Very new to all this only diagnosed one week ago, trying to manage with diet and no Metformin. If I do IF for one or two days a week and take Nuzest then go LCHF is this ok? Thanks
Since you are very new to this, I would strongly advise you to take things steadily. Introduce changes one at a time, and make sure that your new way of life is sustainable. There is no single prescription of diet, exercise and/or medication that works for us all.
I take my hat off to Kevin for his achievements, but no way in hell would I choose to do what he has done. I do much better with one at a time changes, and settling into new lifestyle activities. It allows me to thoroughly assess each change to see if it is beneficial, and it lets me transition in a sustainable way. Then I can keep the ones that work and discard the things that don't. This means my life remains pleasantly recognisable.
If I had tried what Kevin did, it would have been too much, too soon. I might have overcome the first hurdle or three, but sooner or later I would have stumbled, fallen, and probably thrown the baby out with the bathwater. lol. It takes a particular kind of commitment and personality to do such rapid change - and I am definitely not that kind of person.
Everyone reading this probably knows exactly how many life changing diet and exercise commitments they have started, sustained and maintained during their life. I have too many failed diets under my belt to fall for another strict regime. Your mileage may vary (and I envy you if it does)!
Also, from my reading and personal experience, it is MUCH easier to transition onto intermittent fasting after you have adjusted to low carbing. Your body is already half way into ketosis, the carb cravings are gone, your appetite will have shrunk, and you have adjusted to less food and fewer snacks. Plus, if you are one of the people who loses weight (if you want to) on LC, then the intermittent fasting often isn't necessary. The weight loss alone, however fast, or slow, will de fat your liver (if that is the cause of your type 2). And if a fatty liver is NOT the cause of your T2, then no amount of fasting or weight loss will cause a reversal. Why would anyone go to the extremes of Intermittent Fasting if they are losing weight at a healthy rate, and feeling better already?
Regarding the Nuzest, it is a dietary supplement. Nothing more, nothing less. There are other brands. Probably worth you reading around and deciding on the best one for you, your requirements and your lifestyle.
Sorry @KevinPotts this post is not in any way intended to criticise you, or belittle your achievements. I am just aware that there has been a recent almost Born Again frenzy on the forum for extreme dieting and extended fasting. These are short sprints races, often unsustainable in the long run. Type 2 diabetes is a marathon, not a sprint, so raising expectations too high is a dispiriting thing for the majority if the sprint doesn't reverse their condition (I believe the latest statistics on the Newcastle Diet put the reversal rate at 6 months in the region of 43%. That is a 57% disappointment rate).
I guess I would rather be a rock steady tortoise than a hare - but then I have been dealing with glucose intolerance issues for over 40 years now, so my marathon is quite a long one and I have made plenty of failed attempts at sprinting on the way.
Very new to all this only diagnosed one week ago, trying to manage with diet and no Metformin. If I do IF for one or two days a week and take Nuzest then go LCHF is this ok? Thanks
Thanks Kev
How are you doing now? Still basking in your success and testing different foods? Are you finding you stay nicely in range, or are you finding spikes at all? (I spike worse with grains that root veg, and I always wonder if there are food intolerances involved...)
I'm finding this second three months tricky to be honest.
Quite a lot of spiking, but at least I'm finding what I can and cannot tolerate, so once I'm back into my strict regime, but with a broader range of foods, I'll be fine
You've certainly taken a quite extreme approach Kevin, and for a million and one reasons, the extended fasting wouldn't be for me.
Like you, I made a fairly significant impact on my diabetes, in short order; going from 88 to 37 in 4 months. It was only four months because I'd been out of the UK from 3 weeks post-diagnosis, so I wasn't around at the 3 month point.
For me, I just trimmed back my carbs, focusing on reducing my blood numbers. I didn't pay any heed to my weight, aside from the fact it was clear I was losing weight when my shorts were getting loose and some things plain old didn't fit any more.
From my first HbA1c, I just stuck with my diet. I certainly didn't cut back any more, but my HbA1c dropped a bit more, as did my weight. My HbA1cs have been pretty stable thereafter, with a 2 point notch from 31-33 when I have a protracted period of medical investigations, then surgery. Hopefully it'll remain stable for time to come.
Adopting the approach I did, I haven't had any cravings (well, aside from the very odd time I could breathe in a baguette; especially when at the counter of a proper French boulangerie, in Tropical Frogland). My greatest challenge was halting weight loss. How have you found that aspect?
I've ended up extremely fit, well and very slight indeed and I seem to have sort of meandered to that point. I've never taken any meds or supplements.
This thread, and the recent exchanged just illustrate yet again how there are many ways of skinning this cat, for those lucky enough to have bodies able to repair themselves along the way.
Probably just flagged yourself up on every Government computer between Cheltenham and Washington D.C.....will and determination and if you are not temperamentally disposed to my level of radical.......
Probably just flagged yourself up on every Government computer between Cheltenham and Washington D.C.
Just sayin'.....
Nuzest "green-gunk" looks interesting. A bit of research shows it is cheaper to buy on Amazon than direct from the website.
Will give it a try.
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