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#11
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Two Week Induction Results
On Jul 30, 4:42 am, wrote:
On Jul 29, 6:54 pm, Chris wrote: For the record: everyone I know who has had long-term success with a low-carb approach has paid attention to calories consumed as well as just carbs, as you are doing. I agree, but... usually people don't need to get into calorie-counting until close to goal. Em has just started and has lost 8 lbs in 2 weeks. This is not only not a stall, but not even a "slow" rate of loss by anyone's measure. It's a damned good loss. Em, what you're doing is *working*. So... why are you looking to change it now? That was exactly what I thought too. Why worry about how many calories are in a half cup of blue cheese dressing, as long as you're losing very nicely? Also, as far as eating all you want, Atkins said to eat just until your satiated and no longer hungry. That's a lot different than eating all you want. IMO, if you are up to exercising, add some of that in and don't fool with the diet just yet... unless you want to add carbs as per Atkins. This doesn't mean adding crap, but adding veggies. Veggies are good! A lot of people find exercising easier closer to goal. The studies I've read... men tend to exercise on the way, whereas women tend to started exercising afterwards. But those who maintain over time nearly ALL exercise. Some walking probably wouldn't kill you. If you want to do something more than that, I'd suggest strength training. The best resource I know is Krista's site, which is aimed for women, but applies just as equally to men (a squat is a squat no matter your gender):http://www.stumptuous.com/cms/index.php |
#12
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Two Week Induction Results
On Jul 29, 2:03 pm, "em" wrote:
2) To cut the crap attitude that only carbs count and that I can eat anything so long as I don't go over the carb count. I just want to add... During induction, almost everyone overeats. Really. First, you're getting to eat things like bacon and fullfat dairy and such, which you've probably not had for a while and therefore feel "indulgent" about. And second, you have all these cravings for stuff you're not allowed to eat, so you tend to over-do it on the stuff you ARE allowed. Induction is not for weight-loss. Induction is for switching from an insulin-mediated biochemistry to a glucagon-mediated biochemistry. It feels a bit like withdrawal in a way. In Atkins, OWL is the weight loss phase... and that comes *after* induction. Sure you lose weight during induction, but it's mostly water anyways. The real loss of fat comes after induction is over with - cause mostly everyone overdoes it during induction. That's fine, that's how it's *supposed* to be. So... yeah, you may well have been overeating during induction, and may have become aware of how strongly you crave carbs - that is what induction *does*. But you didn't crave bread or pasta or pastries because you were eating too many carbs on induction. You craved them cause it's withdrawal. The low-carbing DTs. You get over it. As you get over it, you find yourself losing your appetite. Well, not really. You have to learn what hungry feels like all over again because it's a *much* less painful feeling than the cravings you get when your blood glucose is high. When my bg is high, hunger is *painful*. When it's not high, hunger is some little minor feeling that I hardly notice and it becomes easy to forget to eat if I'm engrossed in something. It's VERY normal to have cravings in induction; it's just as normal that your appetite will drop... if it hasn't already, it will in the next week or two. You don't need to *cut* carbs. Atkins recommends getting most of your carbs from veggies, and eating more salad or green beans or spinach is NOT going to make you lose control. Seriously, NO ONE ever got fat from overeating broccoli or cabbage. |
#13
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Two Week Induction Results
"em" wrote:
End result: 253 down to 245 -- 8 pounds in two weeks. Considering this was a switch from low-cal to low-carb, I think that's pretty damn good, as I didn't have bags of water to drop. Overall, I am now down more then fifty pounds from my original 298, and I'm really happy about that. Especially since you switched from another type of plan, that is a superior result. I do think that 20 carbs/day may be a bit much for me in starting out. In addition to counting carbs, I need to use a little common sense. Do you have any evidence for thinking that if low is good, lower must be better? It's not true. The concept of the Atkins CCLL is that every body has its own customized ideal carb intake level for loss, and CCLM for maintenance. The idea of the initial 20 is it's so low almost no one has ideal levels that low. For example, a 1/2 cup of blue cheese dressing is very low in carbs, but that's like 600 calories. A half-cup of that stuff, per day, split between two or three green salads does not work for me. Agreed. Over time I've gradually switched to eating salad without dressing much of the time and with very little when I have it. But that's consistent with unmodified Atkins as well. Eat until full not stuffed, let the appetite suppression effect allow you to gradually taper down portions. My plan for the next two weeks is this: 1) To stay slightly below induction levels of carbs, because I think I have a low carb tolerance. I'm thinking 12-15 carbs is a good target -- that allows for copious amounts of greenery, two or three eggs and a little cheese. Do you have any reason to think lower is better when it isn't for something like 99.5% of the population? 2) To cut the crap attitude that only carbs count and that I can eat anything so long as I don't go over the carb count. Moving away from overeating habits, good plan. 3) Allow myself one or possibly two treats a week of something that I've really been missing. A few oz. of almonds or 1/2 a cup of cottage cheese, something like that. Most people can tolerate these things, on low-carb, on a daily bases. NOT ME. Another lesson from the other half of Atkins - The elimination system of very restrictive Induction followed by a gradual easing of those restrictions as a system to find your trigger foods and food intolerances. It has an interesting consequence - You can no longer afford to avoid trying foods on a schedule to avoid any possible binge trigger. Now that you're through Induction it is necessary to find the discovery of a binge trigger as a victory. So you know you don't binge on lettuce, cauliflower, chicken, beef and eggs. So what. Few can eat that forever. No try the items on the carb ladder one at a time. Binge and you've found a food you'll need to avoid from then on, but each and every food from the carb ladder that you don't binge on is a food that expands your allowed variety. Variety is good. Taking the view that trying a new food and ending up binging as a victory, extremely hard but a part of the process. As time moves on, every two weeks, I'm going to add three to five carbs to my daily diet, and experiment with different foods, until I figure out what works for me. The process is every week. Step out in faith! It's *hard* to try those foods from the carb ladder on schedule. But life has a simple principle - Stepping out of your comfort zone leads to a better you. You did well on Induction, the simple boot camp. The hard step of moving out of cravings. Now it's the hard part of finding out what does and doesn't work for you by following the ladder. |
#14
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Two Week Induction Results
Em, congratulations on seeing results from your hard work!
On Jul 29, 2:03 pm, "em" wrote: End result: 253 down to 245 -- 8 pounds in two weeks. Considering this was a switch from low-cal to low-carb, I think that's pretty damn good, as I didn't have bags of water to drop. Overall, I am now down more then fifty pounds from my original 298, and I'm really happy about that. I do think that 20 carbs/day may be a bit much for me in starting out. In addition to counting carbs, I need to use a little common sense. For example, a 1/2 cup of blue cheese dressing is very low in carbs, but that's like 600 calories. A half-cup of that stuff, per day, split between two or three green salads does not work for me. Another example: I have to learn to be satisfied with eating two eggs and two strips of bacon vs. four eggs and six strips of bacon. The carb counts are almost identical. The stupidity factor of the double+ portion is pretty high. My plan for the next two weeks is this: 1) To stay slightly below induction levels of carbs, because I think I have a low carb tolerance. I'm thinking 12-15 carbs is a good target -- that allows for copious amounts of greenery, two or three eggs and a little cheese. 2) To cut the crap attitude that only carbs count and that I can eat anything so long as I don't go over the carb count. 3) Allow myself one or possibly two treats a week of something that I've really been missing. A few oz. of almonds or 1/2 a cup of cottage cheese, something like that. Most people can tolerate these things, on low-carb, on a daily bases. NOT ME. And... that's about it! As time moves on, every two weeks, I'm going to add three to five carbs to my daily diet, and experiment with different foods, until I figure out what works for me. Thanks for all your support! |
#15
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Two Week Induction Results
em wrote:
End result: 253 down to 245 -- 8 pounds in two weeks. Considering this was a switch from low-cal to low-carb, I think that's pretty damn good, as I didn't have bags of water to drop. Don't delude yourself. Switching from low cal/high carb to low carb always results in significant water weight loss at first (until the storage glucose is used up). I tell people about the water loss trick all the time. A classic example is the person who has an event coming up in a couple of weeks and wants to fit into what is now a tight suit, dress, pants and shirt, etc. Most anyone who isn't restricting carbs and/or sodium can lose 5-15 pounds and really loosen up tight clothing in two weeks by restricting carbs, sodium, calories, exercising 30-90 minutes a day, and taking daily saunas if available. Your 8 pounds probably would have been 10+ had you done it all. The take home point is it's a trick. Go back to high carb, especially considering the "stupidity factor" that you mentioned (calories out of control), and that 8 pounds will be right back on. Basically, the way I see it, you took a break. I know what that's like because I do it myself. I do something I call "the ratchet method" where I switch back and forth between low carb and moderate carb (around 40% of calories from carbohydrate) in an effort to prevent stalls. When low carb stalls out and/or I get sick of the menu, I switch to moderate carb for awhile with the understanding that there will be a water weight gain. The cool part is that as long as calories are still restricted (it's not a binge or cheat period but rather part of a cycle), the meal count it high (shoot for 6 meals a day with 2.5 - 3 hour spacing and a minimum of 5 meals), and exercise is maintained or even bumped up a notch (carbohydrate is premium fuel for mind and muscle which makes exercise easier), the water weight gain will be less than that which is lost when you switch back to low carb. In a word, your weight "ratchets" down each cycle. Each cycle causes an increase that is followed by a larger decrease and a new low. The sub-cycles (the low and moderate carb phases of each cycle) can last as long as there is a benefit. For example, when you get sick of 6 meals a day, fruits, grains and other lower fat higher carb food you can switch back to low carb with a lower meal count, lower calories and less exercise. When that stalls out or gets boring you can switch back to moderate carb. The ratchet method keeps it fresh and is, in my opinion, a preferable/more effective alternative to cheat meals and/or cheat days because it keeps the calorie count under control and provides for cycled meal counts and exercise intensity. The variety (change in routine) is likely to be the magic ingredient. Don't be surprised to see something like this as the basis for a mainstream diet book at some point. Cyclical diets are nothing new to athletes, but the typical layman dieter is probably unaware. There is no one best diet for everyone. Healthy people, and by that I mean people without issues with specific foods or glucose/insulin problems, will respond favorably to a variety of macronutrient ratios. That's why there are so many diets to choose from; they all work for some of the people some of the time. The quest for what works best might also include regular macronutrient ratio changes over time. |
#16
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Two Week Induction Results
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#17
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Two Week Induction Results
"em" writes:
End result: 253 down to 245 -- 8 pounds in two weeks. Considering this was a switch from low-cal to low-carb, I think that's pretty damn good, as I didn't have bags of water to drop. Overall, I am now down more then fifty pounds from my original 298, and I'm really happy about that. Excellent progress! As others have said, it sounds like what you're doing is working great, so keep it up. I do think that 20 carbs/day may be a bit much for me in starting out. In addition to counting carbs, I need to use a little common sense. I'm not sure why that amount is "a bit much" for you. If it tends to cause cravings, you may want to start monitoring your blood sugar. Twenty g/day, or even 30g, shouldn't cause significant cravings if your blood sugar is at all under control, but it could if you're diabetic. Bernstein recommends staying away from even trace amounts of actual sugar, like the less than 1g of maltodextrin in sugar-free Jello. That may not be necessary, but you may find you have to watch out for certain things. For example, a 1/2 cup of blue cheese dressing is very low in carbs, but that's like 600 calories. A half-cup of that stuff, per day, split between two or three green salads does not work for me. Why not? I don't know how many calories you think you should get, but 200-300/meal isn't that many out of the total, is it? Another example: I have to learn to be satisfied with eating two eggs and two strips of bacon vs. four eggs and six strips of bacon. The carb counts are almost identical. The stupidity factor of the double+ portion is pretty high. I eat almost that much (usually 4 eggs and 4 strips of bacon) and I'm losing weight, but I'm a pretty big guy; I don't know what size you are. But two eggs and two (thick) strips of bacon only gives you 21g protein and 343 calories; not very many unless you're a fairly small and sedentary person. 3) Allow myself one or possibly two treats a week of something that I've really been missing. A few oz. of almonds or 1/2 a cup of cottage cheese, something like that. Most people can tolerate these things, on low-carb, on a daily bases. NOT ME. I'm still not sure what you mean by "tolerate." Can you elaborate? -- Aaron -- 285/235/200 -- aaron.baugher.biz |
#18
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Two Week Induction Results
"Aaron Baugher" wrote in message ... "em" writes: End result: 253 down to 245 -- 8 pounds in two weeks. Considering this was a switch from low-cal to low-carb, I think that's pretty damn good, as I didn't have bags of water to drop. Overall, I am now down more then fifty pounds from my original 298, and I'm really happy about that. Excellent progress! As others have said, it sounds like what you're doing is working great, so keep it up. Thanks! & I will. I do think that 20 carbs/day may be a bit much for me in starting out. In addition to counting carbs, I need to use a little common sense. I'm not sure why that amount is "a bit much" for you. I did low-carb some time back, maybe eight or so years ago? I did really well for quite a while & then I screwed it up pretty bad. So I learned a lot about what to do, what to not do and how to really screw up. I'm trying to carry those lessons forward. One thing I learned was that, at that time, IIRC, my tolerance for carbs on OWL was around 35, which (I think) is pretty damn low. I also learned that a lot of the foods that one is allowed to have when you up your carb limit are foods that are real "trigger foods" for me, such as nuts and seeds. I'm not in a hurry to eat more carbs and I'm just taking it one day at a time. I have found, though, that less then 20 carbs/day is too restrictive for me, and this morning I made the decision stick with 20 and see how it goes. (I did quite a bit less then that during induction, especially towards the end.) What I remember from doing LC in the past is that you lose quite a bit during the first two weeks, mostly water. Sometime within the next few weeks you hit a period where you don't make any progress for about a week, and then you fall into your regular loss pattern, whatever that is, say one to two pounds a week. I believe my OWL carb tolerance is going to be fairly low, and I'm not as active as I was back then. I want to stick with 20 carbs until I see my weight loss fall into some sort of pattern so that I can perform a reasonably valid experiment to find out what my daily carb limit should be. If it tends to cause cravings, you may want to start monitoring your blood sugar. Twenty g/day, or even 30g, shouldn't cause significant cravings if your blood sugar is at all under control, but it could if you're diabetic. I do have type-2. Bernstein recommends staying away from even trace amounts of actual sugar, like the less than 1g of maltodextrin in sugar-free Jello. That may not be necessary, but you may find you have to watch out for certain things. There are a lot of things I have to look out for! Things that I want to eat, that are low-carb, but I know I have difficulty with, I buy in small amounts. Like almonds -- yah, I can buy the 16oz package for $3.99 but they'll disappear that night. So I buy the 2 oz packackage for $1.99 and save a dollar. Actually, I've been doing pretty damn good. My kids have all kinds of carb-o-la (as in crap-o-la) around the house, and I'm not even tempted to touch it. I know, for a fact, that if I have that one bite of the wrong food, I'll screw myself up. For example, a 1/2 cup of blue cheese dressing is very low in carbs, but that's like 600 calories. A half-cup of that stuff, per day, split between two or three green salads does not work for me. Why not? I don't know how many calories you think you should get, but 200-300/meal isn't that many out of the total, is it? Depends on what you pour it on, I usually have a can of tuna or a can of chick with my salad, for example, which is another 150 calories or so. I can get just as full by using a much smaller amount of mayo, its fewer calories that way and I save those couple of carbs for something else. Another example: I have to learn to be satisfied with eating two eggs and two strips of bacon vs. four eggs and six strips of bacon. The carb counts are almost identical. The stupidity factor of the double+ portion is pretty high. I eat almost that much (usually 4 eggs and 4 strips of bacon) and I'm losing weight, but I'm a pretty big guy; I don't know what size you are. But two eggs and two (thick) strips of bacon only gives you 21g protein and 343 calories; not very many unless you're a fairly small and sedentary person. I rarely eat meals, I snack (and snack and snack) all day long. I might eat bacon & eggs two or three times a day. When I was doing low-cal I was writing down everything I ate. I eat like 10 to 15 times a day, and THAT'S when I'm watching myself and counting calories! (I seem to be eating fewer times during the day since I started induction.) 3) Allow myself one or possibly two treats a week of something that I've really been missing. A few oz. of almonds or 1/2 a cup of cottage cheese, something like that. Most people can tolerate these things, on low-carb, on a daily bases. NOT ME. I'm still not sure what you mean by "tolerate." Can you elaborate? By tolerate, I mean what I can or cannot eat and still do well in regards to losing weight, be that carb count or the propensity of a certain food to drive me towards a binge. Aaron -- 285/235/200 -- aaron.baugher.biz Em - 298/245/2?? |
#19
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Two Week Induction Results
On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 12:03:45 -0700, "em" wrote:
End result: 253 down to 245 -- 8 pounds in two weeks. Considering this was a switch from low-cal to low-carb, I think that's pretty damn good, as I didn't have bags of water to drop. Overall, I am now down more then fifty pounds from my original 298, and I'm really happy about that. I do think that 20 carbs/day may be a bit much for me in starting out. In addition to counting carbs, I need to use a little common sense. For example, a 1/2 cup of blue cheese dressing is very low in carbs, but that's like 600 calories. A half-cup of that stuff, per day, split between two or three green salads does not work for me. Another example: I have to learn to be satisfied with eating two eggs and two strips of bacon vs. four eggs and six strips of bacon. The carb counts are almost identical. The stupidity factor of the double+ portion is pretty high. My plan for the next two weeks is this: 1) To stay slightly below induction levels of carbs, because I think I have a low carb tolerance. I'm thinking 12-15 carbs is a good target -- that allows for copious amounts of greenery, two or three eggs and a little cheese. 2) To cut the crap attitude that only carbs count and that I can eat anything so long as I don't go over the carb count. 3) Allow myself one or possibly two treats a week of something that I've really been missing. A few oz. of almonds or 1/2 a cup of cottage cheese, something like that. Most people can tolerate these things, on low-carb, on a daily bases. NOT ME. And... that's about it! As time moves on, every two weeks, I'm going to add three to five carbs to my daily diet, and experiment with different foods, until I figure out what works for me. Thanks for all your support! Nice, start! Congrads! -- BlueBrooke 254/228/135 |
#20
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Two Week Induction Results
"em" wrote:
"Aaron Baugher" wrote: "em" writes: I do think that 20 carbs/day may be a bit much for me in starting out. In addition to counting carbs, I need to use a little common sense. I'm not sure why that amount is "a bit much" for you. I did low-carb some time back, maybe eight or so years ago? I did really well for quite a while & then I screwed it up pretty bad. So I learned a lot about what to do, what to not do and how to really screw up. I'm trying to carry those lessons forward. So many people screw it up and need to start again. I've done it. The important part is to ask yourself what choices you have that actually work - Quiting and gaining it all back sure doesn't, so the real choice is switching to some other type of plan or trying to learn a lesson each fall so the next fall doesn't happen for longer than the last one. So what happened? Did you drop the carb ladder and start eating stuff well up the carb ladder? Did you follow the carb ladder, find a binge trigger, and treat it as a defeat instead of learning a trigger food to avoid? Did you stop viewing it as the right thing to do? One thing I learned was that, at that time, IIRC, my tolerance for carbs on OWL was around 35, This means you were out of ketosis at 40, right? That's how you find your CCLL - out of ketosis and/or carb cravings start no matter how you get to that carb count even with broccoli. which (I think) is pretty damn low. They seem to cluster around 50ish for most people. It's why Protein Power by Drs Eades select the level of 50 for one of their phases IMO. I've seen CCLLs range from 15 to 150 so while 35 is lower than the most common number it's still well about the deliberate undershoot of Atkins Induction. Consider that you could get to 35 using a carby breakfast like steel cut oats and then eat like Induction for the rest of the day, not all that low. Or eat root veggies like a serving of carrot with dinner ... I also learned that a lot of the foods that one is allowed to have when you up your carb limit are foods that are real "trigger foods" for me, such as nuts and seeds. On Atkins no food is ever allowed if it's a trigger. The carb ladder is the order to try things to find out if they are a trigger for you, not a list of what is allowed at what carb quota. If you didn't understand this, you missed half of the conceptual framework of the Atkins approach. What I remember from doing LC in the past is that you lose quite a bit during the first two weeks, mostly water. Sometime within the next few weeks you hit a period where you don't make any progress for about a week, and then you fall into your regular loss pattern, whatever that is, say one to two pounds a week. That's the expected pattern. It is never guaranteed and each restart has its own chance of following expected patterns or not. I believe my OWL carb tolerance is going to be fairly low, and I'm not as active as I was back then. I want to stick with 20 carbs until I see my weight loss fall into some sort of pattern so that I can perform a reasonably valid experiment to find out what my daily carb limit should be. Do you have the belief that adding carbs will reduce your loss rate? It won't. Keep your carbs too low and thyroid starts cutting T3 output. That causes basal metabolism to drift down and reduces loss rates. The point of CCLL is it sets the carb intake high enough for the T3 reduction to not happen but to keep insulin low enough for fat to flow out of storage not into it. If it tends to cause cravings, you may want to start monitoring your blood sugar. Twenty g/day, or even 30g, shouldn't cause significant cravings if your blood sugar is at all under control, but it could if you're diabetic. I do have type-2. Then controlling blood sugar levels aces loss rates for you. Track meter ratings as you move your quota up. Stop the increases if you either drop out of ketosis or your blood sugar levels start going up. There are a lot of things I have to look out for! Things that I want to eat, that are low-carb, but I know I have difficulty with, I buy in small amounts. Like almonds -- yah, I can buy the 16oz package for $3.99 but they'll disappear that night. So I buy the 2 oz packackage for $1.99 and save a dollar. For me it's cashews. No matter the size of the package of cashews I eat them until it's empty. Not a bad thing with a two ounce package. A very bad thing with a 16 ounce jar! My strategy was to try other nuts until I found one I didn't have that problem with. A box of almonds, pecans or filberts for me can last a long time since I can take a handful, close the lid, and not think of it again for a couple of days. So is using a smaller package the right idea given the principles of Atkins? Food intolerances trigger binges and addictive responses according to Atkins. The way to acheive long term control is to learn all of your intolerances and practice complete avoidance on them. Eat small packages to control your portions and what you're doing is gradually eroding your control. Especially at first I suggest following this Atkins concept carefully. Try something other than almonds for a while not sue small packages. Actually, I've been doing pretty damn good. My kids have all kinds of carb-o-la (as in crap-o-la) around the house, and I'm not even tempted to touch it. I know, for a fact, that if I have that one bite of the wrong food, I'll screw myself up. One bite really does hurt. Maybe a direct binge, maybe gradual erosion of control. Those temptations will never, ever, ever, stop being under our noses in this world. I rarely eat meals, I snack (and snack and snack) all day long. I might eat bacon & eggs two or three times a day. Hard to control. The concept of "three square meals" may be nonsense for some, but I think for you it needs to be a goal. Set up long term habits that give control not take it away. When I was doing low-cal I was writing down everything I ate. I eat like 10 to 15 times a day, and THAT'S when I'm watching myself and counting calories! (I seem to be eating fewer times during the day since I started induction.) Journalling is still a good idea on low carb. 3) Allow myself one or possibly two treats a week of something that I've really been missing. A few oz. of almonds or 1/2 a cup of cottage cheese, something like that. Most people can tolerate these things, on low-carb, on a daily bases. NOT ME. I'm still not sure what you mean by "tolerate." Can you elaborate? By tolerate, I mean what I can or cannot eat and still do well in regards to losing weight, be that carb count or the propensity of a certain food to drive me towards a binge. If it gives the urge to binge you need to avoid it not allow yourself one or two exposures per week. Find other stuff to use as treats. |
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