Goodness graham - do u kep every post . I believe sarah works for the NHS and is analysing peoples diets as part of a web site - so sh!e is an employee
Graham - low carbing is dying in the general popualation and that is a fact - the GI diet has taken over. My crude figures from the GP surgeries are also showing that - people get fed up with it. A moderate carb approach works - I have the results with my own pts and you will not accept it .
There are also enough studies that show that a calorie restriction works. Google it ! Apart from you most low carbers eat a low calorie diet - BBC showed that and very crudely so do my food diaries.
You may be able to follow it but many cannot.
Do you keep all my posts by the way ?!
ally5555 said:Goodness graham - do u kep every post . I believe sarah works for the NHS and is analysing peoples diets as part of a web site - so she is an employee!
Graham - low carbing is dying in the general popualation and that is a fact - the GI diet has taken over. My crude figures from the GP surgeries are also showing that - people get fed up with it. A moderate carb approach works - I have the results with my own pts and you will not accept it .
There are also enough studies that show that a calorie restriction works. Google it ! Apart from you most low carbers eat a low calorie diet - BBC showed that and very crudely so do my food diaries.
You may be able to follow it but many cannot.
Do you keep all my posts by the way ?!
No one is right, no one is wrong, which ever diet that fulfils you nutritionally, improves control, but above all else, one that you can live happily with for the rest of your life.......... that is the one to follow!
IanD said:(repeat a lie often enough & it will be accepted as true)
noblehead said:No one is right, no one is wrong, which ever diet that fulfils you nutritionaly, improves control, but above all else, one that you can live happily with for the rest of your life.......... that is the one to follow!
Nigel
Dillinger said:noblehead said:No one is right, no one is wrong, which ever diet that fulfils you nutritionally, improves control, but above all else, one that you can live happily with for the rest of your life.......... that is the one to follow!
Nigel
This ‘we are all different, there is not right or wrong’ comes up a lot here. It seems to used really as an attempted argument ender, but without much merit as far as I can see. The reason being is that we are essentially all looking at how our glucose metabolism and insulin response works; either innate insulin or ‘added’ insulin in the case of all Type 1’s and some Type 2’s and Type 1.5’s. Now, this is not some subjective mystery affected by our star signs and the proximity of healing crystals. It is pure bio-chemistry. And bio-chemistry is not fluid and changeable in different people; the metabolism of glucose in me will be exactly the same as metabolism of glucose in you. There are variable factors of course; basal metabolic rate, energy expenditure, certain types of medication, and type of diet for instance but certain things must apply to us all.
I would therefore respectfully suggest that you can be on the ‘wrong’ diet and without running through all the arguments again logic rather than ‘common sense’ suggests that the way of coping with diabetes is to drastically restrict one’s carbohydrate intake. This will reduce the levels of insulin your produce, if you are lucky enough to have a still functioning pancreas, or the amount you need to inject if you don’t. The reduction in insulin will mean that you will lose weight as insulin is the key fat forming hormone. As a diabetic reduced insulin will also mean smaller variations in your blood sugars; which means better control and less or no yo-yoing.
People coming to the forum for the first time will often be confused and scared about their conditions and I don’t think it helps to have some sort of ‘cultural relativist’ stance saying all views are good and equal and the only thing we should fear is dissent. Listening to the views of people like Fergus and Hanna and the many others on here gave me the confidence to go against the grain in both senses of the word and return to a low-carb diet. Everything has improved for me as a consequence.
Lastly, the whole GI diet seems to me to be just a bit of a gutless low-carbing really. Follow the logic of what it means to eat a low GI diet and why not just rid yourself of everything that peaks your blood sugar levels completely? If you are Type 2 you may well be able to get some great HbA1c’s on a low GI/moderate carbohydrate diet, but you already know that your body has impaired glucose tolerance; you are a diabetic after all. A message has been sent to you by your body if you choose to ignore it so be it, but I feel uncomfortable with people using their depleted pancreatic function as a reason to eat carbohydrates; the very things that did the damage in the first place.
Dillinger
This ‘we are all different, there is not right or wrong’ comes up a lot here. It seems to used really as an attempted argument ender, but without much merit as far as I can see.
Lastly, carbohydrates don't cause your pancreas to malfunction. You of all people, being type 1 should know that it is a autoimmune disorder, cause unknown at the moment, some believe it may be a virus or some other trigger that starts the process, but it means that the body makes a
mistake and damages its own insulin producing cells, eventually destroying them, that is when the symptoms appear. So, pardon me for saying, but you are wrong again.
timo2 said:Well, if you don't mind, Dillinger, I'll be keeping "everybody's different" in my repertoire of clichés, alongside "diabetes is a game of two halves" and "diabetes is a funny old game", if only to exasperate the more pragmatic forum members.
noblehead said:Sorry to say this (not) but we are indeed 'all different'.
Have a nice evening!
Nigel
Dillinger said:noblehead said:Sorry to say this (not) but we are indeed 'all different'.
Have a nice evening!
Nigel
Nigel,
If you read what I said I was talking about Type 2 diabetics having a problem with glucose metabolism. Which you can’t deny surely? So, if that statement is true why not just get rid of as much glucose as possible?
I think the "eat what you like" diet won't do anyone any good; you wouldn't say to someone with a nut allergy, well just keep eating nuts if you like them so much and keep taking your medicine would you? Sometimes we need to do things in life that are not ideal but are dictated by our circumstances.
By the way, if you are going to post how about leaving the sarcasm out? Or if you are going to be sarcastic and hectoring don't post smilies at me; it doesn't make it all right.
Dillinger
The darker side of low-carb nibbles.
As is so often the case in these instances, it all began with pine nuts at a party. Not wishing to appear prudish as the jar was handed around, I innocently partook of its most moreish contents. I was immediately hit by a wave of euphoric nutrient density, quickly followed by a piney aftershock of oily niceness. From that moment on, my life began to unravel as I surrounded myself with the paraphernalia of the pine-nutter, and happily took on the fridge space commitments associated with such a lifestyle choice. Furthermore, I became helplessly immersed in the seedy world of the health food store.
The next stop on my journey into the fiery Gehenna of mono and polyunsaturated fats was a town called pecan. I was never exclusively a pecan man, normally choosing to combine both pecans and pine nuts for greater effect - perhaps with a few pumpkin seeds occasionally finding their way into a really mind-blowing mix. Some sessions would consist of a generous handful of pecans, followed by a generous handful of pine nuts, followed by another generous handful of pecans, just to take the edge off. However, my tawdry affair with the pecan was swiftly ended by a contaminated batch. A rogue brazil led to a particularly vicious case of heartburn, which served to remind me just what a chancy game being a nutjob is. Then, like a man suddenly remembering that he's left the handbrake off on a steamroller during an oil change, I got the feeling that things were going to get a whole lot worse before they got better.
Thus, perhaps somewhat inevitably, a heady mixture of curiosity and peer pressure threw me willingly into the loving arms of the Macadamia. If I wasn't actually eating Macadamias, then I'd be thinking about eating Macadamias. Mention the cost of anything to me, and I'd immediately tell you how many Macadamias you could've bought with the money instead. Then came my botched raid on a local whole food emporium, during which I was only caught because an employee heard me crawling back along the ceiling heater duct shouting "Macadamias! I've got all the Macadamias!" and raised the alarm. On the plus side, I did received some much-needed help with my addiction from an excellent prison doctor, who weaned me off Macadamias using a mixture of peanut butter and waterboarding.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?