Category: diet


Diet Update and Other Juicy Tidbits About My Life :)

September 2nd, 2009 — 10:08pm

Hello, I’m back! I know, two months with nary a peep from me … It’s been absolutely hectic: We’ve been through 2 moves and 5 business trips over the last two months. But we’re better now.

I’m dubbing this the “I Never Thought This Would Happen” post because that’s exactly what’s going on in my life. The first “I Never Thought” event is that we’ve moved again! Our stop in Belen turned out to be a short one (two months) during which Spencer took a new job in Los Alamos, New Mexico. Los Alamos is a charming little town up in the Jemez mountains about an hour north of Santa Fe. I didn’t like it at first, dismayed by the utter lack of good shopping, eateries, and general city comfort; but it wasn’t long before the little town stole my heart. First of all, the surrounding area is breathtakingly beautiful. There’s a gorgeous canyon right in our backyard and hiking trails around every bend, Bandelier National Park a few miles south and the Jemez mountains a few miles north. Second, once you adjust to the rustic atmosphere, the town is incredibly inviting. The streets and sidewalks are well-paved and filled with friendly passerby, the lampposts are adorned with flowers baskets, and the historic center of town boasts a beautiful park with a small lake and fountain. And because town is so small, all kinds of stuff such as the swimming pool, movie theater, and Spencer’s workplace are all within walking distance. If we do ever get bored, Santa Fe and all its artsy glamour is a mere hour away.

So in short, I’m so excited to be here! I guess I’m just a country person at heart. It’s so nice to be out of the city!

Anyway, on to other exciting parts of my life …

I’m down to 128 pounds! Isn’t that something? It’s been over a half decade since I’ve been this light. What can I say? I never thought that would happen again.

People are already starting to ask me when I’m going to stop losing weight. That’s a tricky question to answer for two reasons. First, I don’t actually have a concrete number in mind. My intention was always to look slender, not to hit some miracle weight; and the more I lose, the more I’m realizing just how small my bone structure is. Even 27 pounds later, I’m still nowhere close. I find it amusing that many people don’t believe I’m still fat. (I guess that means I look decent in my clothes!) Short of presenting them with my naked profile, I don’t know how to show them how much extra I’ve got. I mean, I still can’t find my ribcage! :) So I know I’m not done yet.

Where do I think I’ll end up? Judging from my progress over the last 27 pounds, my guess is 105 pounds. That’s way lower than I had originally thought, but I’m having to adjust my expectations. I say expectations and not goals because it’s become clear to me that I have little direct control over how much I lose and how fast. I feed my body the right foods, and it decides where it wants to end up. (That’s the second reason why it’s hard to tell when I’m going to stop losing weight: It’s not up to me!) I do have some hopes though: 115 by the end of the year, then down to 105 in due time. But again, the number’s just the benchmark. Once I look in the mirror and like what I see, I’m happy!

(I’ll have to laugh if I actually end up at 105. See, a few years back I read this dating book from the 1950’s, and it told me I should weigh 105 pounds. I practically howled in disbelief; I’d not been 105 pounds since I was 10 years old! But then I never thought I’d clear 130 again either, and here I am. So who knows? It’s a weird world!)

Sort of related to my losing weight: I’m becoming a running addict! Just take a moment to absorb that … Me, Joyce, who couldn’t walk a quarter mile four years ago; who was so ill at age 17 that her 50-year-old father had to drag her around a mostly-flat half-mile trail … I’m running! WOW. (Needless to say, this is another thing I never thought would happen.) I started about a month ago, following a most excellent Couch-to-5K plan I found online. This is my fifth week, but due to travel, womanly issues, and some minor joint pain, I’m still on week 3 of the plan. And not only do I not hate it, but I think I’m actually hooked. It’s like a drug: If I don’t run, I’m edgy and irritable all day; if I do, I’m as sweet as pie. Who would’ve thought I’d become an exercise junkie? LOL!

I’ll see if I can put up some pictures of our new place soon. I’m still figuring out all this blogging stuff. :)

Comment » | diet, life, running

Diet Update

June 24th, 2009 — 1:15pm

It’s been a while, sorry about that! But I have good news to report. First, I FINALLY bought a scale. :) Second, I’m down to 135 pounds! That’s 20 pounds lost from my heaviest! Woohoo!

The bad news is that I’ve been sitting on 135 since the beginning of June. After my miscarriage, I lost almost 10 pounds in about a month, so I had my hopes all up that my metabolism was finally kicking into high gear, and now this. Oh well. For a few weeks, I was absolutely obsessed with the thought of making that needle drop a little more. I would examine myself in the mirror every day and collapse in despair when things didn’t change.

Oddly enough, this time it was reading about other people’s weight loss efforts that helped me come back down to earth. I say this is odd because usually, it seems like everyone else managed to shed their fifty pounds in a paltry four months, with smug “after” pictures that feature slender curves and toned stomachs. I’ve been at it religiously for 6 months, and I’ve lost only 20 pounds and less than 3 inches of belly fat! So it’s usually a downer, to say the least. This time, it was different. I ran across several people whose weight loss efforts spanned several years and suffered many long stalls. Admitedly, it’s comparing apples and oranges: Most of these people were middle aged and had hundreds of pounds to lose. But to know that many other people had to tough it out over a long period of time, that it wasn’t instant gratification, really helped.

My feet are more or less planted on the ground now. I don’t weigh myself every day anymore; in fact, I’m taking one man’s advice and weighing myself every MONTH! Sounds like a long time, but I’m losing pretty slowly now. This way, I can be pleasantly surprised by the numbers and enjoy my life in between, without obsessing about my weight. Some days I still fly off the handle over my flabby arms, but usually I try hard to appreciate my figure, which is truly much better than it was! Especially after reading DietGirl (great book and great blog, by the way!), I’ve realized that most of weight loss is learning to love yourself.

I also keep reminding myself of a few things. First, my fat took a long time to gain. Ten years in fact. Most websites will tell you that it takes longer to lose fat than to gain it. So in that light, I’m doing ridiculously well! Second, I’m recovering from years of mysteriously fragile health. No one was ever able to figure out what was wrong with my body, but it’s clear that it has a lot of latent issues to resolve. So if it takes a little longer to get to the flab, well I’ll just assume it’s working on something more important. Third and lastly, I’m not exercising. I know; I can just hear the round of boos coming from the fitness world. So sue me. I’ve been sitting on my bottom, eating steak, feeling loads better, and losing weight! :D Now in all seriousness, I would rather be fit. But I’m going easy on myself. I’ve been an inch from bedridden for most of the last decade, and it’s neither realistic nor productive to expect me to start jogging cold turkey. There is a time to reap and a time to sow; a time to rest and a time to get up and move! Now, after six months of serious recuperation, I think it’s time to start moving! Which brings me to my next post …

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Diet Update

April 8th, 2009 — 11:22am

I’m losing weight! It’s painfully slow, but it’s visible: My face has definitely slimmed. It might seem like a small victory, but when nothing else seems to be moving much, it’s something. As for my waist, I’ve lost something like 2 inches, though I’m always nervous stating progress by the tape measure — it’s so easy to “gain” or “lose” a half inch by shifting every so slightly. My clothes don’t fit much differently though, so no exultations there. :(

I know. Perhaps I should just buy a scale. But it seems like one more thing that I have to find a home for in our tiny studio apartment. And it might be yet another reminder of my slow progress. I’m naturally impatient to be dropping faster. It seems like everyone else on a low-carb diet is losing ten pounds a month. It hardly seems fair! :) However, I have to remind myself that I gained all this weight at about 6 pounds a year — that’s only a half pound a month — so I suppose it’s only natural that I lose it slowly too.

Also, my body probably has a lot of internal strife to settle before it can tackle the external things. My health has been pretty out of whack for many years, so it’s got its work cut out for it. I must say, it’s doing marvelously. I’m actually starting to feel normal now, which is not something I could boast for most of a decade. For one, my thirst is behaving normally now. Where before I would get serious headaches if I wasn’t constantly sipping water, now I simply drink a big glass two or three times a day and don’t think about it the rest of the time — just like regular people! :) That means I have much more stamina and besides, it’s just plain convenient not to have to carry gallons of fluid with me everywhere I go. This happy development is probably the result of thinner blood, which I noticed last menstrual cycle. That’s actually a known effect of low-carbing. Hyperinsulinemia thickens the blood, eventually producing clots and arteriosclerosis and all that nasty stuff; low-carbing reverses the effect. I’m quite grateful: Thick blood runs on my father’s side, and my uncle died of it in his forties. I may have been saved from an untimely death — well, by that cause anyway.

Isn’t it cool to experience the natural benefits of low-carb living? I’m thrilled to be part of the norm. I’ve identified with the abnormal 0.1% on health issues for so long, it seems absurd to me that I’m now one of the crowd. It’s great!

One big new thing: About a month ago, I changed my low-carb approach to the Paleo Diet. I’m reluctant to say I’ve gone off of Protein Power because I love the Eades and their books, but that’s sort of the truth of it. The carb counting was getting too high maintenance. Plus I wasn’t dropping weight very fast, the reason for which I encountered in Protein Power Lifeplan:  I was consuming too many calories. According to the Eades, people of small stature often have this problem, the main culprits being cream, nut butters, and cheese. Well I was getting sick of all the excess dairy I’d been consuming anyway, so after some thought and perusal of Loren Cordain’s The Paleo Diet, I switched over.

The Paleo Diet, by Loren Cordain

What is the Paleo Diet? It ends up being a low-carb diet, but sort of indirectly. The idea is to eat only what a Paleolithic person would have eaten. Of course it’s strictly impossible, but we can approximate. The rules are simple: You can have all the meat, fish, eggs, non-starchy vegetables, and fruit you want. You cannot have dairy, grains, beans, or starchy vegetables (think potatoes, plantains, cassava, etc.). And it’s as simple as that. No calorie or carb counting. Just do’s and dont’s.

Of course, what’s a starchy vegetable? Some are obvious like the ones I’ve listed above, but veggies follow a gradient and, as far as I know, there’s not a strict cut-off point. So I still do some carb look-ups. Another good heuristic is to ask the question, “Could it be consumed raw?” the motivation being that our Paleo ancestors didn’t cook their food (could be wrong about that; I’m not a huge anthropology buff). Did you know that raw potatoes contain toxins and can make you quite sick? Beans too, which is another reason they’re ruled out besides being quite starchy. By the way, I want to clarify that you don’t have to eat your food raw, you just have to check that it can be eaten raw.

Anyway, the simplicity of the diet works well for me. It also effectively keeps my calories low. Since I’ve gone on it, the weight’s been coming off faster (which is to say that now I can actually tell I’m losing — not bad, eh?). I probably consume more carbs now, but mostly in the form of fruits and vegetables that have a low glycemic index and therefore stimulate less insulin release (the mother of all evil!). I say mostly because I’m actually not following this diet strictly. I still eat whey protein powder, the occasional slice of low-carb bread, and once in a very long while a stick of cheese. Still, I stay pretty much on target.

(I feel obliged to mention that I’ve not actually read The Paleo Diet, only skimmed it in the bookstore, so this information by no means represents the diet in full — merely the concept. I’m definitely not following it to the T. For one, Cordain prohibits the use of salt and vinegar; I still enjoy these quite liberally.)

One more new thing in my life that pertains somewhat to low-carbing (boy a lot happens in two months, eh?). My husband and I are trying for a baby! No positive news yet, but it could come any minute. Which is why I spent a feverish week looking for information about low-carbing during pregnancy. I started out with only a few scraps of information. The Eades advise you to shift to maintenance ASAP if you find out you’re pregnant but don’t explain why. I was also vaguely aware that many doctors will glare daggers at you if you attempt to low-carb through pregnancy; but then again, I don’t trust traditional doctors anymore. See where they got me?

Anyway, I couldn’t find any miracle articles that exhaustively explained things, but I did turn up one or two helpful resources. First, a low-carb pregnancy success story from a woman named Dawn — very encouraging. The other is a Yahoo group, PregnantAtkids, which I joined. (Yes, that’s spelled right: Atkids.) It’s a support group for low-carb pregnancy. You have to be trying to conceive, pregnant, or breastfeeding; women only. There are a lot of recipes and articles there, and a lot of women with tips and stories to share. One thing I learned there is that low-carbing increases your fertility! Interesting huh? Granted it’s only anecdotal, but more than one woman on that site has PCOS, yet has several children. Evidently this is considered something of a miracle.

At this point, I’m set on low-carbing throughout pregnancy. I never really doubted it. My diet feels rich and full — not at all a “diet” in the usual sense or “unbalanced” as many nutritionists would call it. I also feel wonderful; I can’t imagine feeling so healthy if low-carb were as drastically bad for you as modern nutrition would have you think. So when I decide to low-carb throughout pregnancy, I don’t make that decision grimly on principle but with immense joy and relief.

Well, that’s all folks. I’ll update you when there’s something to report. Really, I’m going to try to be better about writing more often. :)

Comment » | books, diet, life, pregnancy

Diet Update

February 4th, 2009 — 12:37pm

It’s been about a month since I started my diet, so it’s time for an update!

I still feel great! I have virtually no headaches anymore. My endurance has also improved dramatically. On a good day now, I can walk all over L.A. without feeling much more than muscle soreness; in the past, I would have been positively ill after more than a mile. Even on a bad day, I can manage a 2-1/2  hour grocery trip, a few hours labor in the kitchen, and a trip through L.A. traffic to my husband’s office, all without much fatigue. In the past, that would have been an extraordinarily good day!

My hunger endurance is also higher. I used to crash hard as soon as I was hungry. Now I can tolerate hunger for several hours if necessary, although I try very hard not to do that — it’s important to eat when you’re hungry so that your body doesn’t kick into starvation mode. I feel like I eat less overall, though it’s hard to tell because I eat five or six small meals instead of three big ones. It does take noticeably less to fill me up. Often, a cheese stick and a big spoonful of peanut butter will keep me running for a couple hours.

I’ve passed my first menstrual cycle on the diet. My menstrual has been an on and off health problem so I was particularly interested to see how the diet would affect it. It went by very reasonably. There was very little PMS beforehand, something my husband appreciated immensely. :) As usual, I was tired on the first few days and had some stomach discomfort. I don’t remember having cramps. All in all, good and without warning signs.

And finally, the weight-loss part. Am I skinnier? The short answer is Yes. The harder part of the question is, How much? I don’t own a scale so I have no clue how many pounds I’m losing. Size-wise, I’ve lost about an inch off of my waist. However, tape measures can be inaccurate; depending on how snug you pull it, you can gain or lose a half inch instantly. So honestly, I don’t know how much skinnier I am.

Psychologically, I’m loving the diet. The food is tasty and filling. And the more I go without carbs, the less I crave them. They don’t even sound that good anymore, and that’s coming from a former noodle-fanatic.

I often get impatient and feel like I’m not losing weight at all. When I’m in a more objective mood, it’s clear that I’m visually trimmer. Judging from my belly, I’d say I’ve pushed back a year of weight gain, which isn’t much, but it’s something. Considering it’s only been one month, I would say I’ve made good progress.

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A New Diet

January 22nd, 2009 — 11:00pm

protein-power.jpgTwo or three weeks ago, I went on a low-carb diet called Protein Power. Let me tell you, boy is it something! I feel absolutely great. I love what I’m eating, and I’m always satiated, never hungry. Plus I’m seeing some results already, which is astounding — I was sort of on the diet for a week and then officially on the diet for a week or two, and already I look slimmer.

And as a bonus, it’s cured my acne. Seriously! I have so many acne scars on my face that it took me a full week to realize I’ve stopped breaking out. At first, I thought it was the California air — I started the diet right after I moved here. And that is possible. But after some thought, I don’t think it’s likely. California is drier than Missouri’s summers, but it’s more humid than Missouri’s winters. In Missouri, I broke out every day all year round, whether hot, cold, humid, dry, or anything in between. I tried all kinds of stuff for years before giving up completely. And suddenly, it vanishes. And that’s not all. The dry skin rash on my hand is also fading after months of irritation. Now it could be something healing about Los Angeles, but I’m skeptical. I think it has more to do with what I’m putting into my body.

So how did I get on this diet? What is it about? I hope you’re curious, because I’m dying to tell you all about it!

~*~

So here’s how I got on this diet and how it’s done for me so far. (If you’re itching to read about the diet itself, scroll down to the next section.)

I’ve been smidge overweight for a long as I can remember, but I finally exceeded my own tolerance when I ballooned up to 160 pounds in college. I’m only 5′2″ and barely a medium frame, so that puts me between 30 and 40 pounds overweight depending on what chart you use. After two years of feeling pimply and fat, I’d had enough. I wanted to do something about it. However, it was crazy for me to diet while in college, so I decided to wait until I was out. Well, a month ago, that time finally came.

With no reason to think there was a better way, I figured I’d do the usual low fat, high exercise diet. I’d count calories, eschew cream and butter, and go for a jog every other day. I was really, really dreading it. I hated low-fat eating. I’d tried it before and it only made me feel terrible — headaches, constant hunger, painful menstrual cycles, and on and on. In that condition, I was very doubtful that I could exercise without ill consequence. You see, I’d been sick for almost a decade from adrenal gland malfunction. Even after years of recuperation, I could still barely exercise. And I knew low-fat eating would only make things worse. So, I was understandably skeptical that my diet would succeed. Deep down, I expected to try for two or three weeks before giving up in the face of immediate health decline. After that, I would just resign myself to being fat. “At least Spencer always thinks I’m beautiful,” I would reassure myself, “so it doesn’t matter that I hate the way I look.”

It’s a testament to how much I wanted to be thinner that even with all this hovering over me, I was still determined to give it a try. However, God intervened, thank His goodness! On our way out to California, we stopped to spend a few days with Spencer’s father and stepmother, Jim and Joy. It turned out that Jim had just been on a diet with great success, so naturally I asked him what he did. He introduced me to Protein Power, a low-carbohydrate diet by Drs. Michael and Mary Dan Eades.

Protein Power — I’d never heard of it. Probably some crazy fad diet. I wasn’t keen on it at first. Even though I didn’t like what I had in store — fatigue, hunger, and maybe a five-pound loss if I was lucky — I liked the idea of a fad diet even less.

But then Jim kept talking — about what you eat on the Protein Power diet: Meat, eggs, heavy cream, butter, plus leafy greens, berries, melons, and so much more. Oooh. My mouth started watering: All favorite foods of mine! The trouble was, I loved carbs too. My father’s side of the family comes from Shandong, a province in China that is famous for consuming great quantities of wheat flour. I was raised eating carbs, carbs, carbs. But after a very brief consideration, it was clear that my personal scale was tipped toward protein and fat. I just couldn’t live without meat and eggs. Carbs I would miss, but I could deal.

I wish I could say that something weightier than culinary greed made my decision. But the truth was, I was grasping at straws. I desperately did not want to do low-fat. Protein Power sounded great in comparison. And so what if nutritional experts didn’t like it? I reasoned that one doctor was the same as another, so if there were doctors out there who thought low-carb would work, I was willing to do it.

True to my nature, I jumped right into it. I began eschewing carbs immediately and endeavored to procure the book. However, because we were on the road, the holiday season was in full swing, and ten thousand other things were happening all at once, I didn’t get a good start until about two weeks ago when we moved into our new place. Then I set to work in earnest. It was eggs, cheese, cottage cheese, whole milk, heavy cream, butter, and meat exclusively. Mmm-mm-mmm!

Two or three days in, I hit the infamous carb crash. Most people go through this, I found out later, because your body is readjusting its enzyme makeup. I’m glad I was expecting it because it was rather unpleasant. I was fatigued and dizzy and had to lay down every few hours. But I persevered. In three days, it was over and I was back on my feet.

And was I back! I felt great. I ate less but felt fuller. My endurance also improved, which is a big deal for me. And all this from guesswork: Since the book hadn’t arrive yet, I wasn’t actually following the diet; I was just cutting carbs.

Finally, the Protein Power book arrived. I read it cover to cover. A short ways into it, I realized what a gem I’d unwittingly stumbled into. I had come to this book for weight loss. But it was so much more. This diet was actually developed to treat dangerously high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, heart disease, and diabetes. Weight loss was simply a bonus. Although I don’t have any problems now, my risk factors are not so good: On my mother’s side, my grandmother died of heart disease, and the whole family has heart trouble. On my father’s side, my grandmother has type II diabetes, my uncle died several years ago of a blood clot in his early forties, and the whole family has blood-related issues. If that’s not enough, it’s clear that I store most of my fat in my belly. Very very bad.

Have you ever narrowly escaped a catastrophe you didn’t know was coming? That’s how I felt then, as if I could feel the sheltering light of God shining down on me. Yes I knew about these risk factors, but I’d never put it together quite like that. And even if I had, what was I going to do about it? Go low-fat? See above description of how bad the low-fat diet makes me feel. But now, the solution had landed in my lap. At that moment, I felt so incredibly blessed.

~*~

“That’s very nice,” you say, “but what about this diet. What’s the grand idea?” I agree! Let’s talk about Protein Power now. Here it is in a nutshell:

The idea behind Protein Power revolves around insulin and something called insulin resistance. Insulin is the hormone that keeps your blood sugar from getting too high. You may know that lack of insulin causes type I diabetes. Well, America’s problem isn’t lack of insulin; it’s too much! Here’s what happens: When you’re little, your body is shiny and new, and everything works like a charm. So when you eat a piece of bread and your blood sugar goes up, your pancreas only has to release a tiny squirt of insulin to bring it back down. This is because your cells are very sensitive to insulin. You can eat all the cookies, potatoes, and white bread that you want, and it only takes a little bit of insulin deal with your blood sugar. However, as you age and your cells are constantly bombarded by insulin, they become desensitized and need progressively more stimulus to achieve the same effect. (Just like your classic heroin addict.) Pretty soon, your pancreas is pumping out prodigial amount of insulin to keep your blood sugar in check. At this point, you develop hyperinsulinemia, where you have way too much insulin in your bloodstream.

So what’s wrong with too much insulin? Well everything — that’s what. Hyperinsulinemia causes high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, the thickening and scarring of arteries, and obesity. Eventually it also causes type II diabetes. That’s when your cells become so desensitized to insulin that even ridiculous amounts can’t keep your blood sugar in check. At this point, your exhausted pancreas gives up entirely, and you have diabetes.

If insulin is the problem, the natural question is, “How do we lower our insulin?” The only known way is through our diet. Yep, we have to cut the carbs. Looking at your metabolism, you can see why. Carbs induce a huge spike in insulin. In contrast, fat is completely neutral (remarkable, huh?) and protein elicits only a small response. Here’s the kicker: The combination of high-carb low-protein is even worse than pure carb in terms of insulin. (You wouldn’t believe it possible, but yes.) Which is why the low-fat diet fails: Since most protein sources also contain a lot of fat, when you cut out the fat, you end up cutting out a lot of the protein too. You replace it all with carbs and — voila! — you have high-carb low-protein.

If you’re like pre-diet me and follow the USDA guidelines and all, you probably shudder at the thought of cream cheese or fatty meat. But here’s a paradigm shift: Dietary fat does not automatically translate to body fat. It takes insulin to make that shift. Insulin triggers your body to store fat, while its counterpart, glucagon, tells your body to burn fat. If you keep your insulin level elevated above your glucagon level, you’ll get fatter. You do it the other way around and you’ll get slimmer.

Anyway, all this is explained in much more detail in Protein Power. I’m no medical buff, so I’ll leave that to the Drs. Eades. I would like to relay a small history lesson, which was part of the inspiration behind this diet:

Agriculture has only been around for ten thousand years. “Only?” you say incredulously. “That’s a long time!” Well before agriculture, human beings lived as hunter-gatherers for 700,000 years! That’s 7,000 centuries compared to 100 centuries. Paleolithic people lived on a diet primarily of meat with a small amount of nuts, berries, and other gathered foods. Archaeological evidence shows that these people were tall, lean, fit, and had perfect teeth; there are no signs of obesity, heart disease, or dental problems (and I don’t imagine they ever brushed). Fast forward to the ancient Egyptians. They lived in a modern nutritional paradise: Complex whole grains, fresh fruits and vegetables, olive oil, honey instead of sugar, fish, and almost no red meat. However, both mummified remains and written records show widespread gum disease and tooth infection, obesity, and heart disease. This pattern is not specific to just these two groups of people. It is so consistent that archaeologists use to classify prehistoric peoples: If you find strong bones and healthy teeth, they’re hunter-gatherer; but if it’s brittle bones and tooth decay, they’re agricultural.

For the record, I’ve heard a lot of the same information about Paleolithic people from other sources, namely my college Agriculture Science class.

You might be scratching your head. “Didn’t Paleolithic people have rather short life spans?” Good point, but here’s why it doesn’t matter. Paleolithic people died young-ish (40 or 50), but almost all of them died from severe injuries like skull fractures that were probably sustained while hunting. It doesn’t say much about their state of health when they died (apparently excellent). Nutritional health won’t save you from being run over by a car — or a woolly mammoth — but it will keep you from dying of heart disease, which is sadly the more prevalent of the two today.

I’ll finish up with a little information about the Eades themselves and the history behind this diet. They practice medicine in Little Rock, Arkansas. They used to be dietary conventionalists too, but over time, they worked out this new diet and the reasoning behind it. Even they were skeptical at first. It looked good on paper, but would it work? After two decades, the answer is a resounding yes. They’ve treated thousands of patients with high blood pressure, high cholestrol, heart disease, and diabetes. Usually, these people are able to test normal and kick their medication within 6 weeks!!

~*~

So I’m going to give this a try! So far it’s been treating me great, and I have the highest hopes for the future.

If you’re intrigued and want to dive in too, you can get Protein Power here on Amazon for only $11. (It’s $16 or $17 in bookstores.) It contains everything you’ll need to know to get started. While you’re there, check out the hundreds of success stories posted in the reviews. Hopefully, mine will be among them soon.

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