Hardly any one tries it because they decide in advance it won't work. I have repeatedly said how hard it is and how it is simple but definitely not easy. However comparede to a lifetime of diabetes anything is preferable in my opinion.
We’ve just not had time to evolve to adapt to today’s unhealthy food environment. Cheap, fatty carbage is everywhere, smells amazing when you pass the outlet, and unless you’re super disciplined can be impossible to resist. Especially if you’re hungry at the time. Food is made to look and smell so tempting, and is artificially cheap compared to making a healthy meal at home, with no prep or washing up required.I don't think it's likely that a change in the gene pool is responsible for the rise in obesity.
I think the genetic aspect just helps explain why some people fair much better than others when the food environment goes south.
or the genes were there, but it needed the dietary change to trigger them?Problems with all this genetics stuff is it doesn't explain the sudden rise in obesity that we have seen over the last 50 years or so.
We had far fewer obese people 50-60 years ago and I'm pretty sure that genes don;t change that quickly so it has to be something that has changed in the period maybe with people being genetically more susceptible to it. Which brings us back to that old chestnut of food...
My only real challenge is the fish and chip a few doors away, but I can just take the batter off the fish and have it with mayonnaise
I have already said that what you said was a sweeping statement ie "diabetes gone was just a"summary of Prof Taylor's own statements about the results of his research - or some of them: ""unhelpful sweeping statements like 'diabetes gone"I think you really need to stop with the jibes and the sweeping statements, you are not promoting anything in the way you think you are.
I can put goats butter on it! It’s cow dairy that’s the problem, I can tolerate goat, sheep and buffalo stuff, so I still have butter & cheese, even if it’s a limited array. Got buffalo mozzarella in my arsenal, thoughI scrape the batter off and put butter on it - but you can't do that either. Hug.
when you read the report, the 10 years refers to the length of time someone has been diabetic. It means that ND can work for someone up to 10 years after diagnosis (although later studies purport to have lengthened that time) and not the length of time we allegedly go into remission.I've not seen the 10 years quote before, I thought ND was a relatively recent study.
Me too. I find it increasingly annoying that 'born again, first time dieters' come on here and think they have the answers for all of us.crash diets mess with my metabolism and make me even less able to eat without putting weight on. I learned that lesson 30 years ago.
Yes he probably was losing lean mass, which will make it very hard for him to maintain his weight in the future. We have been warned about crash diets for many years. I can't understand why Professor Taylor thinks they are a good idea now. They have always worked short term, it's the long term problems they create that bother me.I wondered about Paul the Priest's rate of weight loss.
Wasn't it 3.5 stone in 9 weeks? So that's 49 pounds in 9 weeks, or an average of 5.4 pounds per week.
Some studies suggest you can't metabolise fat beyond a certain rate - much lower than that. And it's very hard to lose fat without losing muscle especially on a crash diet, so he will have been losing plenty of lean mass as well.
I'd be interested to know exactly what he was losing. His marbles? His religion?
You think they weigh that much and are that easy to lose.His marbles? His religion?
Me too. I find it increasingly annoying that 'born again, first time dieters' come on here and think they have the answers for all of us.
What I have been trying in vain to say is that Prof Taylor's METHOD ie getting the fat off the liver and pancreas to reverse diabetes works, and it works for as long as the subject keeps the fat off. Not necessarily by using a shakes Diet . But I am trying to say that it is grossly unfair to blame Prof Taylor or imply his METHOD doesn't work just because many of his subjects are unwilling or unable to stick to either the initial diet or the refeeding/follow up arrangements. That is to do with human failure not the failure of the pancreatic/liver fat theory. That is not a jibe at anyone.
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