Everyone can gain 5 lbs overnight eating lots of carbs or lose 5 lbs overnight not eating carbs. It’s water weight from storing sugar as glycogen in your muscles/liver and has nothing to do with fat gain/loss. Weight fluctuations like this are normal. |
I agree. After reading this I actually did reflect on my eating. I will try to eat less and think less about food. I have thought of this before, but seeing it here in writing is a good reminder. |
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Wheat in any form.
Soda, alcohol, sugary drink and juice. No junk food or fast food or food from the bakery - chips, cookies, candies, cakes, icecream, burgers, pizza - all of that is a no-no. We eat out in lovely restaurants, we cook wonderful meals with organic meats, veggies, rice, other grains, butter- but no more eating crap. |
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I know I'm late but the lack of nutrition knowledge always astounds me. To the people who are fat and can't lose weight and are already eating OP's "healthy breakfast" you should know and so should she that oatmeal and banana likely has JUST as many carbs and sugar as a pastry. Oatmeal is high carb and bananas are one of the if not the highest fruits in carbs and sugar. Yes you get fiber and the oatmeal is a complex carb but those are really minimal differences. A banana and oatmeal is sadly going to be nearly the same in sugar and carbs as a muffin. No joke.
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This is another example of how DCUM dieters know nothing about how nutrition works. PP is correct - carbs make you hold water because of the glycogen. This isn't true weight in terms of fat loss or gain. |
When you cut out carbs, you see the short term results of not being bloated from water retention. Dropping 5 pounds of water bloat does look and feel better in my opinion. If you continue to cut carbs your body will be forced to tap its own energy reserves (burn fat) instead of relying on the quick blood sugar highs of simple carbs. You will lose "real" weight. I've done it. Eating a western omelet for breakfast instead of pastries or sugary cereals will leave you feeling full longer. When you do get hungry, it won't be the shaky hunger caused by blood sugar lows where you need something, anything NOW. You will wind up making better food choices in general when you go low carb. |
You do not seem to understand the very real physical symptoms caused by insulin resistance. When the poster says that she is "starving" after eating a sugary meal she means that her body is reacting to wild blood sugar swings caused by too much sugar in her diet. Remove that sugar and suddenly those terrible blood sugar swings go away. |
Mmkay, you are starving and will probably die if you don't have your granola bar at 10:30. Have at it, lady. How's that working for ya? |
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Was just about to write that this sounds miserable. I stopped having 2 dinners. I used to eat something quick when I get home from work and then again munch on something after kids go to bed. I do now one or the other, not both. If I still want to munch, I choose salad / fruits / popcorn. They seem to be more forgiving. I gave up adding sugar to my morning coffee. |
| I was barely eating added sugar during the day, but I often would have oatmeal with a bit of maple syrup or a homemade veggie packed muffin for breakfast. Taking all and I mean ALL added sugar out of my diet and sticking to eggs and veggies for breakfast has been a game changer for me. |
Try eggs with meat and veggies leftover from dinner. I was baffled because I wanted to eat ALL the Things all day long ansnthought my breakfast of steel cut oats with nuts and berries was super healthy. I usually added in a bit of honey or maple syrup. I learned that if I eat carbs for breakfast, they can’t have added sugar and I need to save my fruit for a mid morning snack. When I have eggs, I have better willpower and less hunger all day long. |
Wait, even steel cut oatmeal is bad for you? I make my kids McCann's Irish steel cut oatmeal at least 3-4 days a week. No sugar added, just fresh fruit and organic milk. That's not good? |
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For me, I have to take an honest look at what I'm eating. I weigh myself most days and if the number is swinging high I know I need to cut portions at my 3 daily meals. I agree with NO snacking. I think that whole "eat 5 small meals a day" advice they used to give was really bad advice.
And then know your trigger foods. I know if I end my lunch with a yogurt, I won't reach for the chocolate. But if I end with something salty (cheese and crackers) then I will. Also, don't have the food you can't resist (potato chips for me) in the house. Over the years I've cut out chips, ice cream, and most alcohol. And I've cut way down on bread and sandwiches in favor of salad. |
| In the last few weeks I quit eating dairy (was told I don't process it well), meat, and breakfast, decreased portions, and nominally increased my movement to about 10000 steps a day. I've lost five pounds. |