lcarter
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 513
- Location
- Nottingham
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- My pancreas
All excellent advice. Calories and portions still matter a lot. Get the scale. Do t over eat protein or carbs and eat just enough fat to SATISFY. Dairy can cause weight gain for some of us. As well as insulin resistance. I really minimize mine. I also need to stay under 20 c per day to stay in ketosis.Its a bit of a myth that you can eat as much as you like on a low carb high fat diet. The reason you can do this is because on average people are satiated quickly on a high fat diet and therefore eat LESS total calories than they would on a low fat diet.
The basic laws still apply - i.e. eat too much and you put on weight.
Most people of an LCHF diet actually eat less fat on that diet than they did in their pre-dieting low fat high carb. diets just that the fats are more easily identifiable rather than being hidden in other processed foods.
It sounds like you need to find way to break the cycle of being used to eating too much - I know for me finding a good portion size was/is really difficult.
You may also find you are making your protein portion sizes too big as well - 3-4 oz of meat is quite sufficient (i/e 100 grams) this is not much at all - a singles 10oz restaurant steak ( which is quite small) is enough for two and a half meals) .
Oftentimes the amount of food required is less than half, sometimes a third of what I was eating before. I took to making my new meals as normal, then halving them, leaving that second half in the fridge, most times if I really listened to what my stomach was telling me then I realised I could eat that second half tomorrow. There are actually quite a few diets around which suggest that lunch the next day can be the leftovers from dinner the previous day. Couple that with skipping breakfast and you should find that you can start to cope with reduced portion sizes and the idea of fasting becomes a little less worrisome .
Overall you should be aiming to eat 1g of protein per kg of lean body weight - which for a woman is often not that much. Maybe you should think about weighing a measuring stuff for a little while until you get the hang of the right sizings ? it may be that because excess proteins still convert into sugar, if you are eating too much protein , then this is itself is preventing ketosis kicking in and as such you are not getting the benefits of nutritional ketosis ( which you should be at 30g carbs and trying to lose weight.
The ketosis would remove the hunger pangs and thus allow you to run a calorie deficit as you will still need to do to lose weight. Good luck in finding an answer for you.
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