Anonymous wrote:Hi, Sylvia,
Thank you. I just found a website that describes this --
https://www.sharecare.com/health/exercise-weight-loss/how-long-start-see-changes
It can take 4-6 weeks to see the loss on a scale. Arg. It is frustrating but that makes sense since my clothes are fitting better and I am exercising.
I am eating about 2000 on my "keto" days but since I'm eating only
500 on my low-cal days and switched to 4:3, that should average at 1400. According to Fitbit, I burn 2000k per day. There should be some sort of weight loss.
When does the water weight fall?
-Lego
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can I ask a question about Paleo pancakes from Costco? Is that close enough to keto? I got this mix from Costco, Birch Blenders, can you actually eat 5 pancakes(no syrup) and still lose weight? Doesn't seem right to me. Thanks.
Just depends on how it fits into your day. 5 net carbs per 2 pancakes sounds good to me. May have to try it.
Anonymous wrote:Can I ask a question about Paleo pancakes from Costco? Is that close enough to keto? I got this mix from Costco, Birch Blenders, can you actually eat 5 pancakes(no syrup) and still lose weight? Doesn't seem right to me. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the fats are for safety. Ketosis is not harmful but a high protein diet can create ketoacidosis which is very harmful and can be life threatening. Its more likely to occur with ketones present and a high protein diet. If you can't carbs and you don't eat many fats then you are eating a high protein diet. If you limit both protein and carbs then you are left with fat.
I’m pretty sure this is incorrect, but if you have a cite, it would be helpful to confirm.
Anonymous wrote:I think the fats are for safety. Ketosis is not harmful but a high protein diet can create ketoacidosis which is very harmful and can be life threatening. Its more likely to occur with ketones present and a high protein diet. If you can't carbs and you don't eat many fats then you are eating a high protein diet. If you limit both protein and carbs then you are left with fat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll follow along. I’ve been doing lazy Keto since August 2018. Starting weight was 294, current weight is 227. The last few weeks I’ve had a few bad days and trying to get back on the horse.
A question I’ve been trying to get answered, maybe someone can help. Can you get into ketosis without the meeting fat requirements in my macros calculations?
I have the same question!
No. Ketosis is achieved through eliminating carbs. Meet your protein requirements, limit your carbs, add fat for satiety, but not needed.
Thanks! This is what i was hoping to hear.
Why?