Aug 03
3 ha ha ha!!! 3 pounds down! Posted by misspick

3 more pounds lost!  Am I grateful?  Yes I am.  I really focused on keeping my eating habits under control.  I have opted also to not follow Atkins.  I have a couple of reasons for this.

  1. Food is expensive!
  2. Meat is really expensive!
  3. I like fruit and yogurt and pasta.
  4. If I have the discipline required to stick to Atkins, with a little more work, I can develop the discipline required to stick to any other diet.

 
I am opting instead for a focus on food combining without such a strong tie to carb watching.  I first learned about food combing by reading the book, Fit for Life by Harvey Diamond.  That book is pretty old and I’m not even sure it’s still in print, but if you can get a copy, do.  I know that even if it isn’t in the stores, they can order you one.  Also, make sure you get the first book, not the second one.  Frankly, while I enjoyed the second book as well and found it useful, the medical community came down on him like a ton of bricks after the first book (though in modern times, the eating practices he talks about in the book are accepted) and he spends a lot of energy in the second book defending himself and I could have done without that though I understand.

That’s right THREE!:o)

Jul 28
Water Consumption Posted by misspick

Things are not going well.  I didn’t lose any weight this week.  So how do I turn this thing around now?  Water consumption.

Water consumption is very important for the Atkin’s diet. Many people are doing everything else right, but stall simply because they didn’t drink enough water! It’s such a simple and necessary thing.  Not only will consuming appropriate amounts of water keep you on track with Atkins or your low carb diet plan, it has many other benefits!

· Water clears up your skin by flushing toxins out of it.
· It’s the liquid that allows you to keep that work out going.
· It’s necessary to keep your digestive system functioning properly.
· Every system in your body depends on water. It keeps you alive.
· Water flushes toxins out of vital organs.
· Water carries nutrients to your cells.
· Water provides a moist environment for ear, nose and throat tissues.

It’s also important to calculate how much water you need. Over the years, I have seen many different methods for calculating this amount. Most people say that you should drink 64 ounces of water a day. That’s a great starting pointing, but as with most things involving the human body, it’s a little more complicated than that. According to the Mayo Clinic, there are multiple approaches and multiple factors that influence water needs. The factors that influence water needs are exercise, environment, health conditions or pregnancy. Read more about the factors and influences at the Mayo Clinic Website.

It’s also important to note that the water you drink is not the only water you consume. Most vegetables and fruits also have water in them. It is estimated that the average person consumes approximately 20% of their water from food. For people on low carbohydrate diets, that number may be closer to 10% because we eat less fruit. Keep that water consumption up!

How do you work all that water consumption into your daily life?
· Carry a water bottle with you at all times.
· Drink 16 oz’s of water with every meal (3 meals is 48oz’s)
· Keep a container of water with you at work at home to sip whenever you feel the urge.
· Drink 16 oz’s of water right before your workout.
· Drink 16 oz’s of water first thing in the morning with your vitamin. It will aid in digestion.

Personally, I carry a 22-oz bottle with me everywhere I go. I just have to fill it up 3 times to get my minimum requirement of 64 ounces in.  This bottle it is really the perfect one for me. I carry a big pocketbook and it fits right in there!  I always have water on hand. I fill it up at the office water cooler and it also has a freezer gel pack to keep water cold. I personally don’t use the gel pack. I’m comfortable drinking water at room temperature.

Another option is to buy bottled water. Buy the 20oz or above bottle. Don’t mess with the 16-oz bottles unless you think you’ll get through 4 in a day. Psychologically, my 22-oz bottle works for me because I tend to drink 22 oz’s in the morning before I leave for work.  Between breakfast and my morning workout, I drink another  22-oz.  That just leaves another 22-oz to get through during my workday.  If I get home and find that I haven’t met my quota, I can sip a third serving of 22 oz’s for the rest of the night. I actually drink more than 64 ounces of water in a day, but that’s my minimum. Having the appropriate container makes all the difference in the world. If I was drinking out of a 12 oz container for example, I’d have to fill it up 6 times to get my 64 oz’s in! I’m busy during the day. I don’t have time to run back and forth to the Poland Springs Water dispenser. I tend to drink Brita Filtered Water at home and Poland Spring water at work. So a 22-oz container works perfectly for me. You may find that you want to go higher than 22-oz.

Keep That Water Consumption Up and Happy Healthy Eating!

Jul 21
3 Pounds Down! Posted by misspick

I’ll take it!  I had a bad week the week before and actually gained weight.  After I had ordered the Lasagna from my local favorite Italian restaurant and eaten that plus a Gyro, I realized that the reason I gained weight the week before was because I had consumed several items that are supposedly allowed on the diet but are actually weight loss stallers.

I lost 3 pounds! Let’s celebrate!

The item that is most likely to fool you is sugar alcohol.  According to Atkins, Sugar Alcohol grams are to be deducted from Carbs in the same way that Fiber is to be deducted from Carbs.  IT DOESN’T WORK!  If you do this, you will have a week like the one I had last week.  I consumed massive quantities of Sugar Free Jell O as well as a bag of Russell Stovers Sugar Free Toffee.   I also had some Atkin’s breakfast bars which were not suitable for induction.  This is why I gained last week.  So anyway, after I finished my lasagna and my Gyro, (I didn’t go crazy with it, I ate reasonable portions), I knew what I had to do!  Back to Atkins I happily went.

I know this diet is the right one for me and even if it get’s hard sometimes, I’m going to stick to this and contrary to popular opinion, it’s a great way to eat.  Right now, I’m on induction.  I either drink an Atkin’s shake or eat eggs and some kind of meat every morning and for lunch I have a glorious salad and for dinner I have a meat and a vegetable.  This diet is so filling that I actually don’t snack that much.  However, if I must, I can have Macadamia nuts or another Atkin’s shake.  By the way, the Atkin’s shakes are really healthy!  I feel so energized and healthy and so great about the progress I’m making.  I feel like I’m developing great eating habits that are going to last for the rest of my life and I’m so happy and enthusiastic about that.

By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical WriterWed Jul 16, 7:34 PM ET

The Atkins diet may have proved itself after all: A low-carb diet and a Mediterranean-style regimen helped people lose more weight than a traditional low-fat diet in one of the longest and largest studies to compare the dueling weight-loss techniques.

A bigger surprise: The low-carb diet improved cholesterol more than the other two. Some critics had predicted the opposite.

“It is a vindication,” said Abby Bloch of the Dr. Robert C. and Veronica Atkins Foundation, a philanthropy group that honors the Atkins’ diet’s creator and was the study’s main funder.

However, all three approaches — the low-carb diet, a low-fat diet and a so-called Mediterranean diet — achieved weight loss and improved cholesterol.

The study is remarkable not only because it lasted two years, much longer than most, but also because of the huge proportion of people who stuck with the diets — 85 percent.

Researchers approached the Atkins Foundation with the idea for the study. But the foundation played no role in the study’s design or reporting of the results, said the lead author, Iris Shai of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

Other experts said the study — being published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine — was highly credible.

“This is a very good group of researchers,” said Kelly Brownell, director of Yale University’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity.

The research was done in a controlled environment — an isolated nuclear research facility in Israel. The 322 participants got their main meal of the day, lunch, at a central cafeteria.

“The workers can’t easily just go out to lunch at a nearby Subway or McDonald’s,” said Dr. Meir Stampfer, the study’s senior author and a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health.

In the cafeteria, the appropriate foods for each diet were identified with colored dots, using red for low-fat, green for Mediterranean and blue for low-carb.

As for breakfast and dinner, the dieters were counseled on how to stick to their eating plans and were asked to fill out questionnaires on what they ate, Stampfer said.

The low-fat diet — no more than 30 percent of calories from fat — restricted calories and cholesterol and focused on low-fat grains, vegetables and fruits as options. The Mediterranean diet had similar calorie, fat and cholesterol restrictions, emphasizing poultry, fish, olive oil and nuts.

The low-carb diet set limits for carbohydrates, but none for calories or fat. It urged dieters to choose vegetarian sources of fat and protein.

“So not a lot of butter and eggs and cream,” said Madelyn Fernstrom, a University of Pittsburgh Medical Center weight management expert who reviewed the study but was not involved in it.

Most of the participants were men; all men and women in the study got roughly equal amounts of exercise, the study’s authors said.

Average weight loss for those in the low-carb group was 10.3 pounds after two years. Those in the Mediterranean diet lost 10 pounds, and those on the low-fat regimen dropped 6.5.

More surprising were the measures of cholesterol. Critics have long acknowledged that an Atkins-style diet could help people lose weight but feared that over the long term, it may drive up cholesterol because it allows more fat.

But the low-carb approach seemed to trigger the most improvement in several cholesterol measures, including the ratio of total cholesterol to HDL, the “good” cholesterol. For example, someone with total cholesterol of 200 and an HDL of 50 would have a ratio of 4 to 1. The optimum ratio is 3.5 to 1, according to the American Heart Association.

Doctors see that ratio as a sign of a patient’s risk for hardening of the arteries. “You want that low,” Stampfer said.

The ratio declined by 20 percent in people on the low-carb diet, compared to 16 percent in those on the Mediterranean and 12 percent in low-fat dieters.

The study is not the first to offer a favorable comparison of an Atkins-like diet. Research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association last year found overweight women on the Atkins plan had slightly better blood pressure and cholesterol readings than those on the low-carb Zone diet, the low-fat Ornish diet and a low-fat diet that followed U.S. government guidelines.

The heart association has long recommended low-fat diets to reduce heart risks, but some of its leaders have noted the Mediterranean diet has also proven safe and effective.

The heart association recommends a low-fat diet even more restrictive than the one in the study, said Dr. Robert Eckel, the association’s past president who is a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado-Denver.

It does not recommend the Atkins diet. However, a low-carb approach is consistent with heart association guidelines so long as there are limitations on the kinds of saturated fats often consumed by people on the Atkins diet, Eckel said.

The new study’s results favored the Atkins-like approach less when subgroups such as diabetics and women were examined.

Among the 36 diabetics, only those on the Mediterranean diet lowered blood sugar levels. Among the 45 women, those on the Mediterranean diet lost the most weight.

“I think these data suggest that men may be much more responsive to a diet in which there are clear limits on what foods can be consumed,” such as an Atkins-like diet, said Dr. William Dietz, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It suggests that because women have had more experience dieting or losing weight, they’re more capable of implementing a more complicated diet,” said Dietz, who heads CDC’s nutrition unit.

___

On the Net:

New England Journal: http://nejm.org

Source:  http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080716/ap_on_he_me/med_dueling_diets;_ylt=Ah.WRr0HxF7A0HAfMLUtKfCs0NUE

Jul 13
Disappointment Posted by misspick

This week did not go so well.  I’m on my period and I didn’t work out and I stopped being regimented about what I was eating and when.  I actually think I ate too little and slowed my metabolism down.  I was way under 1000 calories most days.  Anyway, I gained 3 pounds.  The funny thing is, that’s what the scale said today.  Yesterday, I got on the scale and it said my weight was down 1 pound from last week.

Yesterday I ate the following:

1.  Atkins Cinnamon Breakfast bar (2 of those)

2.  Margaritaville Jerk Shrimp and Green Beans (2 servings of those)

3.  A bowl of Sugar Free Lime Jell-O

4.  Multiple Diet Sodas (maybe three)

5.  At least 28 oz of water

That’s it and the weight was up.  Bastardly bastards.  Pounds I mean.

I am rethinking the whole Atkins thing.  Would I be doing that if I hadn’t gained?  Probably not.  Maybe it’s too rigid for me.  I think I’m gonna do Fit for Life for a while.  I need a diet where I won’t gain 4 pounds if I do one thing wrong.  I have to reread that book.  Fit for Life is probably more in alignment with what society views as healthy anyway (although I must say that I believe the Atkins diet is healthy and so do the experts).  Then people can get off my back about healthy or not healthy.

Update:  I got on the scale a mere hour later and my weight showed a gain of 2 pounds instead of 4 pounds.  Whatever!

Jul 06
I’m feeling better than ever. Posted by misspick

I’ve done a lot of work on me and I feel back on track.  I feel capable of not being derailed.  I feel grounded.

I have adopted a new religion which while I probably know more about it than a novice, I certainly don’t know a lot about and I’m learning and reading every day.  I’m a Buddhist now.  I’ve never had a religion before.  I went to a Baptist Church as a child.  I’m really excited about the fellowship and the practices and the discipline.

After fumbling around a great deal and not being able to settle on a diet plan for months, I have landed back where I began, on Atkins.  This is because not only did Atkins help me lose weight, but it also energized me and regulated my rather extensive digestive issues.  I’m so happy I finally got it back together.

This week, I made SOME good choices and some choices I’d like to rethink in the coming week.  Did I lose weight?  Yes I Did!!!  I lost 8 pounds and I sang the Thank You song this morning!

Here's to you
Just for you
Here's to you
This song's for you

You're so special
There's no one else like you
Your style, your smile, your personality
Like a dream come true
You give me love like no other
So unselfishly

So I'm singing this song
Let the whole world know
Keep on doing what you do
What you do
*Repeat

Feels like I'm sitting on top of the world
Whenever you're around me
Pick me up when I'm down
Thak you boy, thank you boy

And when we touch
Can't get enough
The feeling's oh so right
Whatever ...your mind
What you do what you do

*Repeat with adlibs

**I wanna thank you baby
Thank thank you baby
Thank you thank you

**Repeat (x2)

Yeah yeah yeah
Just wanna let you know
So I'm singing this song
Let the whole world know
Keep on doing what you do
What you do

::::::::::::::::::::

That's right honey, "here's to me!".

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