That was my plan. Plus, your sig looks good in here.damn we got the whole california crew in here dropping health knowledge. boom.
Gonna have to disagree with you there bud. Pasta is pretty much all carbs. Eating a pasta for dinner is going to load you with carb (a ton of energy) right before you go to sleep and will make you fat. Eggs on the other hand are mostly protein and fat, but fat isn't as bad for you as carbs are, believe it or not. On the whole eggs are relatively high protein and low calorie (I just looked at my egg carton: 1 egg is 70 calories.. so a big 3 egg omelet will only have 210 calories from eggs). Cheese isn't part of the paleo diet as far as I know. I make my omelets with some chopped veggies (onions, spinach, pepperS) and maybe a chicken sausage, which is all good for you. Oil can be good if it's coconut oil or something else fancy that paleo diet uses.
Eating a "healthy" pasta would be the same as eating 5 slices of bread before going to bed.
Evidence that all oils are bad for you- period.
I was eating a ton of red meat and egg whites along with low carbs, and voila, minor coronary disease started creeping in (and I'm an endurance cyclist and avid cardio freak), so along with a visit to the doc, I started to do my due diligence on cholesterol and diet.
One thing is hard to argue: The one country or region with virtually zero heart disease is a region of China which in essence abstains from meat, all dairy and wheat based foods. Essentially, a plant based diet.
Bears taking a look at it people.. Boring, yes. Healthy? Hell yes.
If you're referring to China and the book the China Study, a 24 year old rips that books to shreds here:
The China Study « Raw Food SOS: Troubleshooting on the Raw Food Diet
One interesting thing to note was that Campbell excluded one county that consumed 45% of their food from animals, and they had one of the lowest incidences of heart disease, lower than many of the more vegan counties he studied.
Also, Dr. Cordain ( a prominent paleolithic diet promoter ) debated Campbell (author of China Study ) and IMO, absolutely crushed him. Cordain used over 150 references to peer-reviewed scientific papers in his arguement and rebuttals to Dr. Cambell's book, and Dr. Cambell used...zero. His arguement is something like "From my philosophy of nutrition -> this follows" which is essentially like a religious person saying that "faith is different"
Not disagreeing with you here: plants are important. But eating no meat whatsoever has been proven time and time again to be a generally terrible way to provide your body with appropriate nutrition.
Evidence that all oils are bad for you- period.
I was eating a ton of red meat and egg whites along with low carbs, and voila, minor coronary disease started creeping in (and I'm an endurance cyclist and avid cardio freak), so along with a visit to the doc, I started to do my due diligence on cholesterol and diet.
One thing is hard to argue: The one country or region with virtually zero heart disease is a region of China which in essence abstains from meat, all dairy and wheat based foods. Essentially, a plant based diet.
Bears taking a look at it people.. Boring, yes. Healthy? Hell yes.
These small LDL cholesterols get stuck in the arteries as a response to inflammation - its job is to repair and mitigate inflammation in the tissues. The reason inflammation happens in the tissues is caused by carbohydrates. Sugars and processed carbs are the biggest problems. LDL rises not because of increased cholesterol intake, but with the levels of inflammation in your body caused by these carbohydrates. Remove the cause for inflammation, you remove the need for cholesterol to DO its job so often and therefore there are less chances for it to actually build plaque in your arteries.
G1C9 knows what the fuck is up. I'd be willing to bet that something like 7/10 in our country (fuck, If 72 million people are obese) people have leaky gut and something like 3/10 have at least one parasite (most likely being H. Pylori).
Elimination diet is most DEFINITELY the way to go if you want to be as exact as possible. When I started working on this stuff back in January I found out (due to a permeable gut/low mucosal barrier function, aka leaky gut) I had 28 food intolerances. Something interesting is that mucosal barrier function also ties into allergies like pollen, dogs, cats, etc.
I could write a whole fuckin' book on all of the shit that was wrong with me that I have since fixed, but the point of the story is:
I stopped eating gluten, processed foods, dairy, and not only do I feel, think, sleep, and look better (in every sense of the word), I also no longer am allergic to cats.
The amount of problems that your average american has due to eating SAD (the standard, piece of FUCKING GARBAGE that is told to us is "healthy"), and honestly, most big diseases/health issues can be fixed just by fucking fixing the foods you eat. It really is not that hard -- there's a lot of good information out there. I think the best place to start would be Marks Daily Apple.
It's funny, I'm sure a lot of people thought they were bad when they were getting away with shady shit with rebills...that kind of stuff is nothing compared to the government-backed fraudulent bullshit that our food industry feeds us every day. To call it "mind-blowing" is a massive understatement. To call it a massive understatement is a massive understatement.
For me, I stopped eating grains for 30 days to see what was up - because I didn't feel like grains were causing me any issues. When I tried to eat them again on day 35 or so, I would get headaches, my stomach would be insanely bloated, and I would feel like shit for the rest of the day - symptoms that I didn't have before. My theory on why this happened is that I had fucked up my system so bad that I couldn't really feel the damage it was doing. When I took it out and my system had time to actually repair, when I reintroduced it it was like "what the FUCK is this shit" and went haywire.
These experiments are interesting but are you 100% sure that your conclusions are accurate?
[FACT] You eliminated grains for 30 days.
[FACT] You started eating grans again on day 35.
[FACT] You didn't feel good after eating grains.
[YOUR CONCLUSION] Grains are bad for you.
To explain why your conclusion might be (I'm not saying it is) inaccurate, I'll refer to cardio for a moment. In my opinion, cardio is great (for example, 30 minutes of moderate cardio per day) for you but excessive cardio (a marathon, for example) isn't.
Do you agree that for most people, 30 minutes of moderate cardio per day = healthy?
I'm pretty sure most of you guys agree, so I'll try to illustrate why your "good or bad for me?" algorithm might be flawed.
Let's assume that 30 minutes of moderate cardio used to be a daily habit. And let's assume that, just like you did with grains, you try to eliminate the 30 minutes of moderate cardio from your daily routine for x days/months. After x days/months, you start jogging again for 30 minutes and obviously don't feel great afterward (something that tends to happen if you eliminate cardio from your daily routine and start over after x days/months).
[FACT] 30 minutes of moderate cardio used to be a daily habit.
[FACT] You eliminated the 30 minutes of moderate cardio from your daily routine for x days/months.
[FACT] After x days/months, you started jogging again and didn't feel good afterward.
[YOUR CONCLUSION] 30 minutes of moderate cardio per day = bad for you
Do you agree that the "30 minutes of moderate cardio per day = bad for you" conclusion is inaccurate?
My conclusion that grains are bad for "you" (if you mean "you" as in everyone), was drawn not just from my own personal experience, but through a lot of research, talking to experts, books, seeing other people's experience, etc.