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thatsme

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Everything posted by thatsme

  1. Yeah, that does worry me - the absolute last thing I want to do is stuff up my metabolism somehow so that I can never eat carbs again. I do plan to stick with this, but I definitely foresee times when I won't be lchf - traveling for eg. There do seem to be some people out there who think there are negative metabolic consequences for lc though, but I haven't been convinced by anything I've read yet - anyone else done research in that direction?
  2. Martin sounds like you and I are on the same track (got sloppy, gained, getting it off again at the moment) - I definitely also plan to start upping carbs again once I've settled back to a good weight level, but it is a bit disturbing how quickly it piles back on at even slightly higher carb levels. Eish. I mean, I knew it would happen based on the literature, but still a not so great experience. Hope you can reset yourself somewhere your body's happier. Thanks for sharing.
  3. Hippopal, I hear you. Hopefully we can tune ourselves back in. I think I'm just going to re-read some of the stuff I thought I already knew, just to reset myself in case I've started wandering from whats recommended without realising it. And then see how things go. Will reassess in a month. I didn't start this for weight loss, more for the other health benefits, but I guess because the other benefits are less tangible a change in weight is what demotivates. But I suppose it's a bit of a yardstick on how we're doing generally, so maybe we should be grateful it's given us a headsup that not all is as it should be. Good luck your end, hope you figure it out.
  4. Yeah, I agree re. the not-doing-it-right thing. I feel like I haven't changed how I'm eating (compared to when it used to work :/ ), but I probably have. It's just that I never monitored things too closely before (because it was working) so it's hard to compare. Re. snacks, mostly nuts and dairy (yoghurt + cream with nuts, sometimes a couple of berries), so maybe that's the problem. But I was eating that before too and didn't seem to be a problem. Hopefully will figure it out soon
  5. Hey guys, I think I need some moral support (or something). Been doing this for about 9 mo now, and was going along fine for the first 6 or so. Settled into a somewhat strict routine but with leeway for relaxing things about once a week when I ate at other people’s houses/ other special circumstances. Dropped ~4kg and kept it off easily. I only weigh about 60, so that’s pretty significant and took me about 2kg above ideal – was happy with that. Then I had a month of lots of ‘special’ occasions – visitors etc. I thought I had gone back to my previous routine after that, but realised a few weeks back that I’m back at my old weight. Thought I’d been strict since then, but it's sticking with me. Feeling pretty discouraged – it was such a relief to find a way to eat that didn’t leave you worried about weight, and now I feel like it’s been taken away and I’m back to the worrying. I’ve never been overweight, but it’s stressful feeling like even if you eat right, it still keeps creeping up. I’m not at the end of the road – perhaps I'm suffering from the 'carb creep' some people mention, or after reading above maybe I’ll cut the cream. Work’s also been very stressful – low carb doesn’t fix stress-eating unfortunately, so maybe I'm just overeating. But not feeling very motivated – refusing ‘normal’ treat food was easy when I was feeling the payoff, but it’s getting harder now. Eish. End of moan Thanks to those of you sharing your personal findings - it's great to stop by here every now and then and see how things are evolving.
  6. You guys who are experimenting, I'd be interested to see the diff in effect between fermented and unfermented milk - so milk vs kefir or yoghurt. Let us know if you try it out.
  7. I assume health shops or dischem will have at least almond flour. I'm guessing it's much cheaper to grind your own if you have the facilites though (although won't be quite as flour-like).
  8. My 2c on a couple of things, in case it helps anyone. Sorry for the length, but if I only contribute once a year might as well: Someone was complaining of nausea a while back? My experience - in my first week I had one day of horrible nausea, but it has never returned (6+ months on). Ditto with headache. If it's because you're trying to up your fats and haven't figured out palatable ways yet - I made this mistake initially (well, as I think of it now) - just eat proper (but perhaps richer than before) food if you're struggling, don't try and eat straight up fat/oil added to things that wouldn't normally have it. I also find upping the acid element in the food makes increased fat less greasy feeling - e.g add a squeeze of lemon/ vinegar/ something like tomatoes. Some things I find make this way of eating workable for me: - frittata's - basically a good solid omellete with fillings. Tasty, transportable & easy to make ahead (e.g. for breakfast on the run/lunch) and you can put in anything you have at hand. Also helps if you're not keen on maxing out on meat and are socially acceptable to share with others (who might not want bullet-proof coffee - eggs generally. Cheap, easy protein & fat, & more sustainable that meat. - some good low carb 'sweet' recipes: I don't have to have snacks, but I like to, especially if it allows you to join in social eating (visitors/ after dinner treat with others). Some recipes below I find work ok - bearing in mind I don't really like very sweet things anyway. If you're okay with it you can add sugar substitutes. I don't, but sometimes add up to 2 tbs honey, or a grated or cooked mashed apple, to a whole batch of something to sweeten it slightly. It becomes affordable if you find a good source of almonds or other nuts you can grind yourself into flour (coffee grinder works best, although perhaps a good blender would do the job) or butter (food processor best). I also make my own coconut milk & flour (more for interest because I like messing around in the kitchen, you can get by without) - chickpea/chana/gram four: I only use it maybe once a month, but I like it because it's lower ch than wheat (~57 vs 75-80g/100) and more of that is fibre (so even less insulin affect I assume), it's gluten-free, & it's cheap and easy to use. It acts like an egg (binding - although you can still add eggs to reduce ch content more), so you can just mix it with water & use it as a base for fritters or wraps. Useful when catering for other people to make a 'starch' component you can also eat some of. - slow-cooked stews. Someone else mentioned this too I think - you can use cheap, fairly fatty cuts of meat (pork is good, some great se asian-flavoured things out there), low maintenance and come out really tasty. A slow cooker or hot bag is useful for this. - if you're in ct, the access park nut shop is the cheapest I've found (any other suggestion?). They also sell macadamia butter at a very good price. If you're interested in cooking, some recipes I've found work for me,: http://www.nomeatnom.com/2012/06/how-to-make-your-own-coconut-flour.html http://slimpalate.com/brownie-bites-paleo-grain-free-gluten-free/ http://lmichellek.com/easiest-almond-flour-cookies/ http://www.charliefoundation.org/recipes/item/972-basic-muffins.html ( these ones ^ work best for me using only 100g butter. I also add a grated apple. Bake at ~150 rather otherwise oil tends to 'boil' out. Have become a staple) http://www.healthhomehappy.com/2010/09/grain-free-crackers-made-with-sesame-and-sunflower-seeds.html marinated aubergine (was good in the season): slice it & bake at 180 until cooked/ soft. Cut up to desired size & add vinaigrette of choice (google something that sounds good). Great for taking along to communal food events (braais/picnics etc) - everyone likes it. Add salad/ feta anything. These look good too, although haven't tried them: http://slimpalate.com/cauliflower-tortillas-paleo-grain-free-gluten-free/ Thanks for all the info everyone's sharing, cheers.
  9. I've been wondering about this - I also have problems with cramp now that I didn't have before (also strike when stretching in bed, when you're enjoying still being half asleep :/ ), and it does make me wonder: why would any diet that we're adapted for, require us to take supplements for our bodies to function properly? Seems a bit odd. Has someone looked into the Mg thing in depth? Any thoughts?
  10. refined coconut oil.. am I the only one who thinks it smells VEry chemically? I got some the other day (Crede's) - thought it would be useful for things you don't want tasting of coconut, but jeez, it smells kind of like fuel or something. You actually couldn't taste it in the end product, but I was expecting to have to chuck it out while I was mixing.. Did I just get a weird batch or do others find it smells.. odd?
  11. Who are these guys?? Every cyclist & driver (so everyone really) I know gets high blood pressure over this kind of behaviour, but it still happens. Really don't understand. Da vinci, thanks for bringing it up in a measured way. Please make sure any driver you're with knows that MOST cyclists really appreciate any considerate behaviour on his part, and do their best to do the same (and are also frustrated by these eedjits). Sorry you have to deal with it
  12. great minds.. sorry, guess I missed that. Thanks for sharing your experiences with it btw.
  13. Hi all I haven't jumped on this bandwagon yet, but been reading with interest - some very convincing stuff out there, especially when you start looking into the cholesterol/ heart disease story. (Same views as dracs for now though..) to share - I've found this guys site pretty interesting, seeing as he's into performance effects as well - it looks a bit like he's trying to sell you something, but I think it's just the idea he's pushing. He's a pretty keen self-experimenter, and has good in-depth posts and seems to stick with science, which is nice. Worth a browse: http://eatingacademy.com/start-here
  14. not for me - I get a much better workout on road bike - no granny gears feel like I'm cheating on the mtb - but agree on other points. Much nicer not having to worry about little bumps in the road & feeling (relatively) puncture-proof (oh-oh. Was that the sound of fate being tempted?)
  15. that's bloody funny. Just lost 10 min of my life watching it over and over
  16. Not sure if this has been posted before, but worth a read: http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2012/09/cyclists_are_annoying_why_you_think_they_re_a_menace_on_two_wheels_.single.html "...our estimate of the number of asshole cyclists and the degree of their assholery is skewed by what behavioral economists like Daniel Kahneman call the affect heuristic, which is a fancy way of saying that people make judgments by consulting their emotions instead of logic." "The “otherness” of cyclists makes them stand out, and that helps drivers cement their negative conclusions. This is also why sentiments like “taxi drivers are awful” and “Jersey drivers are terrible” are common, but you don’t often hear someone say “all drivers suck.” People don’t like lumping themselves into whatever group they are making negative conclusions about, so we subconsciously seek out a distinguishing characteristic first." What we all know I guess, but interesting to hear it explained in terms of how our brains are wired. As he says, being aware of ones biases makes it possible to change, and I think we can all apply this to some sphere of our lives & cut down on high blood pressure moments.
  17. If you're going to forget something at home, let it not be your normal-person-pants. doh. (second round on this one for me. slow learner)
  18. I would pick the milner/ belvedere option - roads are wider and there's far less stop start/ dodge the taxi/ pedestrian/ parked car to be done - feels safer to me. Cars are going a bit faster though. - both are fine, depends what you're more comfortable with I guess
  19. Soo.. how do we get our grubby paws on the shiny new kit then? The antici.................pation is killing me
  20. Whoop! Just in time - kit's about to develop holes those riding behind me thank you.
  21. wow someone's making a mint off you lot with all these food-replacement supplements. nuts, potatoes, pbj sarmies ftw! (although granted I'm never going to be standing on any podiums) And for me anyway I don't agree on the 'you just need to train more' thing. Obviously to a degree that's true, but anything longer than about 2 hrs and if I don't eat every hour ish starting at hour 1, I hit a SERious energy crisis, doesn't seem to matter the fitness level. Praps its just me though
  22. (Ladies) I can't choose one place! But here are what my ultimate riding destinations will have in common: 1) Big climbs = big scenery http://travellingtwo.com/gallery2/d/48528-2/Baralacha_La-descent.jpg 2) but not too much of this.. I'd like to keep my fingers http://data.whicdn.com/images/10791755/ARTI_bicycle_touring_winter-1_thumb.jpgcyclocamping.com 3) good camping spots http://www.examiner.com/images/blog/wysiwyg/image/Peter_Sunrise_Himalayas,_Nepal-1.JPGpic:Peter Gostelow 4) good street food http://goingslowly.smugmug.com/1224806492_SZRPT-783x522.jpg pic: journal.goingslowly.com and 5) friendly people! http://www.worldcycletour.com/cycletheworld/images/vietnam2.jpgworldcycletour.com But now that I've read this thread I'm adding Squier's Umkomaas singletrack to the top end of the list. May we all get to our various theres (there's?) sooner than later.
  23. Ha. You know, unless you actually do these things at home for yourself, you probably won't ever get to learn as a female rider. I really do appreciate people stopping and helping, but if you're a women riding by yourself, guys actually won't LET you fix things - I've had the pump taken out of my hands despite saying really no, fine, thanks for asking. But I'll happily take a bit of sexism when it;s well-meant and comes from the heart (let's pretend that's where it comes from). Just make sure you fix your own at home so you know what the dealio is. And yes I've stopped to help unprepared guys. Swings and roundabouts.
  24. I would also say second-hand - the jump in specs & lighter frame you get for the same cash outlay is worth all the gumtree/ hub searching. Only thing is, having twice recently bought good 2nd hand bikes with xt ish components for that price range (& being a lady of about the same height), it does take a bit of time & you need to be ready to pounce if something show up. Small frames with good specs don't come up all that often.
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