- Messages
- 14,295
- Type of diabetes
- I reversed my Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
Thank you Lamont it is great to hear that you are now living a normal life, i am pleased. I hope one day i can also get my life back with my new diet and trying new supplements. It is encouraging to hear that you are doing so well, so this has lifted my spirits that i can become like you.
I am also adding a B complex vitamin to my diet and already i am feeling my energy levels improving. Does anyone kindly know a good complex mineral formula that might include chromium, L glutamine, zinc, selenium, magnesium and any other helpful minerals. I could buy these minerals separate but i wondered if anyone knows a good mineral formula please.
My new diet is also helping i am limiting bread and many other substances that are full of carbohydrates. However some days i am craving sugar very badly and i felt bad last week as i had a sugary snack and felt awful after eating it. Does anyone know how i can resist these sugar cravings and do you feel one sugar snack a week is okay or can i never go back to eating sugar again? For instance if it was my birthday, do you think as a one off a cake would be okay or should i try and limit these type of snacks forever.
Hi Paul - I'm not an RH'er, but I am someone who has worked through the reduction/elimination phase of my diet.
Your current carb cravings are pretty common in this phase. Our bodies like to work to a routine, and if that routine includes a chunk higher carbs than you are now, your body sometimes will send you signals asking "where are my carbs?".
In terms of getting over these cravings and hopefully reducing or removing them from your life, it's usually fairly important to stick with your diet, rather than take a carb hit. The carb hits can trigger some of the RH symptoms, if you cross your personal thresholds, but can also refresh your body's desire for more carbs.
Once you have been lower carbing for a while, your taste buds will alter, and you may actually find that some savoury things taste very sweet.
One thing some people find is that if they've been eating a particular way for a while, if they revert to earlier eating patterns their sensitivities increase, bringing more extreme reactions than in the "old days", which could for you mean a more acute RH episode.
Please do ensure you understand I said could experience that, not that you would experience it. The frustration of almost any of these metabolic disorders is that they are so highly personal. You have to track yourself, by recording food, bloods and symptoms to make a fair assessment, then judge how lucky you feel, when approaching the cake.