mubs
Storage? I am Storage!
In the past few weeks I have been busy reading up on a topic I came across that fascinated me.
In a nutshell, we eat a diet high in carbohydrates and low in fats (this is what doctors have told us to do).
The Cliff Notes version is:
ALL carbohydrates, regardless of type (simple/complex) or source (grains, lentils, vegetables, starch, etc.) get converted completely to glucose in the body. Glucose is not a sustained source of energy for the body; it is an emergency fuel for the fight-or-flight response (when you want to run away from a tiger, chase a deer to catch, fend off the rapist or fight with that mean toughie who's picking in you). All that glucose triggers insulin release, which utilizes a small portion for energy and converts the rest of the glucose into fat. Since energy is no longer available in the body, you feel hungry / weak / tired and eat more carbs. The stored fat goes on increasing, triggering insulin resistance which itself increases fat storage - a vicious cycle. Get it?
The short answer is to eat lo-carb high-fat food (no don't be shocked). But the body takes time to adapt to this natural way of functioning, since we have been dumping carbs into it and training it to burn glucose. Note that this is not a diet - it's a lifestyle change. If you go back to eating carbs, you go back to to your present condition.
The benefits of this lifestyle change are: loss of body fat, increase in lean muscle mass, reduction in hunger, greater endurance, drop in blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels, reversal of diabetes and heart disease and other things. A high-carb diet is also now being traced to brain diseases like Alzheimer's, dementia, Parkinson's, etc.
Mainstream doctors will laugh at this, but this knowledge is slowly becoming mainstream. Time magazine recently had a cover issue on this topic. More importantly, read the books instead (below).
There are 3 very good books I read. Easier to read the e-books, easier on the wallet too. You can buy the e-books from Amazon.com.
I don't have a Kindle reader, and wanted to read the books. I did find out from Amazon that they have a free Kindle Reader program for the PC (and various other platforms). So I downloaded that, bought the three e-books for peanuts, and read them all.
1)
“Deadly Harvest” – The Intimate relationship between our health and our food.
by Geoff Bond (Amazon)
2)
“The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Living” – An expert guide to making the life-saving benefits of carbohydrate restriction sustainable and enjoyable.
by Jeff S. Volek, PhD, RD & Stephen D. Phinney, MD, PhD (Amazon)
3)
“The Rosedale Diet” – Turn off your hunger switch. Live longer, Lose weight fast, And keep it off.
by Ron Rosedale, MD & Carol Colman (Amazon)
I suggest you read all three, in the sequence listed; but if you can't, at least read #2 and #3. Worst case, at least read #2. All the medical research and citations are there, in readable form in #2. The second book is very thorough and scientific (extensive citations). The evidence provided is compelling and impressive, and makes one want to switch to this diet.
The third (Rosedale's) is written for the layman and is somewhat repetitive, except that he advocates limiting saturated fat and eating more monounsaturated fat. He is also a very big fan of supplements. One thing he strongly recommends is multivitamin-multiminerals without iron. This is impossible to find in India. Iron gets stored in the body, and excessive amounts lead to heart disease.
This is now proven science, and it is inertia, convention, established beliefs and politics that is preventing it from becoming mainstream
For me, the symptoms described in the second book (mainly, and a little in Rosedale's) are what I experience: hunger + tiredness, therefore eat (carbs), and within a couple of hours, back to square one. It was almost eerily like the books were describing me!
Of course they all say this is not a "temporary diet" but a lifestyle change because the body has to switch from burning glucose to burning fat, and that change itself requires a minimum of two weeks on the new eating habits. And that if one reverts back to eating carbs, the body reverts back to burning glucose.
Very low carbs means no grains (rice, wheat, corn etc.); no lentils; no starchy foods (potato etc.). It's is a massive change in lifestyle.
All this may sound blasphemous to you. But have an open mind and read about it. You will be shocked.
I'd like to hear your reactions as well.
Best,
m
In a nutshell, we eat a diet high in carbohydrates and low in fats (this is what doctors have told us to do).
The Cliff Notes version is:
ALL carbohydrates, regardless of type (simple/complex) or source (grains, lentils, vegetables, starch, etc.) get converted completely to glucose in the body. Glucose is not a sustained source of energy for the body; it is an emergency fuel for the fight-or-flight response (when you want to run away from a tiger, chase a deer to catch, fend off the rapist or fight with that mean toughie who's picking in you). All that glucose triggers insulin release, which utilizes a small portion for energy and converts the rest of the glucose into fat. Since energy is no longer available in the body, you feel hungry / weak / tired and eat more carbs. The stored fat goes on increasing, triggering insulin resistance which itself increases fat storage - a vicious cycle. Get it?
The short answer is to eat lo-carb high-fat food (no don't be shocked). But the body takes time to adapt to this natural way of functioning, since we have been dumping carbs into it and training it to burn glucose. Note that this is not a diet - it's a lifestyle change. If you go back to eating carbs, you go back to to your present condition.
The benefits of this lifestyle change are: loss of body fat, increase in lean muscle mass, reduction in hunger, greater endurance, drop in blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels, reversal of diabetes and heart disease and other things. A high-carb diet is also now being traced to brain diseases like Alzheimer's, dementia, Parkinson's, etc.
Mainstream doctors will laugh at this, but this knowledge is slowly becoming mainstream. Time magazine recently had a cover issue on this topic. More importantly, read the books instead (below).
There are 3 very good books I read. Easier to read the e-books, easier on the wallet too. You can buy the e-books from Amazon.com.
I don't have a Kindle reader, and wanted to read the books. I did find out from Amazon that they have a free Kindle Reader program for the PC (and various other platforms). So I downloaded that, bought the three e-books for peanuts, and read them all.
1)
“Deadly Harvest” – The Intimate relationship between our health and our food.
by Geoff Bond (Amazon)
2)
“The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Living” – An expert guide to making the life-saving benefits of carbohydrate restriction sustainable and enjoyable.
by Jeff S. Volek, PhD, RD & Stephen D. Phinney, MD, PhD (Amazon)
3)
“The Rosedale Diet” – Turn off your hunger switch. Live longer, Lose weight fast, And keep it off.
by Ron Rosedale, MD & Carol Colman (Amazon)
I suggest you read all three, in the sequence listed; but if you can't, at least read #2 and #3. Worst case, at least read #2. All the medical research and citations are there, in readable form in #2. The second book is very thorough and scientific (extensive citations). The evidence provided is compelling and impressive, and makes one want to switch to this diet.
The third (Rosedale's) is written for the layman and is somewhat repetitive, except that he advocates limiting saturated fat and eating more monounsaturated fat. He is also a very big fan of supplements. One thing he strongly recommends is multivitamin-multiminerals without iron. This is impossible to find in India. Iron gets stored in the body, and excessive amounts lead to heart disease.
This is now proven science, and it is inertia, convention, established beliefs and politics that is preventing it from becoming mainstream
For me, the symptoms described in the second book (mainly, and a little in Rosedale's) are what I experience: hunger + tiredness, therefore eat (carbs), and within a couple of hours, back to square one. It was almost eerily like the books were describing me!
Of course they all say this is not a "temporary diet" but a lifestyle change because the body has to switch from burning glucose to burning fat, and that change itself requires a minimum of two weeks on the new eating habits. And that if one reverts back to eating carbs, the body reverts back to burning glucose.
Very low carbs means no grains (rice, wheat, corn etc.); no lentils; no starchy foods (potato etc.). It's is a massive change in lifestyle.
All this may sound blasphemous to you. But have an open mind and read about it. You will be shocked.
I'd like to hear your reactions as well.
Best,
m