ITT: A bunch of dudes who found the "Documentary" section on Netflix Watch Instantly and are now orthomolecular gurus (yeah, I saw Food Matters too).

ITT: A bunch of dudes who found the "Documentary" section on Netflix Watch Instantly and are now orthomolecular gurus (yeah, I saw Food Matters too).
Actually seems to be the exact opposite in here. Just for the record I'm referencing my 20+ years of research/learning and 3 years of vegetarian body building, plus having a relatively large network of friends/family who are vegetarian + vegan athletes/body builders some of which were born and raised that way.
And ultimately, I don't care at all who eats what, doesn't affect me at all--but facts are facts and need to be properly represented IMO.
Eric--
How'd you find bulking as a vegetarian? I'm rehabbing a shoulder injury and have dropped almost 40lbs since I stopped being able to lift. Getting back slowly, but I've been giving thought to trying a vegetarian diet for a month.
At the time I was dirty bulking basically, eating anything I could. Mostly because I had to but if I were to get back into shape again, and I plan on it, I'll be going way cleaner for cardiovascular reasons. It'll be harder to do but it's worth it IMO.
For vegetarians there are still a lot of calorie dense, high protein options though, slightly more difficult for vegans. I'd definitely recommend going vegetarian and body building though, it's good shit. :thumbsup:
You don't need animal protein at all, thought this was common knowledge actually. Animal protein is what kills people basically. Is this really the first time you've heard this?
After reading this thread I really feel like buying a juicer but I'm not sure which one I should take.
Seems like Breville is pretty solid! Anything better in this price range? ($200-$400)
Just juiced a bunch of random things, cucumber, carrots, tangerine, celery, onion, greens.
Onion = so much after taste haha
Anyone else just gulping it down and not trying to drink or sip?
Yeah no way I'm making the vegan leap, at least not yet. Dating 2 vegan chicks at the moment who I'm sure would help me with a diet plan though, and I'm sure they'd be happy to have me stop picking on them about not eating animals. Noticed in the last year that my body reacts VERY very poorly to beef protein and I rarely cook fish at home so the only real sacrifice would be giving up chicken. I think I can live with the change in diet, but I'm 6'5 so I need to pack on a LOT of weight for it to show. Haven't seen many HUGE dudes at the gym walking around pounding shakers of almond milk and tempeh.
After reading this thread I really feel like buying a juicer but I'm not sure which one I should take.
Seems like Breville is pretty solid! Anything better in this price range? ($200-$400)
Probably should start with a cheap juicer for starters, just my opinion though. You can grab a cheap juicer for like $30.
Little late to the juicer bandwagon, but better late than dead, aye?
Got my juicer a little over a week ago and have been using it everyday and loving it. Got the whole family doing most of it. (The 3 year old is always a foo(d) fighter) Right now we're all just supplementing, not fasting or raw food dieting. That may change at some point but I want to maintain a fun and relaxed attitude about the whole thing to ensure my family sticks with it.
Any one claiming they feel better or have more energy by using a juicer is merely feeling the placebo effect. You can get more vitamins and minerals that your body needs by taking a good multivitamin.