GraceK said:Love the rant warning!! :lol:
And I love this forum too. There's so much useful information that people are willing to share, I feel better already.
As far as the carbs go and NHS advice - I'm with you on that one and I'm doing my own thing regarding what I eat, what makes me feel good, what doesn't and I've just had half a bar of ASDA's own make chocolate! I'll test my BG in a couple of hours and see what it's done to me. I ate chocolate two nights ago and my morning fasting reading was the lowest it's ever been so far, yet the night I had porridge for supper it was sky high next morning - so work that one out. :roll:
GraceK said:If you're eating ordinary milk chocolate then I'd test a lot sooner than two hours (say 30 mins). It is likely to be very fast acting in its effects and you could be missing a very large spike
lucylocket61 said:So HOW can it be the carbs which are necessary for energy?? Isnt it flippin' obvious that the carbs were the problem?????
I am not an expert, but even I can see that stuffing myself with carb is doing the opposite. Why can the HCP's see that??
Your Body Prefers Burning Fat Over Carbohydrates
We’ve evolved* to be fat-burners (must be why we’re so adept at storing it on our bodies!). It’s easy to see why. Fat burns slow and evenly, providing all-day steady energy levels. Carbohydrates burn quickly, and they’re gone in an instant, leaving you groggy and depleted unless you “carb up.” Furthermore, carbohydrates are an inherently unreliable and fleeting source of energy for our body, with most people only able to store about 400-500 grams of carbohydrates on the body at any one time. Our storage capacity for fat, on the other hand, is virtually endless. Just ten or fifteen pounds of body fat, which is the bare minimum available on even the leanest individuals, can provide tens of thousands of calories. Luckily, reducing carbohydrates and increasing fat intake sends the epigenetic signals necessary to help us revert back to fat-burning, and it only takes a week or two to get things moving in the right direction.
Become fat-adapted, enjoy boundless energy. Free yourself from the shackles of a carbohydrate-based metabolism/dependency.
Read more: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/the-prim ... z26KvDJtiF
It is obvious that your body isn't "designed" to get most of its fuel from carbohydrates, because, unless you are some sort of elite athlete, it can't eaily process more than about 160g a day
Sid Bonkers said:GraceK said:If you're eating ordinary milk chocolate then I'd test a lot sooner than two hours (say 30 mins). It is likely to be very fast acting in its effects and you could be missing a very large spike
Thats not actually correct GraceK, chocolate is very, very high in fat and fat slows down digestion which means that far from any spike being sooner it would actually come later.
Also it is the 2 hour postprandial level that is most important as everyone even non diabetics will show a spike before their levels drop, what is important is that our levels are returning to near normal at he two hour stage or longer if eating a very fatty meal. ie. the pizza effect.
GraceK said:Sid that quote above didn't come from me, it's someone elses answer to one of my posts. Don't know how it got attached to my name. :?: But yes I think you're right.
lucylocket61 said:Rant warning:
[long part of rant elided]
I only lost 2kg in 5 monthsThey said I wasnt trying enough and I must have been cheating. Eat more carbs and cut out as much fat as I could.
3 months ago I was diagnosed as Type 2 diabetic. And I found you lot and this forum. I have reduced my carbs significantly and lost 10kg in 12 weeks. I have loads of energy and only need 7 hours sleep a night.
So HOW can it be the carbs which are necessary for energy?? Isnt it flippin' obvious that the carbs were the problem?????
I am not an expert, but even I can see that stuffing myself with carb is doing the opposite. Why can the HCP's see that??
Comment from DSN on my sudden weight loss? "See, I told you you could lose weight if you tried hard enough"
I dare not put down what my reaction and thoughts about that comment are :twisted: I smiled, and fled. Good job the weight loss nurse is on my side with low-carbing. But we have to keep it secret or she could be in trouble for no toeing the NHS line.
Thank you for reading - Rant over.
phoenix said:Lucy', I was only reading this earlier. I found it an interesting concept.(though at the moment that's just it interesting, not convincing)
Dieting by DNA? Popular diets work best by genotype.
http://www.theheart.org/article/1053429.do
phoenix said:It is obvious that your body isn't "designed" to get most of its fuel from carbohydrates, because, unless you are some sort of elite athlete, it can't eaily process more than about 160g a day
citation please
Jaminet said:Glycogen makes up 1-2% of the mass of muscle or about 300-500g. The liver has another 70-100g of glycogen which is used to manage blood glucose.
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