That is interesting. I have put back some of the carb in my diet (you have been following that thread) and have left my fat intake (mainly from nuts as mono-unsaturated) alone. This seems to have worked for me and I am not craving more carbs when I do it them. I am also at the point that with exercise I am losing one pound a week so that is a deficit of about 4k calories per week. My carb intake is generally a mix of low GI and Medium GI with a few High GI of which I know when I am having them and can think about any impact they may have and counter them with 10 mins of exercise if needed.
I do not think I will ever get back to the carb levels I used to eat - just do not have the spare calories so I am not craving them at all and do not find it difficult to turn down cakes, sweets, etc, nowadays. May be I was in that spiral in that I was craving them because I couldn't process the glucose.
If the carbs aren't working for you I think the decision is made, stay away from them. By the way how are you with berries and apples? I find these really work for me.
Sorry a little unstructured
Thanks Andrew
I never really have had a sweet tooth, so don't have sugar cravings I sometimes notice other people have. Prior to, and in the early years of being diabetic I followed the advice of medical practitioners of wholemeal bread, pasta, brown rice etc to make up a third to half of food intake. I am somewhat annoyed at my gullibility at that, but what is in the past cannot be changed. As all of my recent blood tests, including cholesterol, blood glucose etc have been normal range and I have stopped metformin, I don't want to do anything to tip that balance. My need for weight loss is not vanity. When you have been as big as I have been, even though still big the transformation feels good.
I think I need to do some more reading and consider carefully what to do next re diet. I can happily do without the bread, pasta, rice spuds etc. Maybe time for me to forget Newcastle method now as the objective of returning to non-diabetic blood glucose has been maintained. Also I prefer natural fresh foods, and by necessity the meal replacement items would probably be full of additives. So, thinking of introducing real food gradually, then sticking with low carb, Mediterranean type diet. Berries and apples sound good, especially if I can add yogurt and seeds. Love almonds and walnuts, but they could be my downfall, as I could quite easily pig out on them.
To anyone else considering Newcastle diet though, I would say if you are committed to giving yourself two months of your time to concentrate on the possibility of improving your chance of reversing T2 diabetes it has to be worth a try. I am glad I did three years ago, and would certainly do so again if I needed to. I just think that it probably is not what I need right now, due to my objective this time to being weight loss rather than the necessity to get blood glucose control.
I appreciate the support and encouragement here.
Thanks
Pipp