Made with Love

Low Carb Diet

LOW CARB SNACKS I love :

meat sticks - read labels , some have more then others but generally can get ones that are 2g or less
Pork rinds , nice crunky alternative to chips
cheese strings ,
Atkins shakes from low carb store - these can be life savers for when you really have a craving , taste amazing and pretty cheap
 
Forgot a few more :

pickles , olives , mixed hot peppers , etc

The salty and sour mixed with the spice can handle almost any craving
 
Thank you Shakandbake, very useful info. I didn't know about the pork grinds and I've seen them in the store but thought they would be fried and bad for me.

I'm on my 4th day and I've eaten 0 carbs. I've been eating lots of boiled eggs, egg whites, salads with balsamic vinegar and olive oil, snacking on vegetables and fruits, chicken and turkey breast, yoghurt with 2 grams of fat or less, a few almonds mixed with cranberry and raisins and that's about it in 4 days now.

Maurice I was going to pm you but I'm sure many here will benefit from your answer. I know there are several here from reading this board that are trying to shed some weight and hopefully we can all learn.

What do you think of a cheat day? Several articles I've read and I've heard from several people I should have one day where I let myself go food wise.

Another question I have is will having no carbs start to eat away on any muscle mass I may have? I was speaking with a trainer and he was telling me I should eat some carbs or the weight loss will be mainly muscle mass loss?

So many different strategies it gets confusing!
:wacko:
 
Pork rinds are awesome. I believe they are baked. I don't know either way if they are good or bad for you but they sure taste good.
 
I think Bosco is somewhere on a beach all oiled up, flexing his muscles and impressing the young ladies.

Listen I can hear the ladies now

"oh he's so buff"
"look at his washboard stomach, oooooh he's dreamy"

then the other comments from the fat guys

"ahh, he's small where it counts from all the steroids"
"I bet he can't fight, I could take him"
"He's all show no go"




Sorry MB, I'm bored and just poking a little fun!:biggrin:
 
Jerkthis said:
What do you think of a cheat day? Several articles I've read and I've heard from several people I should have one day where I let myself go food wise.

Another question I have is will having no carbs start to eat away on any muscle mass I may have? I was speaking with a trainer and he was telling me I should eat some carbs or the weight loss will be mainly muscle mass loss?

So many different strategies it gets confusing!
:wacko:

My opinion on ''cheat'' days is that if you are a carb addict then don't do it. One day can turn into 2 or 3 pretty easily.

Think about it. If you are trying to quit smoking would you have a cheat day?

Some have said that having a ''cheat meal'' seems to work just as well. I guess it depends on your will power to stick with the plan.

Another idea would be to stay strict for 2 days and then introduce some ''good'' starch like Yams or Quinoa on the third day.

Then go back to eating veges and berries with your protein and healthy fats the next 2 days.

This one has worked well for me. Everybody is individually specific and that has to be taken into account.

Don't be afraid to eat fat. It drives me crazy when I hear people scouring the grocery stores for low fat food.
 
The fat issue is quite contentious I know.

We have been bombarded with the low fat propaganda since the 70's.

But ask yourself a question. With everything in sight being low fat for decades now how come we as a nation are approaching record numbers of obesity?

Of course trans fats should never be consumed as our bodies just don't know how to process them. But saturated fat is not the evil that the pundits would have you believe.

I'm not saying to go out and scarf down as much as you can but in moderation it should not pose any health risks.

The more I learn about it the more I'm Leaning towards the Paleo lifestyle.

And I recommend reading the Paleo Solution The orginal Human Diet by Robb Wolf.
 
Madman said:
I think Bosco is somewhere on a beach all oiled up, flexing his muscles and impressing the young ladies.

Listen I can hear the ladies now

"oh he's so buff"
"look at his washboard stomach, oooooh he's dreamy"

then the other comments from the fat guys

"ahh, he's small where it counts from all the steroids"
"I bet he can't fight, I could take him"
"He's all show no go":biggrin:

Bosco's beach days are over and to tell the truth I was never much into that whole scene anyway. I'm the guy who was always covered up in public.

As for the steroids and shrinkage well they cause testicular atrophy and lead to sexual dysfunction.

It's really f#cked up. You take all these ''supplements'' and spend hours in the gym to look a certain way.

Then all these women throw themselves at you but the average guy is most likely quite a bit better in the sexual performance department.

Fighting is another conundrum. One thing I learned early on is that just because you are big that does not make you a good fighter. As a matter of fact it's most likely the opposite.

The heaviest I ever was is 285lb's. And I can tell you for a fact that I couldn't have fought my way out of a wet paper bag.

The reason being is that I would be out of gas in about 10-20 seconds. And nothing is worse than that feeling when you are engaged in street fight believe me.

I'm not a proponent of steroids and will gladly sit down and discuss them rationally with anyone going down that path.
 
get a good app for your phone to help with counting calories. And during the summer months stay away from those calorie filled ice capps, ice coffees, even booze. :shocking: Also reduce the carb in take which should be easy with a lot of grilling going on!
 
Legend hit the nail on the head about avoiding the ice capps and ice coffees. They are loaded with sugar and calories and many forget about that and suck those back as if they were water.
 
tboy said:
hey, i am just passing on the info from the two programs that were on this week......if you have a beef, take it up with them!!!!

here's the link, go bitch at the doctors and scientists who were featured on the show....



Sorry bosco, i will take what a scientist who has studied the problem for over 40 yrs over you anyday......no offence.

Jonny Bowden echos my thoughts on the series exactly. It's nice try but they miss the point entirely I'm afraid.

Most of the so called experts I feel have never spent any real time in the trenches in the fitness/ weight loss industry.

Here's what Bowden has to say;

The Weight of the Nation: Documentary Sends the Wrong Message


5/18/2012 1:12 PM

by Jonny Bowden, PhD, CNS, aka “The Rogue Nutritionist” ™

This week, a new documentary about the obesity crisis premieres on HBO. It’s called “Weight of the Nation”.

And it’s take-home message is wrong, wrong, wrong.

You’ll be hearing a lot about this documentary, if you haven’t already. And with good reason. It’s the result of an unprecedented collaboration between the three major public-health institutions in America: the nonprofit Institute of Medicine (IOM), and two federal agencies, the CDC (Centers of Disease Control and Prevention) and the NIH (National Institutes of Health).

“Weight of the Nation” is a sincere attempt to confront an epidemic (obesity) that costs the US alone 147 billion (in 2008, up from 78.5 billion in 1998).

“Obesity, and with it, diabetes are the only major health problems that are getting worse in this country, and they’re getting worse rapidly”, said CDC Director Thomas Frieden, MD, MPH, in a July 27 media briefing during he Weight of the Nation Conference. “Beyond the economic costs are the disability, the suffering and the early deaths caused by obesity”, he added.

Yet the documentary—made by sincere and well-meaning people, mind you- draws the wrong conclusion and sends the wrong message. And it’s unlikely to make the slightest bit of difference in the obesity crisis because its focus is on the wrong enemy.

Here’s why. For decades we’ve been being told that the reason we’re so fat is that we eat too much and we exercise too little. This diagnosis is so widely accepted that to question it makes you a heretic. We’ve variously blamed high-fat foods, saturated fat, too much protein and sedentary lifestyles for this situation, but what we haven’t blamed is the real cause of the problem: Carbohydrate intolerance and a toxic diet.

The conventional wisdom is that we were never fatter, but the truth is we were fat during the depression, when bread lines and soup kitchens dotted the nation. As Gary Taubes asks in his superb Newsweek cover article The New Obesity Campaigns Have it All Wrong, “How can we blame the obesity epidemic on gluttony and sloth if we easily find epidemics of obesity throughout the past century in populations that barely had food to survive and had to work hard to earn it?”

When you get real close to it, even the common idea that we’re fat because we don’t exercise doesn’t pass the smell test. “Why is the world full of obese individuals who exercise regularly?” asks Taubes. Indeed. The Weight of the Nation shows construction workers in Arkansas laboring at back-breaking jobs that involve running up ladders with the equivalent of a 50 pound backpack, and lifting very heavy stuff all day long. If it were all about exercise, guys like this should be svelte.

They’re not.

And if it were all about eating too many calories, how do you explain the fact that some medications have as a “side effect” weight gain of anywhere from 20-140 pounds? Did the folks who gained that weight on the meds all of a sudden start eating twice as much?

No.

The fact is that weight gain is driven by hormones, and the most important hormone for weight gain—insulin- is driven by the engine of carbohydrates. It’s not that we’re eating too many calories (though that may be a part of the problem). And it’s not that we’re not exercising--- (that is a huge problem, but not just from the point of view of weight).

The problem is that we’re eating too many carbohydrates. And the ones we’re eating are all the wrong ones.

We’ve been blaming fat (especially saturated fat) for years. Our health “authorities” have been promoting for decades what one writer called “the greatest nutritional experiment in history”—a high carbohydrate low fat diet. This grain- and carb-heavy diet—very similar to what’s used to fatten cattle—was best illustrated by the god-awful, thankfully discredited USDA food pyramid of 1992. (Your tax dollars subsidize the production of the very foods that are making us fat and sick, in the form of a corporate giveaway known as the Farm Bill.) And of course, all these wonderful foods, made from corn, sugar and wheat, are virtually “fat-free”, so surely they’re healthy, right?

But fat was never the enemy, though acting as if it were made a lot of companies a lot of money.

The real enemy was- and is—sugar.

In the 1980’s, the FDA decided- in its infinite wisdom—that sugar was perfectly OK since the evidence against it “wasn’t conclusive”. (If you think this decision wasn’t influenced by the sugar lobby, I’d like to talk to you about a lovely bridge I have for sale in beautiful Brooklyn.)

“While the government spent hundreds of millions trying to prove that salt and saturated fat are bad for our health, it spent virtually nothing on sugar”, writes Taubes. “Had it targeted sugar then…our entire food culture….might have changed”.

And maybe we might have been told that the real culprits in our diet are not meat** and saturated fat, but the overwhelming amount of sugar and processed carbs that we consume on a daily basis, and that are increasingly being linked to diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer’s and virtually every other disease of aging.

Meanwhile, we have a lot of very overweight people who not only suffer with their weight, but have the added indignity of being blamed for not having any “willpower”.

“Lack of will isn’t their problem”, says Taubes. “It’s the absence of advice that might actually work.”

**Note that when I say “meat” isn’t to blame, I’m talking about pasture-raised meat, not the crap we get in supermarkets and restaurants.

References:
1. Taubes article:

2. CDC Weight of Nation Press Briefing: https://www.cdc.gov/media/transcripts/2009/t090727.htm

3. Obesity costs: American Association of Family Physicians (AAFP):
 
Too my surprise I'm not losing it as fast as I had hoped.

In 7 days I haven't had little to no sugar,

I only cheated a bit on Sunday but not over board,

little to no carbs but lots of protein, salads and moderate fruit consumption. I've lost only 3 lbs. I thought for sure I would have shed at least double that.
 
Life's too short, enjoy it and eat the things you like but in moderation.
 
I've plateaued recently myself Jerk. I've lost the first 25lbs. quickly. Now I'm stuck at around 27 - 28 lbs. and I really want to surpass the 30 mark but it's been hard. I've been continuing my walks and cut down on most bad foods although I do find myself binging which I know is not good. I tell my mom to not keep junk food in the house but she enjoys her sweets and even though she tries to hide them I stumble onto them and can't resist.
 
It's not easy, that for sure CMC. Well, hey at least we're trying.
 
Jerkthis said:
I'm on my 4th day and I've eaten 0 carbs. I've been eating lots of boiled eggs, egg whites, salads with balsamic vinegar and olive oil, snacking on vegetables and fruits, chicken and turkey breast, yoghurt with 2 grams of fat or less, a few almonds mixed with cranberry and raisins and that's about it in 4 days now.

Jerkthis, eating no carbs is not healthy. Carbs are an essential macronutrient just like proteins and fats. Try to stay with complex carbs over simple carbs. They are harder for your body to reak down so they use more energy. Also try stimulating your metabolism by eating protein within 1 hour from when you wake up and continuing every 4 hours until you sleep. Also increasing your fiber to 25 -35 g a day can help with weight loss. Also are you drinking enough water to stimulate weight loss? A good rule of thumb is 1/2 your body weight (in pounds) is how much water in ounces you should be drinking in a 24 hour period unless you have heart, kidney or liver disease. Good luck.
 
This thread is inspiring me to diet and workout providing I can still drink a few cold ones on days like today!!
 
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