will ever be as lean as we’d like. This is a reality to be faced. As I discussed, there are genetic variations in fatness and leanness that are independent of diet. Multiple hormones and enzymes affect our fat accumulation, and insulin happens to be the one hormone that we can consciously control through our dietary choices. Minimizing the carbohydrates we consume and eliminating the sugars will lower our insulin levels as low as is safe, but it won’t necessarily undo the effects of other hormones….

This means that there’s no one-size-fits-all prescription for the quantity of carbohydrates we can eat and still lose fat or remain lean. For some, staying lean or getting back to being lean might be a matter of merely avoiding sugars and eating the other carbohydrates in the diet, even the fattening ones, in moderation; pasta dinners once a week, say, instead of every other day. For others, moderation in carbohydrate consumption might not be sufficient, and far stricter adherence is necessary. And for some, weight will be lost only on a diet of virtually zero carbohydrates, and even this may not be sufficient to eliminate all our accumulated fat, or even most of it.

Whichever group you fall into, though, if you’re not actively losing fat and yet want to be leaner still, the only viable option…is to eat still fewer carbohydrates, identify and avoid other foods that might stimulate significant insulin secretion…and have more patience. (Anecdotal evidence suggests that occasional or intermittent fasting for eighteen or twenty-four hours might work to break through these plateaus of weight loss, but this, too, has not been adequately tested) “
Last edited by BrightAngel on Sat Jan 01, 2011 2:26 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Kathleen » Fri Dec 31, 2010 8:48 pm

HI BrightAngel,
I'm glad you told me about your problem with binge eating in conjunction with intermittent fasting. I lost the No S habits when I tried to add intermittent fasting, and -- well -- here I am about 200 again. I had my own experience with low carb gong way back to The Scarsdale Diet in about 1976. My general approach, however, was low calorie. I may look into the new Taubes book, so thanks for telling me about it, but I want to try out the intermittent fasting approach. I'm also thinking I may try to have one diet per month and just stick with that for the month. For example, with my working, it's hard to walk 10,000 steps, but I can sure make the effort to reach 6,000. This new diet of the day wears as thin as does binge eating.
Kathleen

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When "S days gone wild" don't subside.

Post by BrightAngel » Sat Jan 01, 2011 1:59 pm

Image Happy New Year

I recently read Gary Taubes' new book
"Why We Get Fat and What To Do About It"
The concepts in this book may be helpful to many of our obese members,
when combined together with the basic structure of the No S Diet.

This could especially be the case for those
for whom "vanilla" No S has resulted in little or no personal weight-loss,
or for those who find that "S days gone wild" don't subside after a reasonable trial period.
Below is a link with exerpts from it.


Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It - Google Books
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Re: When "S days gone wild" don't subside.

Post by connorcream » Sat Jan 01, 2011 7:19 pm

BrightAngel wrote: I recently read Gary Taubes' new book
"Why We Get Fat and What To Do About It"
The concepts in this book may be helpful to many of our obese members,
when combined together with the basic structure of the No S Diet.

This could especially be the case for those
for whom "vanilla" No S has resulted in little or no personal weight-loss,
or for those who find that "S days gone wild" don't subside after a reasonable trial period.
This could help with a wide range of health problems, obesity, being one of them. Thanks for the heads up on the book.

Happy New Year to you!
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

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Why we Get Fat and What We Can Do About It

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 02, 2011 2:18 pm

Image This is a copy of a few relevant posts from the General Thread.
BrightAngel wrote:
wosnes wrote:I've not read either of Taube's books
I think he's a prime example of how anything can be proved using research.
Taubes' is a controversial science journalist, not a diet guru.
He is famous because of his extremely accurate and thorough reporting
of the past 100 years of research in this area.

As you say, you have not read either of Taubes' books,
but merely read "comments" about them.
I do not believe that an unbiased person such as yourself,
who has your experience and intelligence,
would have that opinion after actually reading his books.
BrightAngel wrote:
wosnes wrote:I haven't read comments -- I've read articles written by Gary Taubes.
And I know that any science writer or researcher worth his/her salt can make anything sound credible.
Taubes is not a Researcher, a science writer, or a scientist.
He is not involved in science or research, except as as an award winning journalist
who researches and writes about controversial science issues.

Except for the really famous article written by Taubes-"What if it's a Big Fat Lie",
Taubes is not well-known for his articles, but for his books.
These made him famous, and there have been many articles by others about him.
It sounds like you read articles by others about Taubes, who perhaps quoted him out-of-context.

The famous New York Times article, and the book Good Calories Bad Calories,
are his primary previous written contributions to the Health care area.
I understand that previous to that he wrote a controversial book on a Physics issue,
and then another on an Engineering issue.
He seems to be sensible, down-to-earth, and unbiased, which is unusual
in such a brilliant man. He has a Physics degree from Harvard,
an Engineering degree from Stanford, and a Journalism degree from Columbia.

Your prejudice against him surprises me.
I can only suppose it is due to your lack of accurate information,
especially since he is so greatly respected and admired
by many of the natural food diet gurus that you frequently quote here in the forum.
I suggest you keep an open mind until you've actually read his book.
If you were to invest $14 and actually read his latest one,
I would then be quite interested in your opinion.
BrightAngel wrote:
Sharpie wrote:As a scientist and writer myself, I can vouch for this.
I can make anything sound good/credible and give you a whole page of references to boot.
Doesn't make it True (with a capital T) though.
Fortunately, (or not) most people stick to writing what they believe to be true.
Then you have to decide if you believe them yourself.
As a retired Attorney with 25 years of trial experience,
I agree with your statement of how easy it is to make people believe your opinion.
This, however, isn't applicable or on point in the present case.

I believe that most people who have read Taubes books
would agree that this...although true... simply misses the entire point.

The point is not what Taube's personal opinions or conclusions are, BASED on his research of the area.
The point is the shocking, but true, state of the actual scientifc research in this area.
BrightAngel wrote:
wosnes wrote:If you look at all the slim, healthy populations throughout the world, most of their diets are based on a combination of whole and refined grains and legumes with vegetables, fruits, meat and dairy added as available and affordable. (There are just a handful whose diets are meat based.) One could say that it's genetics, but when people from those places come to the US and start eating like Americans, they develop the same weight and health issues as Americans.
john wrote:You know, on the topic of grain based diet of populations elsewhere in the world, I was also thinking about past populations. I believe the usual diet of a Roman Legionnaire was mostly grain(oats) with little meat or animal products? Any corrections or thoughts on this or other historical perspectives??
Both sides of the issues and questions stated above are discussed in detail
within the 500 pages of difficult reading in Taubes 2007 book, Good Calories Bad Calories.
which was written for the medical profession.
They are also discussed rather thoroughly in his new book,
Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It,
which is only 250 pages and was written for intelligent, average people.
If you are an open-minded person who is truly interested in both sides of those issues
you owe it to yourself to read Taubes' new book.
Without knowledge of the total picture, the validity of one's opinion is questionable.

To show you how important a book that I feel this is...
Although as part of my choice to treat dieting as a Hobby,
I read almost EVERYTHING published about dieting.
Some of these are good, some are not.
However, I have chosen to review only TWO books on Amazon.
One of them was the No S Diet, back in 2008.
The other is Taubes new book.

I have always been a calories-in-calories-out person,
and I am undecided about the unprocessed foods question...but beginning to lean toward natural foods.
However, my own experience,
put together with the details of the past 100 years of all dieting research,
has led me to my VERY RECENT experiment with low-carb eating.
At this point, I am totally undecided about its value to me.
After 6 months or so, I might have an opinion as to it's effectiveness,
now...I've just become open-minded enough to actually try to find out for myself.
Last edited by BrightAngel on Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Kathleen » Sun Jan 02, 2011 6:49 pm

BrightAngel,
I'll be reading the book and then let's see if we can have a discussion about it. You've obviously given a lot of thought to this issue, and I have found your comments to me helpful -- although I tend to have a delayed reaction to them. I'll let you know what I think after reading the book. Thanks.
Kathleen

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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:22 pm

Kathleen,
I'll be looking forward to our future discussion.
Image
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Insulin argument

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:24 pm

TexArk wrote: I have also read enough in the past
to see the truth in the insulin argument for some people.

It is my opinion that those who have never been obese
and have never had a bingeing disorder would not be interested in this argument,
and it probably doesn’t even apply to them
.
I think that this is a very good point. Image
Last edited by BrightAngel on Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Delayed Gratification

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:26 pm

I loved this. Image
Although I'm familiar with the delayed gratification research,
I'd never seen this video.
Thanks for sharing it.
Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:59 pm

gettheweightoff wrote:In an effort to live a lifestyle free from an obsession with diets ....
Image This appears to be a common Theme among members here.
The majority of people just want the problem to go away.
They want to eat like "normal people" and be in the "normal" weight range.
They'd like to lose and maintain their weight without difficulty or much thought.

Some people who are only overweight, or just above the border of obesity, are able to do this.
Unfortunately, those who have lived with a lifetime of obesity
are unlikely to ever accomplish this...
even when the way of eating is as simple as the No S Diet.

I am one of those people with a history of morbid obesity,
who has lost a great deal of weight,
and I have maintained my weight near my goal for the past 5 years.
I have found it Beneficial to incorporate an obession with diets into my personal lifestyle,
to embrace the devil, and make dieting into an enjoyable Hobby.
With some effort, an "obsession with dieting" Image
can be changed from a "bad" thing, into a "good" thing.
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Taubes Lectures

Post by TexArk » Mon Jan 03, 2011 2:34 pm

BA,
I thought you might be interested in these lectures...seem to be different from the ones in the lecture hall...they are in a home setting and have a Q and A session.

http://livinlavidalowcarb.com/blog/ims- ... aubes/8971

Update on my experiment of NoS Low Carb: First two days I have not been able to reach 1000 calories and am extremely satisfied. Of course I am getting zero exercise at the time. I will add more nuts or oil today to get calorie count up.
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Re: Taubes Lectures

Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 03, 2011 3:19 pm

TexArk wrote:http://livinlavidalowcarb.com/blog/ims- ... aubes/8971

Update on my experiment of NoS Low Carb:
First two days ...I ...am extremely satisfied.
I saw that Taubes' lecuture on YouTube when it first went up,
and I especially enjoyed the Q&A section.
However, I didn't have the easily accessible link you provided,
and I'm really happy to have it here on my Thread.

Congratulations on your successful eating behavior.
I feel certain you will see good results when you are able to weigh again.
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Portion Control

Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 04, 2011 1:58 pm

Kathleen wrote:Monday, January 3, 2011:
On Sunday, a local Minneapolis Star Tribune columnist, Katherine Kersten, said:
"Honesty, generosity and self-restraint don't come naturally to human beings.
These traits are difficult to acquire,
and require suppression or rechannelling of base human instincts.
Only a society with a moral system based on claims of transcendent truth
can help its citizens overcome their selfish tendencies and successfully cultivate virtue."

I have been pursuing a method of eating that would allow me to eat as much as I wanted.
I have wanted to lose weight on a diet without portion control.
It was a noble venture to find a way to avoid
the misery I certainly experienced with coventional diets,
but now I realize that it was all a dream:
the key to successful weight loss is moderation,
and moderation means portion control.

Sometimes long-cherished beliefs are hard to let go,
and sometimes they are a relief when you let them go.
I've had a long break-up with this notion that portion control isn't necessary, either,
but I think the recovery is going to be much easier.
ImageAt Last !ImageWay to Go! Image
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Science can only PROVE what is NOT TRUE

Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 04, 2011 2:40 pm

guadopt1997 wrote:Breakthrough research revealed in this book (Carb Lover's Diet) shows ............
Image It is important to remember that there are a lot of rules
that have to followed for accurate scientific research,
and the results of that research are also often reported incorrectly.
Even then.... Image
Science cannot prove what is true.
It can only prove what is NOT true.


Taubes' former book (2007), Good Calories Bad Calories,
which was written for medical professionals,
is a very detailed and hard read which
thoroughly covers the past 100 years of dieting research-all sides.

The new book, Why We Get Fat and What to Do about it
restates a lot of that information Image
in a way that an intelligent average person can understand.
Image Reading it will provide a great deal of enlightenment
for anyone interested in the Reality surrounding weight issues.
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Post by BrightAngel » Wed Jan 05, 2011 4:47 pm

Image
Commitment, you either have it or you don't,
and only you can decide if you do."
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Structure together with Individual Flexibility

Post by BrightAngel » Thu Jan 06, 2011 1:50 pm

Image One of the things I like best about Reinhard, (along with his Habit concept),
is his Acceptance of the Differences between each of us.

One of the things I like best about the No-S diet,
is the way it provides Structure together with Individual Flexibility.
reinhard wrote: No-s is, in a way, a lower-carb diet.
Sweets are carbs.
They're just easier to identify and more indisputably bad for you than other carbs.
They're the "low hanging fruit" of carbs.

So while I am not persuaded that the "carbness" of sweets
makes them worse than any other calories (to my mind,
it's all about the bigger picture behaviors they're associated with)
you're hedging your bets a little with no-s:
if they are in fact worse you are in fact eating less of them.

If you feel the need to add additional carb based restrictions to no-s,
you certainly can, it's an easy framework to hang additional rules onto.
Another relevant passage from the no-s diet book:
Page 167
...the No S Diet...is accommodating and unobtrustive enough
that you could combine it with another diet if you want to hedge your weight-loss bets,
want to take a systematic approach to specific nutritional issues...
People on No S...have reported combining it
with various types of low-carb plans,
the Shangri-La Diet, vegetarianism, and more.
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Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 07, 2011 2:08 pm

ImageHere's something I recently found amusing.
stonetoomany wrote:A UK comedy show has a diet club character
who promotes the “Half-calories Dietâ€.

She takes a chocolate bar and holds it up
She cuts the bar in two and says:

“Now look, you can eat this now because it is half the calories.
And because it's half the calories you can eat twice as much.â€
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WWGF on the Cover of February 2011 issue of READER'S DIGEST

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 07, 2011 8:48 pm

Image IT"S SO COOL...
I've been talking to everyone about Gary Taubes' new book,
Why We Get Fat And What to Do About it.
and how interesting its concepts are to me...
even though I've never been a "low-carb" person,
but have always been a calorie counter.
I even bought another copy as an audio book
because I like listening to them while I do other things.

Today I working on a picture puzzle while I listened to that cd,
when the mailman brought my new Reader's Digest.
WWGF was featured RIGHT THERE ON THE COVER,
and there was an excellent article about it inside.
It made me feel just like one of the "in-crowd"..
Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Sat Jan 08, 2011 3:47 pm

Over43 wrote:I'm not sure becoming a grown up has a final destination. :shock:
Image My belief is that it doesn't,
and I'm doing my best to enjoy the ride.

Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 09, 2011 2:04 pm

Posted on the General Thread,
and Copied here for Future Reference.


Image I found this recent broadcast on obesity interesting and informative,
and am interested in the individual reactions of those who hear it through.
For faster access, click "Popup".


http://www.kpbs.org/news/2011/jan/04/wh ... being-fat/
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Post by Kathleen » Sun Jan 09, 2011 2:16 pm

BrightAngel,
Ever hear the saying, "Even the devil can quote Scripture?" Well, I have now read the first part of the book (first 8 chapters), and I think it makes a compelling argument for why a portion control approach is a dead end. Those who can manage to stay in a semi starved state do stay lean but at the very high cost of being hungry all the time. I think I'll stop reading now until I'm home next month, but I did skim through the rest of the book. To me, taking a low carb approach means you'll have carb cravings that you can never satisfy, which is similar to having cravings from a portion control approach. I will be reading the rest of the book thoroughly but more to evaluate what can be applied to fating than what it says about a low carb approach, and as a result my reading will be very biased. Where would you like to have this discussion? Thanks.
Kathleen

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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 09, 2011 3:24 pm

Kathleen wrote:I have now read the first part of the book (first 8 chapters),
and I think it makes a compelling argument for why a portion control approach is a dead end.
Those who can manage to stay in a semi starved state do stay lean
but at the very high cost of being hungry all the time.
ImageIt IS a good argument against portion control (...in a Traditional balanced diet...).
This is one reason I so much wanted you to read it so we could discuss it.

I have been maintaining a very large weight-loss for many years,
and I've had to learn to tolerate having both hunger and carb cravings most of the time.
It has been worth the Effort to me,
however, I am always on the alert for a way to stay small AND reduce hunger.
I don't know whether or not this is it...but I'm giving it a try.
...stop reading now...until the end of the month, but I did skim through the rest of the book.
To me, taking a low carb approach means you'll have carb cravings that you can never satisfy,
which is similar to having cravings from a portion control approach.
There are strong cravings at first, but for me they have already been greatly reduced,
and I'm still at a very the early stage of my low-carb experiment.
I have observed that most people who adopt low-carb eating as a way-of-life,
are like long-time ex-smokers who experience cravings only occasionally,Image
unless they smoke again.
Then, they have to go through craving withdrawals again.

This is something I will want to discuss further with you
after you have read the book completely.
I will be reading the rest of the book thoroughly
but more to evaluate what can be applied to fasting than what it says about a low carb approach,
and as a result my reading will be very biased.
ImageI am very sorry to hear that.
I had hoped you would read the entire book with an open-minded approach.
Skimming a book with a biased or closed-minded approach is almost worse than not reading at all,
because it makes one THINK they know everything about the Subject
without actually absorbing the Knowledge which is necessary to understand it.


Both No S, AND Low-Carb blend very well with Intermittent Fasting,
and in fact I know that many obese people find each of these Eating Structures
extremely helpful to help them use Intermittent Fasting for weight-control,
while avoiding the binge-fast cycle that fasting often produces.

ImageIf my current low-carb trial proves successful,
I plan to experiment with this combination later.
I've been told that Eat Stop Eat works exceptionally well in a Low-Carb lifestyle.
Where would you like to have this discussion?
I don't want to get into a discussion on the General Thread,
because I don't want to see comments
from anyone who has not ACTUALLY READ the book. Image

Otherwise, anywhere is Acceptable to me...But I just had a Thought..
Since both of us read each other's Threads daily...
ImageOne way would be...
On your Thread, you could quote something you want to discuss,
and then make a lengthy comment of your thoughts.

Then I could quote you on my Thread and make my comments about that,
and you could quote me on your Thread and make your comments about that. etc. etc.

That way my comments would mostly be on MY Thread,
and your comments would mostly be on YOUR Thread.

Another way would be to Personal Message back and forth.
Or we could e-mail each other.
Although, I think that many of the Forum members would be interested in reading our discussion,
and it could be Thought Provoking and Helpful to some.
What is your preference?
Image
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Post by Kathleen » Sun Jan 09, 2011 3:54 pm

Hi BrightAngel,
Recognizing and acknowledging I have a bias is better than not recognizing it. I will attempt to be open-minded but my sister in law's low carb cheesecake cured me of ever being willing to try low carb! How about a discussion on the general form instead of one of our threads? I'd like to go through this chapter by chapter.
Kathleen

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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 09, 2011 4:07 pm

Kathleen wrote:Recognizing and acknowledging I have a bias is better than not recognizing it.
Very True.
my sister in law's low carb cheesecake cured me of ever being willing to try low carb
Amusing....but your sister-in-law's poor cooking skills
actually have little to do with a low-carb lifestyle.
How about a discussion on the general forum instead of one of our threads?
I'd like to go through this chapter by chapter.
Image While I think going through it chapter by chapter would be great.
I don't want to do it in the General Discussion Forum. Image
The General Forum is open to comments by EVERYONE.
Anyone who has an opinion...no matter how uninformed...can chime in,
and despite the Subject Heading, those Threads tend to go far off topic.
This would be very distracting
Image and make it extremely difficult for the two of us have a discussion.

Image I just had another idea....
We could start a new additional Check-In Thread for the two of us together,
and call it something like
Kathleen and Bright Angel's Discussion of Why We Get Fat.
What do you think about that?
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one week of NoS Low Carb

Post by TexArk » Sun Jan 09, 2011 5:04 pm

I wanted to chime in here to report my experience this week. I have stayed well under 1200 calories with no hunger or cravings and actually had to add calories at the end of the day so as not to be too low. My carbs have stayed between 60 and 100. I am following the guidelines I set for myself on my checkin. I just count the carbs as they show up on Diet Power. I don't think these are effective carbs..not sure. As you know I can't weigh yet (maybe next Tuesday) but I feel thinner! I am still in wheelchair so no exercise except a little weight lifting.

I have worked my way through the first 17 chapters on Good Calories Bad Calories and watched many of the lectures posted on internet. I wanted to read through the science before the short version. I am not a trained scientist, but a university critical reading and thinking teacher by profession. I have been reading nutrition research for years, however, and I find Taubes easy for a lay person to understand. I want my husband to read this and he does have a science background and would not go for the "condensed version." I will read it next though to see if it is something that I could share with others which would be easier than the tome.

I see the logic and the reasoning in what I have been reading and I am seeing evidence (albeit short term) for me. I would like to join you and Kathleen in your discussion, and I firmly agree that it should not be held on the main discussion board. There is too much groundwork that has to be laid to try to respond to comments from those who have not studied his writings. Also, people who have tried some of the low carb diets in the past may consider themselves experts when they still don't know the science behind the diet. I certainly do not want to get in an exchange with those who are not open minded or resent this discussion.

My concern for my diet right now is that I don't get too low in calories so I am adding extra good fat to keep it up. How crazy is that?
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Post by Over43 » Sun Jan 09, 2011 5:07 pm

I would like to see this discussion. Personally I think Gary Taubes is brilliant. Glaciers move faster than I did getting through Good Carbs, Bad Carbs, but it was worth it. I have not read the second book yet, but plan on it.
Bacon is the gateway meat. - Anthony Bourdain
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I made myself be hungry, then I would get hungrier. - Frank Zane Mr. Olympia '77, '78, '79

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Re: one week of NoS Low Carb

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 09, 2011 5:52 pm

TexArk wrote:
I have worked my way through the first 17 chapters on Good Calories Bad Calories
and watched many of the lectures posted on internet.
I wanted to read through the science before the short version.
I am not a trained scientist, but a university critical reading and thinking teacher by profession.
I have been reading nutrition research for years, however,
and I find Taubes easy for a lay person to understand.

I see the logic and the reasoning in what I have been reading
and I am seeing evidence (albeit short term) for me.
I would like to join you and Kathleen in your discussion

I firmly agree that it should not be held on the main discussion board.
There is too much groundwork that has to be laid
to try to respond to comments from those who have not studied his writings.
Also, people who have tried some of the low carb diets in the past
may consider themselves experts
when they still don't know the science behind the diet.
I certainly do not want to get in an exchange with those
who are not open minded or resent this discussion.

Image TexArk, Thanks for your comment,
and I would very much enjoy discussing with you
the concepts in Good Calories Bad Calories as well as
Why We Get Fat and What to Do About it by Gary Taubes.
The best way for the two of us to do that, however,
is probably not inside a Discussion between Kathleen and me about the topic.

Image While I welcome the additional participation by unbiased people,
I am hoping for a Dialogue primarily between two people...
peppered by occasional on-point comments from others
who have also read the entire recent book,
and are therefore, informed on the exact issues,
and who are also willing to discuss this in a general and interesting way
while maintaining a courteous manner.

I am certain that you would do this, Image
and I hope that you will feel free to be such a participant.
If you would like a more in-depth or personal discussion on the Topic,
please PM me to see how we could arrange this.
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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 09, 2011 6:03 pm

Over43 wrote:I would like to see this discussion. Personally I think Gary Taubes is brilliant.
Glaciers move faster than I did getting through Good Carbs, Bad Carbs, but it was worth it.
I have not read the second book yet, but plan on it.
Image Thanks for your comment.
I agree with your assessment .

Image He is Brilliant...and well-educated.
Taubes has a degree in physics from Harvard.
A master’s in aerospace engineering from Stanford
and a Journalism degree from Columbia.
Image EACH of those schools
is considered the Pinnacle of each specific area of study.
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Post by TexArk » Sun Jan 09, 2011 6:14 pm

I understand your rationale. I will follow your discussion with Kathleen with interest. You are correct. I would like to see a focused discussion between you two. If I have a question concerning some of the concepts discussed I will pm you.
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Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 10, 2011 5:03 pm

Re-posted below.
Last edited by BrightAngel on Tue Jan 11, 2011 12:25 am, edited 2 times in total.

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Biochemist review of Why We Get Fat

Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 10, 2011 5:56 pm

Image I just read this review by a Biochemist of Taubes' new book,
Why We Get Fat and What To Do About It.
In 2008, Gary Taubes' GCBC changed my life for the better.
I'm raving about his new book WWGF.
If you can't slog through GCBC, read WWGF because it might just save your sanity.

If you haven't taken a course in chemical thermodynamics and aren't sure he's correct, let me add –
he's right and no laws of thermo were harmed in his hypothesis.

But he's smart and educated enough for you to be safe in trusting the accuracy of his statements.
"Only need to count calories and move more"- buzz words and jingo phrases

......(especially when incomplete and misconstrued because of the complex subject matter)......
are dangerous things.
`Calories'
(as they are currently misrepresented in the context of human nutrition) do not count.

I'm a biochemist and I teach thermo. I'm a parent (cook for my family).
I also eat and I'm thankful I'm a voracious reader and I found Taubes.

Keep in mind our bodies are much more than a simple mono-functional furnace –
which only burns fuel to produce heat. We need to eat for fuel, heat, insulation,
and what is always neglected in these discussions- constantly supplying raw materials.
We eat for all these reasons, for our 100 trillion cells that `turnover' at various rates,
but also for our 1000 trillion prokaryote symbiotic passengers that turnover all the time.
Cholesterol is never used for fuel- only for raw material.

And since these discussions seem to only ever mention fuel calories, this is crucial.
Cholesterol is so important to our structure and function
and for us to thrive that most cells can make it. Drugging it down might not be a good thing.
Restricting dietary fat and protein calories for energy to make cholesterol
(low calorie, semi-starvation diets)
or decreasing animal fat and protein components, raw materials,
to build it, or acquire it, and then blaming it for heart disease -might just be incorrect.
And there quite simply is no requirement in human nutrition for dietary carbohydrate.
Ingested carbohydrate is only used for fuel.

Don't you think that the body is a little more complex than a furnace?
So the simplistic directive –
do not eat much fat because it supplies 9 calories/gram
and it will make you fatter than if you eat carbohydrate, 4 calories/gram-
could be problematic.
Could it be that eating sugar, grains and carbohydrate is what's causing the trouble?

Read everything Taubes writes. It might save your life.
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Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 11, 2011 12:23 am

Image
The above-mentioned Discussion has started on a Separate Thread.
Any forum member who has read Taubes' book, Image
Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It,
and is willing to follow the Guidelines for Discussion
that are specified in the first posts on the page 1 of Thread
is welcome to make comments.

Anyone who is familiar with Taubes' concepts
but hasn't yet read the book
can easily get it from Amazon
either hardback within a few days, or instantly on Kindle.
Also from most bookstores,
or even as an e-book for your computer or Ipad from Google
Image I know Kindle is about $10 and Google is about $14,
and you can get electronic copies instantly.
The Links are easy to find, I've posted some of them already

Personally I encourage you to do this, rather than wait for a library copy
...which could take a very long time...
and you will also probably want to re-read it several times.
It isn't a difficult read, and probably will take less than a weekend.
Image
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Update on Current Low-Carb Experiment

Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 11, 2011 5:45 pm

Image For those of you interested,
I am now at the beginning of Day 15 of a low-carb experiment,
so I've now completed two weeks.
I'm calling my Plan VLC-2011 (for very-low-carb, year 2011).

My plan is to do my best to maintain the same eating Habits that I've established,
including tracking all my food in my DietPower food journal,
while working to keep
my net carbs at, or less than, 30 per day,
and my daily calorie average similar to my past year's amount.

This is not a plan I can recommend to anyone. Image
I don't even know how it will work in my own body.
I'd like to do this experiment for a 6 month period,
but if my weight climbs...or there are other unforeseen side-effects,
I will terminate it early.

Years ago, my DietPower journal became an enjoyable Habit for me,
and it easily tracks my carbs, fats, proteins and calories etc.
I also log in my daily scale weight and DietPower graphs it for me,
which enables me see whether my weight is trending up or down over time.

So....
Thus far, I am enjoying the novelty of eating a new way. Image
I'm not following a specific low-carb plan - like Atkins or Protein Power etc.,
I'm just restricting my carb intake,
and trying to keep my protein and fat intake around the same number of grams..
which results in a fat percentage Ratio about double the protein Ratio,
because protein is 4 calories a gram and fat is 9 calories a gram.
ImageAllegedly, my minimum protein requirement is between 20 grams (WHO) and 36 grams (US RDA).
I usually take in between 50 and 100 grams.

I am aware of the Atkins "carb ladder", which puts foods in about 10 categories,
but I am not choosing to follow it, rung by rung etc.
The theory is that each of our bodies is different in the way it tolerates carbs,
and that some people need more restrictions than others.
I found it Interesting that Sugar and Refined Grains are NOT on that ladder at all...
meaning they are off-limits to everyone, always.
Makes sense to me.
Image I have been avoiding sugar and refined starch,
and I have also been mostly avoiding complex carbs
including whole grains, dry cooked beans, and starchy veggies like corn, potatoes etc,
because these have a really high carb count....
AND I've found that eating a small amount of them
causes me to crave much more of them,
plus it seems to start up a craving in me for foods with sugar and refined starch as well.

I found that after the first week, my cravings
for sugar and starchy foods has been greatly reduced.
They still exist, but are not as severe.
Right now, they are sort of an occasional thought..."um, that would taste good"...
instead of an incessant yammer..."GET ME THAT".
I still want it, but mostly I don't feel like I HAVE to have it.
which is a change.

My morning weight is mostly staying inside the 116 lb range.
This is good.
It is also somewhat different, because on a "normal-balanced" diet,
my morning weight bounces around a great deal from day to day,
and my norm is to easily bounce within a 5 to 8 lb range during any one month.
Image I have many different measures of Success in this Low-Carb Experiment.
However, Failure would be an upward weight-trend,
and/or Hunger and Cravings greater than I experience while eating a "normal-balanced" diet.
So....in that I am not currently experiencing Failure...thus far, it is a Success.
My quote for today is:

"A person who never made a mistake
never tried anything new."

.........................Albert Einstein
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Boston Globe 1/11/11 review of Why We Get Fat by Gary Taubes

Post by BrightAngel » Wed Jan 12, 2011 4:27 pm

Image Here is a recent Boston Globe article that I found interesting.
Eat less, move more’’ has been the exhortation
of countless physicians trying to encourage their patients to lose weight.
Alas, if it were only so simple.
The health benefits of not being overweight include reducing the risks
of diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart disease.
There are also aesthetic, social, and practical benefits to staying slim,
as anyone who has recently flown on a commercial airline can confirm.
And yet, more than two-thirds of adult Americans are either overweight
or obese, most struggling in vain to lose weight.

This advice is based on the premise that weight gain (or loss)
is all about the balance between calories in and calories out:
Excess energy is stored as fat, which is then burned when extra energy is required.
But, as Gary Taubes points out in this well-researched and thoughtful book,
what we eat and how it affects our metabolism may matter more than how much we eat.

Describing what he calls “the 20-calorie paradox,’’
he points out that for a lean 25- year-old to gain 50 pounds by the time he is 50,
all that is needed is to consume exactly 20 calories more that he burns per day, every day.
This is “less than a single bite of a . . . hamburger or croissant.
Less than 2 ounces of [soft drink] or the typical beer.
Less than three potato chips.’’
If calories in-calories out was all there was to it,
“you [would] need only to rein yourself in by this amount
— undereat by 20 calories a day — to undo it.’’
Or, perhaps, to exercise more.
Except that increased physical activity doesn’t always seem to result in weight loss.

Examining the effects of estrogen, cortisol, growth hormone,
and especially insulin on weight gain, Taubes suggests that
the way our carbohydrate-laden diet influences the secretion of and sensitivity to insulin
is likely the main cause of fat production and storage.

Much of what Taubes writes makes intuitive sense.
It is known, for example, that insufficient sleep is associated with being
overweight and obesity, which are caused in part by changes in two
hormones that govern hunger and satiety, ghrelin and leptin.
Taubes writes that while we accept that children eat more
when going through growth spurts (which are hormonally driven),
we are quick to assume that overweight people are that way
because of overeating and not that they may be overeating
because they are growing (in this case out instead of up).

And this connects with one of the most important messages of the book:
that while the popular perception is that fat people are somehow weak or deficient in character,
they may in fact have a heightened sensitivity to the effects of our modern diet
and to the resultant rapid and frequent swings in blood sugar levels
and insulin that lead to increased adiposity.
Some of this may be acquired, but much of it is likely genetic.
And while one can try to modify diet to counterbalance genetic susceptibilities,
judging a person based upon inherited traits
that have nothing to do with “strength of character’’ is both unfair and unhelpful.

So should we all live on steak, eggs, and romaine lettuce, forswearing everything else?
This seems extreme and even potentially dangerous,
especially for children and pregnant women, among others.
However, reconsidering how our diet affects our bodies,
how we might modify it to be healthier,
and being less harsh with those who struggle with their weight
are all worthy goals.
Taubes has done us a great service by bringing these issues to the table.


http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles ... e_get_fat/
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Post by BrightAngel » Thu Jan 13, 2011 2:56 pm

Image For future reference, I'm copying this post from the General Thread.
Imogen Morley wrote:I know that if it comes to food,
addiction is more a matter of psychology than physiology,
but... nothing is impossible ;)
I find this statement interesting.
Are those cravings for sweets and starches REALLY a problem of the mind,
rather than of the body?

I, myself, have spent a lifetime considering this issue a psychological one.
My personal experience with this involves about 20 years of Therapy
to overcome that problem,....to no avail.
With professional help, I've dug into my psyche on the "whys";
I've taught myself most of the "hows"...in fact...
I've learned and incorporated most of the recommended Behavior Modifications.
Numerous "mindful" eating behaviors have become Habits for me.

For many, many years, my pattern has been not to label foods,
"good" or "bad",
but to allow myself to have a little of anything I want, including the occasional sugar-laden dessert.

Those techniques, including the No S restriction of sweets on N days,
have helped me resist the cravings,
but they have NOT reduced or eliminated the cravings.
Imogen Morley wrote:How do you combat N-day cravings when they hit you like a ton of bricks? Ignore them, try to substitute?

What are your views about possible sugar addiction
(which has not yet been confirmed by science,
though a word "dependency" is often used in this context)?
I recall from the No S book, that Reinhard, personally, doesn't find the term "addiction" helpful,
and he tends to avoid using it for various reasons.

At this particular moment, I have finally reached the point where I am willing to seriously consider
the possibility that these cravings are physical, rather than psychological.
I've begun to think that new way, due to my exposure to Good Calories Bad Calories (2007) by Gary Taubes,
and his recently released book, Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It.

Perhaps many of us DO have a physical intolerance for certain food substances....
Perhaps the physical tolerance for them varies between individual,
just like some people have bodies that are allergic to peanuts...
and to varying degrees....,
maybe there is something to the Theory about Insulin and Carbohydrates too.
I don't know.

I DO know that psychological treatment won't resolve a physical problem.
All the therapy in the world won't let those with a severe peanut allergy, eat peanuts without side-effects.

I've recently begun a personal experiment
to see what a lengthy Low-Carb commitment will do in my body.
I am especially interested to see whether or not
a total elimination of sugar and refined grains,
and a serious restriction of whole grains, starchy vegetables, and fruit
will eliminate or greatly reduce these cravings in my own body.
This is a day-by-day experiment...and at this point....I don't even know how long I'll be able to stick with it.
Imogen Morley wrote:To free myself from the grip of my sugar dependency,
I've been toying with the idea of replacing sugar-laden desserts
with their healthier equivalents (sweetened with honey, xylitol, maple syrup).
"Natural" sweeteners seem to agree with my physiology much better than simple sugar,
as they do not provoke overwhelming cravings.
I'd like to treat those things like regular S-day indulgences,
to be enjoyed on special occassions and in moderation... if it's at all possible :D
That sounds like a reasonable plan for you, since you appear
to have personal knowledge that those sugars "do not provoke overwhelming cravings".

Each of us does the best we can with our own experiences.
The same things don't work for everyone.

In my own body, it makes no difference whether it is white sugar,
or "natural" sweeteners. MY body treats them all the same way.
I am learning that...right now... this even seems to be true for me
with regards to starches.
In fact, recently I learned that within 24 hours after having half a cup of Lentils
...(complex natural carbs)... for lunch, all of my sugar cravings returned.
And....I've carefully examined my surrounding circumstances...mental state....etc,
and feel fairly certain that this instance was not due to a psychological issue.

Life goes on.
We all do what we can.
I'm now living as a normal weight person,
and I'm willing to keep doing whatever it takes to make that a long-term status.
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Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 14, 2011 2:12 am

ImageIt doesn't really matter what particular "Diet" you're on
because....
A name is just a box we put ideas in.
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Post by osoniye » Fri Jan 14, 2011 6:22 am

Just wondering, what was your average carb intake before starting this low carb adventure?
-Sonya
No Sweets, No Snacks and No Seconds, Except (Sometimes) on days that start with "S".

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More About Me

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 14, 2011 6:35 pm

osoniye wrote: What was your average carb intake before starting this low carb adventure?
ImageI estimate that my “normal†average carb intake has been between 100 and 150,
however, for various reasons, that estimate might be incorrect.

At the end of the first half of 2010,
I became interested in experimenting with low-carb issues, Image
primarily due to Taubes’ Good Calories Bad Calories,
as well as my own weight-maintenance difficulties.
I made several brief (failed) efforts during 2010.
At the beginning of 2011, I started my current Low-Carb Experiment.
In the years prior to that time, I did not consciously try to restrict carbs.

Calorie Restriction has always been my primary method of weight-loss/maintenance.
While reducing my calories, I made a conscious effort to eat a reasonable amount of protein.
Even though I primarily ate low-fat, fat is in just about everything.

ImageSo, there were simply less calories to take in as carbohydrates.

Taubes’ writing has made me aware of the fact that Image
in every diet throughout my lifetime….and there have been a lot of them….
my calorie restriction has also inadvertently resulted in a carb restriction.

I remember that in years prior to the end of 2004,
during the times when I wasn’t restricting calories,
my primary food was carbs Image
…sugars, simple and complex carbs, and fat.
I believe that I took in about the same amount of protein that I do now.

ImageI have detailed daily records of my food-intake from 9/20/2004 through today.
For the past 2308 consecutive days, I have entered all my food into my DietPower log.
The DietPower program stores that data, and makes it readily accessible to me.
I can easily access my data in “averages†for specific time periods,
or for exact amounts within individual days.
This gives me the ability to make an accurate personal analysis of my own behavior.
which is limited of course, by my own insufficient skills of analysis.

I began maintaining my current weight in January 2006,
and have now done so for the past 5 years.
Image

During that 5 year period, I have experimented with a number of different issues,
involving food-intake and exercise,
by using a number of different methods and ways-of-eating.
Eating more, eating less; exercising more, exercising less etc.

Leaving the issue of ongoing Hunger and Cravings aside, Image
I’ve been concerned about how..
..….independent of any exercise or ageing issues…..
my calorie requirement to maintain my current weight has dropped over time.
It is impossible for anyone outside a lab to ever accurately count calories.
However, my focus is on the Calorie deviations,
and since I weigh/measure foods and count the calories in them the same way
Over time, I am measuring my own behavior by my own behavior…
…which I believe is as accurate as anyone can ever be in real life.

ImageTo maintain at or near my current weight:….
1st year of Maintenance: 2006 – Calorie intake 1505
2nd year of Maintenance: 2007 – Calorie intake 1408
3rd year of Maintenance: 2008 - Calorie intake 1179
4th year of Maintenance: 2009 – Calorie intake 1045
5th year of Maintenance: 2010 – Calorie intake 1076
This calorie deviation is not explainable by exercise or aging…Image
and probably not even by carbs….
During 16 months of weight-loss my calorie intake averaged around 1200 calories,
and I lost from 190 to 115…75 lbs.

During the first two years after that, I maintained around 115 lbs
with around a 1450 average calorie intake.

During the 3rd year, in order to maintain about the same weight,
it was necessary to drop my calories about 250 calories a day.

During the 4th and 5th years, in order to maintain about the same weight,
it was necessary to drop them an additional 120….
which is about 370 less a day than during the first two years,
and about 150 daily calories less than during the 16 month weight-loss period.
Image There simply don’t appear to be any factors….
….outside my body’s own desire to regain lost weight….
that adequately explain this to me.

As a result of the above-information, I have come to the personal conclusion that
the simple Calories-in/Calories-out, together with the Theory – 3500 calories = 1 fat lb,
just don’t adequately explain what is going on inside my own body.
ImageYou might be interested in this chart of some detailed nutritional information.

Image
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Protein and Kidney Damage Pros and Cons

Post by TexArk » Fri Jan 14, 2011 11:56 pm

Pros and Cons of High Protein Diets

http://www.atkinsexposed.org/atkins/79/ ... y_Fund.htm

http://fitnesstransform.blogspot.com/20 ... amage.html

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/high-p ... ts/AN00847

http://www.diabetes.org/living-with-dia ... pathy.html

It seems to me that the main cause of kidney damage is high blood sugar not protein, and excessive protein seems to be a problem only after there is kidney disease especially in the diabetic patient.
24.7 bmi Feb. 2019
26.1 bmi Sept. 2018
31.4 bmi July 2017

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Re: Protein and Kidney Damage Pros and Cons

Post by BrightAngel » Sat Jan 15, 2011 1:05 am

TexArk wrote:It seems to me that the main cause of kidney damage
is high blood sugar not protein,
and excessive protein seems to be a problem only
after there is kidney disease especially in the diabetic patient.
I think your statement is correct, Image
I agree with the following opinion, some of which is quoted below.

It can be found at:

http://www.phlaunt.com/diabetes/16351841.php
Does a Low Carb Diet Cause Kidney Damage?

The belief that high protein diets cause kidney damage is one reason why, for many years,
doctors warned people with diabetes that low carb diets would kill their kidneys.

Fortunately, this turns out not to be true.
While almost any intake of protein is a problem for people with advanced kidney disease,
studies have found repeatedly that for people with normal kidney function
or early diabetic changes the low carb diet not only doesn't promote kidney damage,
it also reduces blood pressure, which is a major cause of kidney damage
and may actually reverse early kidney changes.

In fact, people who are able to normalize their blood sugars with a low carb diet
often report that their kidney function recovers
and that microalbumin disappears from their urine.

A low-carbohydrate diet may prevent end-stage renal failure in type 2 diabetes.
A case report. Jorgen Vesti Nielsen et al. .Nutr Metab . 2006; 3: 23.

One possible reason this may happen is because a low carb diet
is really a high fat diet, not a high protein diet.
While protein might make up a larger percentage of intake on a low carb diet,
the actual amount of protein eaten is usually not all that different
from that found in a low fat diet.

Think of it this way. If I eat a hamburger with no bun and no fries and a salad
and you eat a hamburger, bun, and fries,
my protein intake may be 50% of the calories I ingest,
making it look like I'm eating a "high protein" diet.
You are eating the same amount of protein,
but the intake of all those high calorie carbohydrates makes your protein intake
a much smaller percentage of your total calorie intake,
so a nutritionist will consider this a safer, "lower protein" intake.

Meanwhile, someone eating a high carb diet has to contend with all the glucose
from those carbohydrates that are routed through the kidneys,
while the person eating the hamburger and salad will not
because their blood sugar will not rise out of a normal range.

If you are really concerned about possible problems with a high protein diet
and your kidneys, there is a simple solution.
Don't EAT a high protein diet.
Eat a low carbohydrate diet with just enough protein
to provide enough to repair your muscles and organs
and provide the glucose needed to run your brain.

Use the Protein Calculator you'll find here to determine
your exact protein need while eating a low carb diet.

A review of research evidence on the topic of whether low protein diets
actually help people with diabetes preserve kidney function published in
Sept of 2008 comes up with the suggestion that they do not,
and suggests that ACE inhibitors and ARBs are as effective
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Post by funfuture » Sat Jan 15, 2011 11:34 am

Congratulations, Bright Angel!

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Post by BrightAngel » Sat Jan 15, 2011 6:16 pm

funfuture wrote:Congratulations, Bright Angel!
Image Thanks funfuture,
I think you are congratulating me for the efforts reflected in this nutritional chart?

Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 16, 2011 2:24 pm

Image Copied here for reference and discussion.
Member of Another Forum wrote:I'm not a nutritionist or a biochemist, but I am a chemical engineer by degree
and I've done plenty of mass/energy balances in my life.

The deficit does matter,
but most people seem to think the equation should be:

change in fat storage = calories eaten - calories used by body.

It is probably a lot more complicated than that, more like:

change in fat = calories eaten + calories released from fat storage
+ calories pulled from protein matter in the body - calories expended by cells
- calories added to fat storage - calories added to protein matter in body


and I'm sure I'm leaving some things out.

We don't have a lot of control over most of those things
on the right side of the equation,
even though we'd like to think so.

They're driven by genetics and hormones
and regulatory systems in our bodies,
which even biochemists and nutritionists don't fully understand,
probably because it can differ so widely from person to person.

The one thing I can control
is what kind of substances I put into my mouth.

For me, keeping carbs low seems to help
with several of those pieces of the equation,
so I know I'll have to continue with this way of life,
if I want to lose to a reasonable weight and maintain it.

****
(July 2010) Start: 296 lbs
(January 2011) Current: 248 lbs
Goal 175 lbs
Second Member of another Forum wrote:Yes, Yes, Yes.
Very True.

**
Start 236 lbs
Current 128 lbs
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Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 17, 2011 3:48 pm

Image Something I frequently tell myself:

Strength is the Product of Struggle.
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Dialogue about Taubes

Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 17, 2011 5:05 pm

Image This online dialogue between two men, was so unusually civilized,
that I copied it here for future reference.

Guy 1 wrote:Some people do seem to have success
at losing and maintaining weight
by following a low-carb high-fat diet.

It doesn’t work for me,
but I don’t deny that it seems to work for some people.
Guy 2 wrote:I, too, had difficulty losing weight after my initial (couple) induction weeks,
as despite my vigilance in keeping my carbs around 20g/day,
I had weeks of “zero†weight loss, causing me tremendous frustration.

I still greatly admire and respect Taubes’ books and lectures,
especially his review – and debunking – of the calories-in/out theory.
Yet despite this, trying to lose weight has been hell.

However, rather than “throwing the baby out with the bathwaterâ€,
I feel that, for myself, I have to also include calorie reduction,
as it has helped me to lose weight.
Guy 1 wrote:If you look at the fine print at the Atkins site (I have links for reference)

They say if you are not losing weight cut back on protein.
If you are still not losing weight cut back on fat.
If you are still not losing weight cut back on calories to about 1800 per day.

Voila. You’re back to where you started from – counting calories.
Guy 2 wrote:I know.
In “The New Atkins†book by Westman, on page 107, he writes,
“Although you don’t have to count calories on Atkins,
if you’re overdoing the protein and fat, you may be taking in too many calories.â€

He does explain this more but it still is paradoxical.
Even Atkins talked about weight stalls and going for a week
doing 1,000 calories on macadamia nuts & cream cheese.

I think Taubes’ book was designed
to relate the basic mechanisms that make us fat (and how to get rid of it),

but for you and me, we have to look at calories as well. Not fair!
Guy 1 wrote:The basic Japanese diet is very very high carbohydrate…
[but] the obesity rate in Japan is about 3%.
Guy 2 wrote:I remember hearing a recent interview where Taubes acknowledges the paradox,
although mentioned that the lack of sugar may have something to do with it.

I don’t know what’s true,
but certainly one cannot discount the malevolent influence of sugar,
HFCS, and all that crap
Guy 1 wrote:Exercise is good because

(a) it helps you expend more calories;

(b) certain kinds of exercise can help build muscle mass,
which results in an overall higher metabolism.
Guy 2 wrote:I only know my own experience with exercise.
It helps me feel good, it stretches my muscles, helps my lower back,
but I don’t lose a drop of weight.

That’s my reality (I don’t like it, but it is what it is).
Guy 1 wrote:There is nothing wrong with eating less during the day
and saving your calories to eat more in the evening.
Guy 2 wrote:Again, I only know my own experience.
If I eat a large meal at night, it makes me “conk outâ€,
resulting in an insatiable “sweet tooth.â€

Night time is worse for me because I am usually sedentary,
contrasted with daytime where I can be “out and about†more.
Guy 1 wrote:Some people are somehow able to lose weight
by just eating certain kinds of food
and forcing themselves to stop eating when they are “almost full.â€

This does not work for me.
My sense of fullness is too out-of-kilter to make such a system work.
Guy 2 wrote:Well written.
I have no “graduating†sense of fullness.
I notice I am full way too late to be useful.
Guy 1 wrote:All diets are diets.
It drives me crazy when proponents of this or that diet
claim it’s not really a diet it’s a “way of life.â€
Guy 2 wrote:Yup.
Whether it’s a diet, calorie restriction, a “lifestyle changeâ€,
the bottom line is that you can’t eat what you want,
especially if you love bread, potatoes, pasta, and sweets (like me).
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Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 18, 2011 3:55 pm

Today Connorcream Image
posted an interesting link which is the first of 4 videos on
Blood Sugar: Why you can't lose the weight.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RE4cXeX7Po&NR=1

I was impressed with this simple, yet informative, presentation,
of issues which go very well with the concepts in Taubes' new book.
Especially with chapters in the first part of his second section,
which I am now involved in briefing.

I like the way this doctor started with the Basic issues,
and then made a natural progression to those more complex.

I was interested in her confirmation that individual bodies differ,
...which is one of the more intriguing things I find about diets....
and I plan to watch that 4 part series again later
to more specifically watch the way she addresses that issue.
Last edited by BrightAngel on Thu Jan 20, 2011 3:06 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 18, 2011 4:03 pm

Image I found this post really interesting.
TexArk wrote:I still have my 3 meals, no snacks or sweets,
but I have not been using S Days for sweets
because I just do not need them.
So much more peaceful.


...my husband ...was excited to report the results
of his one week low carb experiment (no wheat or sugar)
and he has stopped his ultra low fat obsession.
His sinus and congestion problem is completely absent for now.
He said he thinks he must have a mild wheat allergy.
He also reported that he was very calm
and not agitated craving his usual evening snacks.

I never could get him to try NoS because he didn't want to give up snacking
--lots of toast with fake butter spray and frozen individual pizzas!
His family has a history of diabetes
and he has put on tummy weight for the first time in his life.
Taubes' book really got his attention.
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connorcream
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Magic Bullet

Post by connorcream » Tue Jan 18, 2011 10:23 pm

I got a Magic Bullet for DS to make protein shakes with. I cannot remember when (or if) I have ever bought something "as seen on TV". I felt kinda young doing it:-)

What is your favorite use of it?
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

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Re: Magic Bullet

Post by BrightAngel » Wed Jan 19, 2011 12:56 pm

connorcream wrote:Magic Bullet
What is your favorite use of it?
Image I use it for a great many things, but
I believe my Absolute Favorite thing is using it to quickly whip up eggs, and/or egg whites
before I cook them or mix them together in a recipe that doesn't require my big kitchen aide mixer.

I do that at LEAST once a day, usually more.
I keep the 12 oz assembled right there on my counter all the time,
it buzzes things up so fast, and is easy to wash.
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Re: Magic Bullet

Post by BrightAngel » Wed Jan 19, 2011 1:02 pm

Image I found this post helpful and am copying it here for reference.
member of another forum wrote:I recently rediscovered a few things:

(1) Eating too high a proportion of carbs
makes me really, ready-to-eat-the-wallpaper hungry.
I received a gift of fruit and discovered that an apple or a pear
is a really bad snack for me.

(2) I need to eat some fat to feel satiated.
I've had stretches of several days in the last three weeks
when I ended up doing mini-binges (yes, plural)
because I was so darn hungry.
I should have noticed sooner that I was eating way too little fat.

During the week before Christmas and New Year's,
I decided to use a few fast food coupons.
I used to eat quite a bit of carefully chosen fast food
early in my new lifestyle but have phased out most of it.

During the week of eating more fast food,
I was surprised to find that, despite the fact that my meals had lower volume,
they were keeping me satisfied until the next meal.
It was a good booster shot reminder.
I don't know if I'll make it a point to eat more fast food,
but I will make it a point to eat more fat.

(3) Sadly, perhaps, I still like the feeling
of being noticeably full (but not stuffed).
However, if I can avoid the hunger pangs,
I am not tempted to eat until I reach this point.

(4) I seem to be OK with chocolate in the refrigerator
in small, individually wrapped portions.
Chocolate in large bars or other snack-type foods
in large containers seem to be more problematic.

One or two small pieces of chocolate
seem to be good for me for scratching the itch,
without triggering a physical craving.

Between being less busy and struggling with hunger pangs,
I've eaten more than planned,
but it hasn't been ridiculous, and I still plan to pay it back.
Now that I've reminded myself how to keep the hunger under control
and I'll be busier again, I think it will be much easier to stay on plan.

One food I think I'll be eating more is cheese balls/logs.
I found today that 4 oz of cheese log and a pear (550 calories)
made a very nice lunch--I was a little hungry five hours later,
but not the kind of hunger that Must Be Obeyed.

Sometimes I feel like a chemistry experiment!


**

Start 260 lbs
Current 144 lbx

Height 5’5â€
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Post by BrightAngel » Thu Jan 20, 2011 12:24 pm

Image You can find a transcript of Tom Naughton's (of "Fathead" fame)
recent interview of Gary Taubes at the link below.
Taubes answers some new questions,
and I found it really worth reading.


http://www.fathead-movie.com/index.php/ ... ry-taubes/
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Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 21, 2011 4:04 pm

Image Copying a fellow member's great post.
TexArk wrote:Today I weighed in at 170 lbs.

NoS has helped me form some habits and I no longer snack.
I gave up sweets during the week and I don't eat seconds.

I have lost 30 lbs. since adding Calorie Counting to NoS
and have counted carbs since January 1.

Since limiting carbs I feel so much better and have no cravings.
As I have said before, the counting is so easy
with software programs and nutrition labels.

Absolutely no exercise (in a wheelchair) and I am still losing!
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Many Thanks

Post by TexArk » Fri Jan 21, 2011 5:30 pm

Bright Angel,

I want to thank you for sharing your hobby with us. I appreciate your thoughtful posts and your gentle spirit.

As for the low carb discussion per Taubes books....I can see that someone who is perfectly happy with their way of eating would not be the least bit interested in the discussion. After all, why change what is working? But for those of us who have tried numerous approaches, we are more like the patient who keeps seeking out doctors who may have answers for what ails us when conventional diagnoses have failed. As a younger person I used to have terrible cramps at TOM and had to take tylenol with codeine. The worst doctor I had was a female who never had painful cramps and insisted I just needed to accept feeling uncomfortable!

I am a thoughtful person who has never chased after fads. I have never tried any of the quick loss diets (cabbage soup, etc), and I have been reading and experimenting all my life trying to control my weight. I think of myself as open minded and yet I am very skeptical. You may remember that when I first joined NoS I was determined to never count any calorie or gram or point again. I saw you as a person who could do that, but I would describe my reaction the same as KCCC--I wanted to run the other way. However, the difference is I could not make NoS work for me without the counting. If I had been closed minded I never would have tried the DP free trial. I feel the same way about low carb. I had to be convinced by Good Calories Bad Calories and I was a skeptic at first. I would never have read the book, though, if I had been perking along with complete success. And as you stated, I am jealous of those who can just use moderation and stay balanced without any problem. That is not me and I finally realized that I could not keep gaining weight trying to be that person.

I know that we are not alone. When I read all the posts from those who never get S Days under control and seem to have huge bingefests each weekend, I suspect that is more than lack of self control. I am more sure of that after reading again the effects of insulin. I kept perfect 21 day N Days and had lousy S Days for 2 years...gaining as I went. The calorie counting helped with the control, but it was mostly because the carbs had to be less even on the weekend. I used to be like the men in the starvation experiment. I would think all week long what I could eat on the weekend and I read cookbooks all week long. I told a friend I felt like I was reading food porn all week! NoS was not supposed to be about deprivation because of the S Days. It just didn't work that way for me.

Anyway, thank you again for your thoughtful approach. I am sure there are others who are lurking and reading and can use your information when the time comes for them. As for the others, there is no explaining or discussing unless they are in denial about their own situation.
24.7 bmi Feb. 2019
26.1 bmi Sept. 2018
31.4 bmi July 2017

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Re: Many Thanks

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 21, 2011 6:26 pm

TexArk wrote:I know that we are not alone.
When I read all the posts from those who never get S Days under control
and seem to have huge bingefests each weekend,
I suspect that is more than lack of self control.

I am more sure of that after reading again the effects of insulin.
I kept perfect 21 day N Days and had lousy S Days for 2 years...gaining as I went.

The calorie counting helped with the control, but it was mostly because
the carbs had to be less even on the weekend.
I used to be like the men in the starvation experiment.
I would think all week long what I could eat on the weekend
and I read cookbooks all week long.
I told a friend I felt like I was reading food porn all week!

NoS was not supposed to be about deprivation because of the S Days.
It just didn't work that way for me.

I am sure there are others who are lurking and reading
and can use your information when the time comes for them.
Image TexArk,
Thanks for your kind words.
I'm glad that my own experience and example has been helpful to you,
and I join you in believing that there are others here who can be helped by us.
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Post by BrightAngel » Sat Jan 22, 2011 12:48 pm

Image It occurred to me that others of you might like to try this recipe,
so here's a copy of a post I recently made on another Thread
Graham wrote:Now, are there such things as low-carb treats?
What are they?
If I normally have pancakes on Saturday, are there low carb things to equal them in appeal and pleasure?
Or should I let carbs be my treats?
If sugar is bad for me, and sweeteners raise insulin too,
what can I do about my sweet tooth if I want to get slim?

Being sugar free seems so SAD.
BrightAngel wrote: I agree with you about how sad this seems.
Personally, I choose not to go that route,
and I find that artificial sweeteners fill the bill for me.
Sure, they aren't as good for one as going totally without,
but considering the alternatives, it's a vice I can live with.

Many low-carb people appear to be able to have artificial sweetners without any problem.
It is my understanding that splenda is one of these which DOESN"T raise insulin...
(low-carb people who oppose it think any "sweet" taste is bad for one)

Anyway, I always use liquid splenda in my tea,
(a powdered pkg counts as a carb because of the binders)
and I allow myself occasional treats made with splenda...
and even some with sugar-alcohol.

The majority of low-carb people seem to do the same.

I have a favorite pancake replacement that I'm using on low-carb.,
I use a very small amount of bottled sugar-free maple flavored syrup with it,
but it is good with just a pkg or two of Splenda sprinkled over it.
Here's the recipe.

Mock Pancakes
1 whole egg,
2 egg whites,
1 TB cream cheese
1/2 tsp vanilla
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 pkt splenda

Blend all ingredients thoroughly.
Spray non-stick coating on small skillet
heat on medium high heat.
Pour mixture into heated small skillet
Then cook like pancakes - except
lift the edges to allow the batter to flow under
like one does with an omlet.
When the bottom is browned and the top is almost set,
Spray non-stick coating on top of pancake,
turn it over and brown.

I used to do this recipe when I was doing low-fat,
but then I used 1 TB ricotta cheese, and no butter.

However, on low-carb, I put butter on it, and then a couple of tablespoons
of sugar-free syrup.

I've been using this recipe for quite some time,
and it is one of my favorite go-to breakfasts.
It tastes good, and makes my body feel good.
In fact, I feel really abused if I ever have to have real pancakes.

Even my husband, who doesn't eat "diet" foods loves it.

Try this and see if it helps out.
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Giving up is not an option

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 23, 2011 12:21 pm

Image Something to Think About:
Many of us have preconceived expectations
when we start this journey
as to how long it will take.
We think that by doing everything to a T,
everything will go as planned.
But many times that is not the case.

We must learn to accept the obstacles
that are inevitable in this journey,
knowing that the end is not what makes us who we are
or who we were meant to be.
It is the journey of overcoming obstacles
that defines who we are and who we are meant to be.

Giving up is not an option.
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connorcream
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Pancakes

Post by connorcream » Sun Jan 23, 2011 7:46 pm

BA-
Aside from an occasional tortilla, this is my most grain dense meal, and I love them. Many times I have frozen them to take while traveling. I have easily made them in kitchenettes around the country. I always have a serving of berries (usually strawberry & blackberries) on the side with SF maple syrup. I cannot count how many times I have been glad to have them to eat instead of what the rest of the family or diners were having. They toast up nicely or micro too. I add high quality cinammon or SF syrups in them at times as well. A nice alterative to pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving when pumkin pie spice is added. Glad to see the opportunity for me to encourage their enjoyment again.
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
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Re: Pancakes

Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 23, 2011 8:39 pm

Image Connorcream...
I'm not sure...but I think you might be referring
to my protein "oatmeal/egg-white pancake" recipe.

I love those protein pancakes to pieces,
and plan to incorporate them back into my diet,
after my current low-carb diet carb requirement increases a bit.

For now, I am using the egg/egg-white/cream-cheese substitute
which is the above recipe.
Try it out and see if you like it.

The advantage, of course, is that it totally lacks grains.
the disavantage--for those who count calories, or want to eat low-fat -
is that it's higher in fat.
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Mea Culpa

Post by connorcream » Sun Jan 23, 2011 10:27 pm

You are exactly right, I was thinking of the oatmeal ones. I will happily try this recipe too. So embarassed. Thanks for pointing it out.
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

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re change to low-carb

Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 24, 2011 1:37 pm

ImageRecently I ran across this interesting post
from someone who has been successful at low-carb eating.

Member of Another Forum wrote:I had an insight last week.
I came home from town and ate some chocolate chip cookies,
then opened up a loaf of bread and ate several slices with butter.
That was one of my old habits before I lost weight.

I'm about 50 lbs lighter now,
but after eating those cookies and that bread,
I felt as fat and sluggish as I used to feel.

I thought I had so much more energy on account of losing weight,
but then I realized it wasn't just that I'd lost weight,
I had more energy because I was eating better.
That was a turning point for me and I've been back on track
(and feeling much more energetic) ever since.

***

Start: 189 lbs
Current 137 lbs

Height 5’6"
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a bit of wisdom

Post by BrightAngel » Tue Jan 25, 2011 2:10 pm

Image My thought for today:

Don’t trust a diet program that sells food.

In Physical matters (as opposed to Spiritual matters), Image
Trust based on blind faith is unproductive.
It's good to take information from everyone, process it all.
Then use what works, and discard the rest.
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Re: a bit of wisdom

Post by BrightAngel » Wed Jan 26, 2011 2:42 pm

Image Post copied from the General Discussion Thread for future reference.
gettheweightoff wrote:I just threw out the last of my diet books and it felt great.
I could have given them away but to me they are sort of evil
and why put anyone else through the nonsense.
No-S is for me... why read anything else!
There are many No S members who agree with the above-quoted statement.
I think people should do whatever works for them. Image

Image That said...
I'm the opposing voice here.

Diet books are just interesting information for me.
As part of my dieting hobby, I read them all the time.
Actually, I love diet books. Image I like looking at the different methods
that people have to lose and maintain weight.
I even enjoy the confirmation when I find that a new diet is the same old one.
I can honestly say that I've learned something from every diet book I've read, Image
.....and I've read hundreds of them.
Sometimes what I learn is exactly the opposite from what the author intends to teach me.
Sometimes I find a new thought or a new idea.
Sometimes I find a new recipe that puts together foods I like
in a whole new way that I'd previously never considered.
ImageIf I had stopped reading diet books after I reached my goal weight,
and maintaining it a couple of years,
I would never found No S,
nor been exposed to the many concepts here that are very helpful to me,
or "met" all the great people here on this forum.
Many diet books are similiar, Image
but occasionally, while reading many of them, I find some Gems.

I don't have to hate dieting, Image
and I don't have to hate reading diet books.
It's okay if other people choose to think this way,
but there are other options available,
and those are okay too.
It really IS all a matter of perspective.
Image
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Post by BrightAngel » Wed Jan 26, 2011 3:17 pm

Post copied from another's private check-in Thread for future reference.
Graham wrote:...if I need to reduce/eliminate bread,
what will give the texture of bread or other stodge that is low-carb?
What gives a bread experience without the downside?
ImageMy low-carb experiment is very new,
but I've found some eating satisfaction
through the way eggs can be used to simulate bread.

I previously provided you with my "mock pancake" recipe,
which is primarily eggs.
Another way to use similiar ingredients
is a rather famous recipe in low-carb circles, called "oopsie rolls".

This is made by separating eggs, whipping the whites with a bit of cream of tarter,
and beating the yolks with cream cheese,
then folding it together and baking it on a low oven.
Image Then exposing them to air several hours on a cooling rack.

The result is like a very delicate bread.
You can google "oopsie rolls" and get detailed recipe instructions from many sources.

After making them I divide them into individual baggies,
then place those baggies together in a larger bag and keep in my freezer.

There are many uses,
but my personal favorite is to take out a frozen oopsie roll,
sprinkle it with 1/2 oz of cheddar cheese,
and microwave it for 30 seconds.

This satisfies my desire for my old favorite, melted cheese on toast. Image
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Post by ChubbyBaby » Wed Jan 26, 2011 6:06 pm

Hi BrightAngel,

I'm pretty new to the No-S diet and to this board, but I've been reading the past posts voraciously and have found your journey very interesting. I wanted to share with you because I think we are thinking along similar lines, but I'm coming at it from the opposite end. You see, I've been low carbing for the past 15 years but am still struggling with my weight, which is why I am learning about the No-S diet. I've also lost weight several times in the past doing strictly calorie restriction. Even though I've not had the long term success that you have had I think I can sympathize with your struggle.

I've read your summary of Gary Taubes book and it was great. Thanks for doing that. I'm on the waiting list at my library for this book, so I will eventually read it, but I am not unfamiliar with what he is saying, but because I haven't read the book I didn't want to post on that discussion thread. Also because what I want to share is just anecdotal evidence based on my own experience, and not scientific by any stretch of the imagination.

From my own experience I believe it is true that carbs cause some people to gain weight. I don't believe that this is true for everyone though. I believe that certain people with a genetic predisposition to blood sugar issues are affected by all carbohydrates. For other people I believe that eliminating or controlling their intake of refined carbohydrates is all they need to do. In my case, I have that genetic predisposition, and so I have to reduce and monitor all carbohydrate intake. Other people, like the ones who do well on Vanilla No-S, probably do not have that predisposition, so they are able to easily lose weight by gently restricting their refined carb intake using the No Sweets rule.

I also believe that just because a person is genetically predisposed to weight gain because of blood sugar issues and insulin resistance doesn't mean that they do not have any character issues in regards to gluttony. In my own case, I started having weight problems because I overate at mealtimes. This was due to the fact that I ate way too many carbohydrates during the day, for a person with blood sugar issues. However, once I started eating low carb and my hunger was under control I continued to overeat, because I had formed the habit. This is something that I need to work on, aside from restricting my carbohydrates. For this reason I don't believe that a low carb diet is the magic bullet for all genetically predisposed people either. A low carb diet definitely helps to control the hunger, but there may be other issues involved as well. There are many people on the low carb boards who cannot lose weight doing low carb, or who stop losing for no apparant reason. There may be a variety of reasons for this, but I suspect that many of them are just eating too many calories. Calories still do count, even on a low carb diet.

I am experimenting with this myself. I got to the point where I couldn't lose weight anymore eating low carb, but now I am starting to realize that I was eating too many calories. The problem is that a low carb diet generally is a very high calorie diet. When tracking my food intake I feel the least amount of hunger when my fat intake is at least 65% of my daily calorie intake. High fat intake is crucial when eating low carb. So, how do you control your calories while doing this? Well, I'm hoping that the No-S diet may be the answer. Eliminating snacks, gently controlling portion sizes with the one plate method, and saving sweets (low carb sweets) for S days is one way to reduce calories without being forced to eliminate fats. As I said, I'm still experimenting with this, so I'll see how it goes.

In your case you may find that simply reducing your refined carbohydrates will be enough to control your hunger. You can try switching to higher fiber breads and unprocessed grains as well and keeping your foods as unrefined as possible. Another suggestion would be to read Protein Power by Dr. Michael Eades. He has a questionaire in his book to help you determine if you have blood sugar issues. If you find that you do then you may have to control your carbs more strictly. If you want to read more scientific information about low carb diets he has a great blog.

Sorry this got long. I hope some of it was helpful.

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Post by BrightAngel » Thu Jan 27, 2011 1:15 am

ChubbyBaby wrote:In your case you may find that simply reducing your refined carbohydrates
will be enough to control your hunger.
You can try switching to higher fiber breads and unprocessed grains as well
and keeping your foods as unrefined as possible.

Another suggestion would be to read Protein Power by Dr. Michael Eades.
...he has a great blog.
ImageChubbyBaby, Thank you for your comments.
Your personal experiences seem to dovetail nicely with what I've heard from other low-carbers.

During the past year, I've purchased and read a great many low-carb books,
including Protein Power, and I've also visited Dr. Eades website.
He makes some excellent points,
which I considered when designing my current low-carb experiment.

Unfortunately, the solution you suggest is not the one for me.
For quite a long time...years before I considered experimenting with low-carb eating...
I've greatly restricted or eliminated refined carbohydrates.

Many years ago, I replaced refined carbs with complex carbs,
eating primarily carbs that were whole grains, lentils, sweet potatoes etc.
and, of course, I've even limited complex carbs for a very long time,
in order to keep my calories low enough to maintain my current weight.
It is extremely unusual for me to eat foods containing sugar,
although I do choose to use artificial sweeteners.

I think I've addressed those issues in earlier posts inside this Thread,
and I may have also mentioned it in my comments on the Taubes discussion thread.

Although I didn't get my protein guidelines from Dr. Eades,
when I reviewed his formula, I saw that the amount of protein that he recommends
is almost exactly what I've been eating for years.

Once I get that protein requirement,
and the fat that just seems to naturallly be in everything...
even when working to eat low-fat....
there just haven't been many calories left for carbs...

For the past couple of years, it has only taken about 1050 calories a day,
to maintain my current weight.
One needs to be very wise with food to accomplish that long-term,
and over time, I learned to be very creative with lean meat, egg-whites,
and protein powder.

Earlier in this Thread I shared a detailed chart which shows my
yearly averages of calories along with carbs, protein, and fat
for the past 6 years.....During which I have NOT tried to
restrict carbs, only calories....
It just worked out that there wasn't enough room in my calorie budget
for more carbs.

For your convenience, I'm copying it here.

Image

With your low-carb experience, I'm certain you realize that
1 average slice of whole-wheat bread contains about 24 carbs grams,
and about the same for only 4 oz of a sweet potato, or 1/2 cup of oatmeal.
Plus, of course, ALL vegetables...even green leafy ones...contain carbs.

When you consider that my "AVERAGE" carbs for the past 3 years
were less than 100 grams per day..
...which, of course, includes those unfortunate high-carb binge occasions,
including holdiays, vacations, birthdays, etc.
it becomes clear that even without any conscious attempt to
restrict carbs
,
this past several years, I wound up eating fewer carbs than a great many people
who are consciously working to have a low-carb lifestyle.


At present, I'm purposely working to further restrict my carb intake.
There are posts earlier in this Thread which discuss that experiment.
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Calorie Police, the erroneous enforcers

Post by BrightAngel » Thu Jan 27, 2011 1:18 pm

Image Copying this inspiring comment from another member.
connorcream wrote:
Graham wrote: I was wondering, CC,
do you stick to No S now or just low carb
or is it low carb plus calorie counting or what?
I think the term low carb is not even well defined.
Some sources say 25 gms, some 72, others a range 50-100,

http://www.marksdailyapple.com/how-to-s ... blueprint/.

I find it helpful to think reduced carb
because I have found with tracking that <100 carb I lose. >120 I gain.
I do not like posting calorie counts because the low calorie police show up.
But the truth, is if I ate what the calorie calculators say I can,
then I would get fat again.
I definetely am having way to much fun being trim to get fat again.

I also think calories matter
and it is no more difficult to monitor my calories along side my carbs.
I have an easy time staying low if my calories are high quality, nutritious,
satisfying most of the time.

When I track my money with DH: we balance the checkbook,
look over investments, save for retirement, plan our giving, etc...
It is not just one thing.

When I think of my family: I study their health, know their interests & friends,
send them emails about those things, go to doctors, etc...
The things that matter, and my health matters a lot,
like these other important interests, have many facets to it.

So yes calories count,
a lot of low carbers stall because of their high consumption of cheese and nuts!
However, equally as important, is where those calories come from.

I preplan for major splurges, jsut like money.
If a big withdrawl is coming soon, I save up for it.
DH & I are taking a cruise for 30th anniversary this summer.
Paying cash for it, no debt, saving. It is just a way of life.

So find your happy foods, take them apart,
decide what parts you like, then make it for yourself.
You can do this.
It is not beyond you or anyone else for that matter.
With something as important as our health,
we really should not leave it to someone else.
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

TexArk
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calories and carbs

Post by TexArk » Thu Jan 27, 2011 2:30 pm

I agree with you and connorcream about continuing to monitor both calories and carbs. I have averaged 1300 calories and 120 carbs the last quarter. So yes, I was already lowcarbing just by watching my calories and eliminating snacks and sweets. Since the first of the year I have averaged about 60 carbs daily. I do not know what my maintenance requirement will be, but I hope to finetune it as closely as connorcream and find my range. The youtube video on blood sugar asserted that if one is experiencing cravings, then the carb count needs to be lower. This has been my experience as well. I don't know that my weight loss rate is any different by going lower in carbs, but my satiety certainly is. And that is a huge plus! I don't care what the numbers say as long as I am not hungry.

Thank you for sharing your experiences and wisdom with this board. You and connorcream have helped me immensely and I look forward each day to checking in to see what you have to offer.
24.7 bmi Feb. 2019
26.1 bmi Sept. 2018
31.4 bmi July 2017

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ChubbyBaby
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Post by ChubbyBaby » Thu Jan 27, 2011 7:03 pm

Hi Again BrightAngel,

What a tremendous amount of data you have accumulated over the years! It must be so helpful to have such an incredible resource that you are able to refer back to! It makes me want to start tracking everything too. :D

I totally understand what you are saying about a natural restriction of carbs because of your overall caloric restriction. Keeping your carbohydrates around 100g is definitely lower than most people, but think it would generally still be considered too high to be "low carb", which is probably why you weren't finding much hunger relief. It's possible that this level of carb intake is fine for some people, but it would be too high for me. I know I'd still be hungry, and I don't want to be hungry...like TexArk just said. :lol:

Dr. Eades recommends eating the proper amount of protein for your lean body weight, keeping your carbs under 30g and then letting the fat fall where it may. He also states that in order to lose weight you need to keep your calories low enough to create a deficit, but if you are trying to maintain a weight loss then you don't need to monitor the calories.

I read a post on his blog from a 60 year old woman who was trying to lose weight but had stalled. The BMR calculators told her that she needed to eat 1600 calories, but she found that in real life she had to keep her calories down to 1200 in order to lose. His advice to this woman was to keep her carbs restricted, but allow her calories to go up to almost 1600, and see what happens.

This seems almost shocking. I know that if it were me I would probably try to lower my calories even more, but eating low carb seems to change the rules to some degree.

I also found this statement of his very helpful:
"There is enough individual variability that nothing specific works for everyone. Most people can pretty much eat what they want in maintenance as long as they keep carbs low enough. Some people, however, still have to watch calories a little."

Some suggestions for watching the calories that I've read are keeping your protein intake to your minimum recommended amount, and staying away from calorie dense low carb, foods like cheese and nuts.

I'm still in the weight loss phase, so I am aiming to keep my carbs to under 30g. I'm playing around with increasing my fat intake to help me control my hunger, but this will increases my calories, so I'm not sure how well this will work. I am hoping that the No-S rules will help keep my calories down enough to create a deficit.

You, on the other hand, are trying to maintain, so what's going to work for you will be different than what I'm doing. You might be able to increase your carbs a bit more. In the book Protein Power they suggest that in general, a maintenance carb level should be equal to or up to about 30% more than your protein intake, but you will have to experiment to find the right number for you.

It really is an individual journey. Good luck on your journey BrightAngel!

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Recent Candid Interview of Gary Taubes

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 28, 2011 2:31 am

Image Note:
I just finished listening to the 1/27/11
Gary Taubes interview on Jimmy Moore’s LLVLC show.
It is a rare, candid interview with Gary Taubes discussing this book,
Why We Get Fat.

http://www.thelivinlowcarbshow.com/shownotes/

This is Part 1 of a section two-part episode (#439)
where Gary talks about the process of writing a book
like the 2007 New York Times bestseller Good Calories, Bad Calories

and contains a direct response from Gary to those who question his integrity.

Part 2 is scheduled for tomorrow, 1/28/11.
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

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BrightAngel
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Re: Calorie Police, the erroneous enforcers

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 28, 2011 1:08 pm

Image I thought this was an interesting comment on
Taubes' book, Why We Get Fat,
that seemed to accurately summarize Taubes conclusions,
and posted it here for future reference.

Member of a Low-Carb forum wrote:
My understanding of why we lose weight comes from these Taubes conclusions...

Fattening and obesity are caused by an imbalance
—a disequilibrium—in the hormonal regulation of adipose tissue and fat metabolism.

Fat synthesis and storage exceed the mobilization of fat
from the adipose tissue and its subsequent oxidation.

We become leaner when the hormonal regulation of fat tissue
reverses this balance.

Eating in a way that allows our hormones to regulate properly
is the how the weight loss happens.
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

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BrightAngel
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"S" days - Shoveling Sugar/Eating till Vomiting

Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 28, 2011 2:57 pm

Anoulie wrote:I plan on making the most out of my S days tomorrow.
Even if that means I'll be shoveling plain sugar into my mouth
and eating until I vomit.
The above-quote is a good description of binge behavior.
ImageI think there's a good chance that this was a "tongue in cheek" statement,
but I quoted it here because
it is representative of the most difficult No S problem for many of us here.

Some No S members are relatively close to "normal" weight
...just overweight, or slightly over the boarder of obesity..
and this is the extent of their individual personal experience of being fat.
Some No S members are definitely obese, and even morbidly so.Image

There are many differences between these two types of members.
These include both Mental and Physical Differences.

Some only joke that they are going to eat sugar
until they vomit or feel like it.
This may only mean they will actually have a few pieces of candy
and/or cookies
which will seem like a lot to them.
But, some actually do this on a regular basis, Image
and this means they are actually going to have a lot,
such as one or more family size bags of candy/and or cookies
and...despite a great deal and time and effort....
they are not able to overcome this "addiction-like behavior".

Reinhard fits into the first category,
while people like me fit into the latter.
We are mentally and physically different.
One-size-does-not-fit-all. Not even in No S.

I think there can be no doubt that Taubes is correct
when he says that sugar is a special case
because it seems to "hijack" the brain.
This seems to be an issue with almost everyone,
however, for some, this means "giving in" to a piece or two of cake
and for others it means eating the entire cake. Image

Perhaps Taubes is also right when he says this isn't just a
mental or behavioral issue,
maybe there's actually a large physiological issue...
......maybe our respective bodies are different in more ways than size.

Some of us seem to be more sensitive to this than others.
There are some of us, for whom even "healthy" complex carbohydrates...
such as baked potatoes and whole kernal corn... can trigger binge behavior.
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

glimmergrrl
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Post by glimmergrrl » Fri Jan 28, 2011 5:04 pm

Hi BrightAngel
I am a new member here, and have very much enjoyed reading your posts....thank you for imparting your wisdom. I, as well, belong to the 2nd catagory (see my post for today, if you care to). I spoke to this same issue as ED is a demon I have fought all my life, ever since I was 4years old, chubby, when my gramma told me that I'd "never catch a man" :shock: if I was fat and that I was unacceptable to her. She was never very "grandmotherly" to me, was not allowed to sit on her lap as I might muss her dress, displace a hair on her perfectly coiffed head, etc etc. It was then the GREAT SECRET OF HOW TO BE THIN was imparted to me! BULIMIA!!! I was given a box of chocolate ex-lax and was told to eat some after every meal.....and thus, the sick dance began.
glimmer

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BrightAngel
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Post by BrightAngel » Fri Jan 28, 2011 6:40 pm

glimmergrrl wrote: ED is a demon I have fought all my life
Although I have dealt with bingeing all of my life, Image
I've never been anorexic or had a problem with purging,
but I am very familiar with eating disorders.

I generally choose not to discuss eating disorders in detail within forums online,
because there are so many "normal" people who simply do not understand.

However, as I've mentioned before, I've got a new domain DietHobby.com,
and am having a web-site designed for it now which should be up by the end of this month.
Since it will belong to me, I'm going to blog there and talk about anything I want.
This will include talking about eating disorders.

One of the things that has annoyed me while visiting many forums,
is the way that many moderators shut down
any kind of unusual viewpoints about eating disorders,
and delete helpful comments simply because THEY THINK it MIGHT promote ED,
or seem "pro-ana" or "pro-mia".

This has not been a problem here at No "S",
but generally No S doesn't attract a lot of people with eating disorders,
and Reinhard has made it clear he knows little about that subject.

At my own web-site, DietHobby.com
I am looking forward to the freedom to speak about whatever I like.

Image I have quite a few rather unusual opinions about ED,
and a few months after my blog gets going...
.....(I don't want to frighten people away immediately)...
I'm going to share some of them.
Last edited by BrightAngel on Sat Jan 29, 2011 1:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

Kathleen
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Post by Kathleen » Fri Jan 28, 2011 8:11 pm

BrightAngel,
I went months and months of eating ungodly amounts of food on S Days. While I still eat a lot, it is nowhere near the amount I used to eat. I'm listening right now to the Taubes interview.
Kathleen

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DietHobby.com

Post by BrightAngel » Sat Jan 29, 2011 1:36 pm

ImageOften, I find Dieting as a Hobby quite a lot of fun.

Today, I'm really hyped-up about the new website being designed
for my new domain at DietHobby.com.
Yesterday I got a little Progress Report, which makes me feel hopeful
that things are on track (still looks like by the end of February),
and I am asmiliating information, and writing some starting pages.
I am looking forward to having a home spot of my own, Image
sort of a base, for my online posts.
Although I've been using BrightAngel online everywhere but in DietPower,
I'll be using my real name there. You'll still find me easy to spot.

I belong to several forums ... (No S and DietPower, are my two main ones)...
...and I'm going to continue posting in them,
but my own domain is going to be a place where I can coordinate,
and bring all the dieting stuff that interests me together.
making it totally individual, without regard to sticking to a forum Theme etc.

I am hoping that people from different forums will comment there,
and that this will help individuals come together that might not have otherwise "met".
Image Of course, I really hope all you guys will drop by after it goes up
to check it out,
and if you like it, then will visit there often. Image

My plan is to encourage normal, average people like us to participate,
and to limit comments from technical or bigoted types,
Image I'm going to work to create a place that has a courteous, accepting attitude..
similiar to the one in this forum.
Anyway, I'm totally into it right now....Image
which is helping me with my weight-maintenance
and motivating me to carry on with my current low-carb experiment-of-one.
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

connorcream
Posts: 540
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Location: San Antonio

Post by connorcream » Sat Jan 29, 2011 3:07 pm

I am so happy you are undertaking this. It will be bookmarked. I will visit often and post like I usually do. I am attending a Women's Luncheon today with DD. It is some what of a high profile event. The speaker will be talking about eating, perhaps disorders as she suffered with bulemia, and is now a therapist. Some of the ladies who have asked me about my weight loss will be there. I am quite nervous about what this speaker will be saying versus what I have come to understand about adiposity. This speaker will be a key note speaker at another benenfit dinner which DH & I are one of the main coordinators. It is very intertwined.

The problem I am struggling with is, how to respond in truth, that obesity (and other metrobolic syndrome troubles, i.e. Crohn's) is not a head problem but a fat regulation problem with being fat or inflammation as only a symptom. Will be praying for the right words to say. After all, these ladies have not come to hear me, however, they have seen my journey of success.
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

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BrightAngel
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Post by BrightAngel » Sun Jan 30, 2011 2:43 pm

Image Today, my only sister's dear husband is still in the hospital
and is having yet another emergency surgery on his spine...
...this will be the 7th lengthy surgery within the past month,
the last 4 of which have been due to complications of his first surgeries for back-repair.
This is a life-threatening problem, and
I ask any of those who Pray to join me in praying for him,
and for my sister and their children.
Image
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

connorcream
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Location: San Antonio

Post by connorcream » Sun Jan 30, 2011 5:16 pm

I will offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass for him, your sister, children, yourself and all those dear to you.
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

Kevin
Posts: 1269
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Location: Maryland, USA

Post by Kevin » Sun Jan 30, 2011 11:02 pm

I will keep him in my prayers.
BrightAngel wrote:Image Today, my only sister's dear husband is still in the hospital
and is having yet another emergency surgery on his spine...
...this will be the 7th lengthy surgery within the past month,
the last 4 of which have been due to complications of his first surgeries for back-repair.
This is a life-threatening problem, and
I ask any of those who Pray to join me in praying for him,
and for my sister and their children.
Image
Kevin
1/13/2011-189# :: 4/21/2011-177# :: Goal-165#
"Respecting the 4th S: sometimes."

TexArk
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Post by TexArk » Mon Jan 31, 2011 12:10 am

Praying for peace, comfort, and healing for him and the family.

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Thank You

Post by BrightAngel » Mon Jan 31, 2011 3:31 pm

ImageThanks to each of you for your prayers and kind wishes.
To update those of you who are interested,
the surgeon told us that the operation was successful,
and my sister's husband is alert and recovering in the hospital.
Image
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

connorcream
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Post by connorcream » Mon Jan 31, 2011 10:46 pm

I am very glad that things went well. You and yours have been in my prayers today.
connorcream
5'8.5"
48 yrs
Started calorie counting
10/6/2009
start/current
192/mid 120's maintaining
Maintaining a year

kccc
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Post by kccc » Tue Feb 01, 2011 1:45 pm

Glad to hear the news is good. Best wishes for the recovery period.

Do remember to "care for the caregivers" too. :)

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BrightAngel
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Post by BrightAngel » Wed Feb 02, 2011 5:06 pm

Image I am thankful that I have such terrific online friends.
In fact, I'm in the middle of writing something about that
to post on my new site.. DietHobby.com after it goes up.

Image I'm told this will be soon...maybe even by the end of next week. Image
So, I'm working to write things that need to appear on it initially,
and some basic things I'll be using that will remain invisible to others.
This is quite a lot of work...more than I imagined, but I'm finding it fun.

Also, I don't know if I've shared this before,
but my adult son has been earning his living as a web-designer Image for the past 12 years.
For various personal reasons, we have not been close for some time.
I'm finding that dealing with him in his professional capacity to accomplish this task
is improving our relationship, and that greatly increases the value of this endeavor to me.

I'm planning to stay a member of this forum,
but if my site takes a lot of time, I'll be less active here.
I'm hoping my site will direct some new people to this forum,
and I very much hope all of you will visit there often.
Image
BrightAngel - (Dr. Collins)
See: DietHobby. com

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Post by BrightAngel » Thu Feb 03, 2011 6:44 pm

Ability is what you're capable of doing.
Motivation determines what you do.
Attitude determines how well you do it.

………………… Lou Holtz
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See: DietHobby. com

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