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Old 01-30-06 | 01:24 PM
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Originally Posted by alison_in_oh
Difficult? Sure! Not appropriate for the general public? Probably not. But "associated with low plasma levels of total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, less coronary heart disease, less diabetes, and less obesity"? Yup. IT'S IN THE LITERATURE. Peer-reviewed, methodology and bias exposed. Studies have been done to control for fat content of the diet. They're not as effective as the whole Ornish approach in managing disease, but restricting fat does have an effect.

Here's a quote from Ornish in May of 2004. "The debate should not focus only on low carbohydrate versus low fat. Patients have a spectrum of dietary choices. To the degree that they reduce their intake of refined carbohydrates and excessive fats and increase their intake of unrefined carbohydrates (fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes) and sufficient omega-3 fatty acids, they may feel better, lose weight, and gain health."

Doesn't sound too extremist to me, but maybe that's just cuz I've been brainwashed by the PC hoardes.
well, I can see you and Jarey aren't giving up your biases anytime soon. there is a load of rubbish that gets thru the peer-reivew process, so there goes that... Ornish makes a lot of claims but fails to back any of it up. Did you read A. Colpo's take on him? once you get past Anthony's tone, he has a lot of valid criticisms. One of which is that Ornish cannot claim that reducing fats has any benefits.
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Old 01-30-06 | 01:30 PM
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Originally Posted by Jarery
See, this is what i been saying all long. The web is full of both sides of the argument. You keep pointing to "big fat lie". Have you searched lately? There is literaly 100 websites devoted to how he quoted out of context many of the people he uses to make his point. The folks he used to make his point totally furious with him in his way to rework their statements to do 180 degrees from what they beleive in order to support his personal views.

Histrionic distortions?

ya thats someone who I want to use as a reference and believe.

Im open to most everything. But i also dont beleive everything i read just because its in print on the internet. You seem to be very selective in the evidence you use. Even your diet, of 8% carbs, is contrary to many of the sites that promote the very things you do.
https://www.jigsawhealth.com/articles...rated_fat.html
They also promote saturated fats, but even they recognize that balance, somewhere around 40/30/30 carb/fat/prot is healthiest compared to either a low fat or low carb.

Re research your own sources. I had never heard of Gary Taubes untill you mentioned to 'google' him. I went looking with no pre conceived ideas. And my conclusion is he's a fraud. well maybe not a fraud, but someone with an agenda and will twist the truth and stats enough to prove his agenda. And thats the opnion of the very people he interviewed and quoted in his articles to make his own points.

I'll keep to my own conclusion, and that of say the Harvard site I linked, and even the above jigsawhealth link and keep to a balanced diet. Exact numbers, be they 40/30/30, or 50/30/20 are not critical, but they give a good range to shoot for.

The only thing still 'in the air' and unproven to me about a balanced diet, and all the fact/fiction regarding fats and cholesteral is saturated fat. To me this is the only area that needs definate studies. Ive read a crap load of sites that point to studies saying it should be reduced (not eliminated) and a couple sites saying its fine. Most sites that say its fine seem to ones pushing an agenda.

heck even your touted Mr Taubes has some interesting things about it you may have missed .
"" While some manipulations in his writing seem very carefully calculated - e.g., waiting until the next-to-last paragraph to include three major bombshells (that he is on the diet himself, that overconsumption of saturated fat can indeed shorten lifespan, and that "Atkins had suffered with heart troubles of his own")""

So i'll keep to a balanced diet, and a reduced sat fat intake. And maybe sometime before im dead they will have a definitive idea about sat fats.

you never heard of taubes? his article in the NY Times is what kicked off the whole low carb "craze." and fumento and co. can nitpick about irrelevant details, but the gist of taube's articles hold up (whether his interviewee's like it or not) - that the entire theory that fats are bad and should be restricted is based on extremely flimsy, even non-existant science. this has been borne out again and again,test after test, including tests created and designed to prove the opposite. Unfortunately, there are a LOT of people who have been duped by the low fat mantra, and a lot of people who have based their careers on it, so how can they turn around on a dime and admit they were wrong? they cant.

anyway, eat what you want, but you really need to knock off the attacks on people who do try low carb, you are on very thin ice, science wise, when you do.
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Old 01-30-06 | 01:39 PM
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*sigh* I've been having fun with this, but I'm really not in the mood to run around defending a super-lowfat diet that has no application to a person of my health status. Sure. Exercise, weight loss, and antioxidants could very well take the claim for Ornish's results. Point is, he's got the only results that are as good as surgical treatment of coronary heart disease -- and he's got some good results on quality of life with prostate cancer, too.

Here, check this out though, pretty cool survey of diet, cholestrol, and heart disease: https://www.pubmedcentral.gov/article...medid=16389340
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Old 01-30-06 | 01:44 PM
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Originally Posted by alison_in_oh
*sigh* I've been having fun with this, but I'm really not in the mood to run around defending a super-lowfat diet that has no application to a person of my health status. Sure. Exercise, weight loss, and antioxidants could very well take the claim for Ornish's results. Point is, he's got the only results that are as good as surgical treatment of coronary heart disease -- and he's got some good results on quality of life with prostate cancer, too.

Here, check this out though, pretty cool survey of diet, cholestrol, and heart disease: https://www.pubmedcentral.gov/article...medid=16389340
not really, he only claims to have results. btw, he IS a rabid animal rights PCRM/PETA nutcase. so I take his claims with a grain of salt over some savory filet mignon...
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Old 01-30-06 | 01:50 PM
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Originally Posted by mrfreddy

anyway, eat what you want, but you really need to knock off the attacks on people who do try low carb, you are on very thin ice, science wise, when you do.
A balanced diet is on thin ice science wise ?
I also dont think I attacked anyone on low carb. Didnt this thread get started by low carb people saying everyone else was wrong ?
You crack me up, dont forget to put your nike's on before the comet gets close
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Old 01-30-06 | 01:57 PM
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Originally Posted by Jarery
A balanced diet is on thin ice science wise ?
I also dont think I attacked anyone on low carb. Didnt this thread get started by low carb people saying everyone else was wrong ?
You crack me up, dont forget to put your nike's on before the comet gets close
sorry, jarey, wasnt referring to you, but a lot of knuckleheads have felt free to drop in and take potshots..

about the so called "balanced" diet? why is that a magical formula? where did that come from? remember, you dont need carbs at all to survive, but you absolutely need fats and protein. also remember, humans evolved over the eons on a very different balance, due to far fewer carbs being available to us for the first 99% of our existance on the planet. and during that time, grains, soy, etc. were unavailable, because they are poisonous in their unprocessed forms.

some people like to argue that lifespans were shorter, but if you really thing our longer lifespans are due to increased carb consumption, I know some nice folks who'd like to talk to you about real estate opportunities over the East river here in NYC...
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Old 01-30-06 | 02:16 PM
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Balanced comes from many places. Like the other thread where kids left to their own devices automatically eat a 'balanced' diet over time.

Sites that dont have an agenda to push, like the Harvard site I linked. Did you read it? To me thats a site that has no other agenda than to get people healthy. They go with current science at the time, they change when they prove they need to, like in abondoning the low fat theory when further evidence shows it wrong. THey dont stick with wrong statements just because they refuse to show they were wrong.

Harvard site is probably my mainstay for guidance. Even the jigsaw site which is highly favorible to the Weston Price way of thinking promotes a balanced diet.

Saying a body doesnt need carbs is baloney. A body doesnt need to get out of bed, and can live a long life in a coma being fed intravenously. Doesnt make it the 'right' way. Carbs, fat and protein, are all needed, in my opinion.

Using the 'how we were in caveman times' argument is very hollow to me also. Why? Because I dont live in an unheated cave on a hill and eat raw dinasour, or whatever they ate. The whole world and humans have evolved. If you think that there hasnt bene time for humans to evolve, then how come were taller now ?

As i said, to me pretty much all science and studies points to a balanced diet as being the healthiest choice. Jury is still out on saturated fat though.

Read the harvard site, it may open your eyes as much as some of your links have opened mine. Although I've never been one to go for 'new'. I skipped the low fat craze, and i skipped the low carb faze.

The only 'new' fad dietary wisdom I've not discounted is glycemic load. Thats one I beleive has merit. And in the next 5 years I'm sure lots of 'for' and 'against' will come out.
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Old 01-30-06 | 04:05 PM
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Originally Posted by Jarery
Balanced comes from many places. Like the other thread where kids left to their own devices automatically eat a 'balanced' diet over time.
sorry, you gotta understand we low carb folks hear this "balanced" mantra all the time. all it means to me is more carbs/sugar than I want to put into my body. guess it all boils down to how you feel about running your body on fat versus glucose.

Sites that dont have an agenda to push, like the Harvard site I linked. Did you read it? To me thats a site that has no other agenda than to get people healthy. They go with current science at the time, they change when they prove they need to, like in abondoning the low fat theory when further evidence shows it wrong. THey dont stick with wrong statements just because they refuse to show they were wrong.

Harvard site is probably my mainstay for guidance. Even the jigsaw site which is highly favorible to the Weston Price way of thinking promotes a balanced diet.
it may take some institutions a while to realize the errors of their ways. if they say sat. fats are bad for you and that you need for some reason to eat 30% carbs, I say show the evidence!

Saying a body doesnt need carbs is baloney. A body doesnt need to get out of bed, and can live a long life in a coma being fed intravenously. Doesnt make it the 'right' way. Carbs, fat and protein, are all needed, in my opinion.
as long as you realize that is just your opinion. but the facts still stand, and have been proven again and again. you dont need carbs. we can derive a lot of benefits from carbs, but you do not need them to survive. try not eating proteins and fats for a while, see how long you last.

Using the 'how we were in caveman times' argument is very hollow to me also. Why? Because I dont live in an unheated cave on a hill and eat raw dinasour, or whatever they ate. The whole world and humans have evolved. If you think that there hasnt bene time for humans to evolve, then how come were taller now ?
again, scientists tell us we have only gone thru some very very minor evolutionary changes in the pas 10,000 years. there hasnt been enough time. your metabollic processes are the same as your pre-agriculture cave man ancestor, a product of millions of years of evolution.

As i said, to me pretty much all science and studies points to a balanced diet as being the healthiest choice. Jury is still out on saturated fat though.
there's that balanced word again, ha haa

Read the harvard site, it may open your eyes as much as some of your links have opened mine. Although I've never been one to go for 'new'. I skipped the low fat craze, and i skipped the low carb faze.
ok. I've read some of it, I'll take another look.

The only 'new' fad dietary wisdom I've not discounted is glycemic load. Thats one I beleive has merit. And in the next 5 years I'm sure lots of 'for' and 'against' will come out.
in my opinion, glycemic load is just a pc watered down version of low carbing.. once the pc crowd realized they couldnt fight low carb on the merits, they decided to stick to the fear of sat. fats and come up with a semi-low-carb-eat-just-lean-meats-but-sat.-fats-are-still-the-devil type of plan. it admits that sugar and insulin are indeed a problem, but wont face the fact that sat. fats are not a problem. just my opinion tho...
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Old 01-30-06 | 04:44 PM
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Originally Posted by mrfreddy
once the pc crowd realized they couldnt fight low carb on the merits, they decided to stick to the fear of sat. fats and come up with a semi-low-carb-eat-just-lean-meats-but-sat.-fats-are-still-the-devil type of plan. it admits that sugar and insulin are indeed a problem, but wont face the fact that sat. fats are not a problem. just my opinion tho...
Wow, you got comprehension isssues dude.

You want evidence that balanced is better than a fad diet?
Im not overweight, you are.
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Old 01-30-06 | 05:36 PM
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Originally Posted by Jarery
Wow, you got comprehension isssues dude.

You want evidence that balanced is better than a fad diet?
Im not overweight, you are.

I started to respond to this rubbish, but no, I think not....
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Old 01-30-06 | 05:59 PM
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How about...

I was overweight, I'm now not overweight, I did it (and continue to do it) with a balanced diet and feel better than I ever did in over 30 years.

Of course, being a mutant has its advantages
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Old 01-30-06 | 07:40 PM
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Originally Posted by Mike Cavanaugh
It amazes me how some of you are so tied up in your emotions on this subject that you can not even read and comprehend an entry... In my posting giving some examples of what I eat, what exactly led you to believe that I eat deep fried meat at every meal? What in the world led you to believe that there are "no vegetables to speak of?"

If you have a reading disability, I appologize in advance.

Mike
The only person who sounds like they're being overly emotional is you. You sound like a petulant little girl who's whining because folks don't agree with you. Poor thing. Maybe you should take that focus and work on increasing your speed. That oughta keep you occupied.

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Old 01-30-06 | 07:52 PM
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Originally Posted by koffee brown
The only person who sounds like they're being overly emotional is you. You sound like a petulant little girl who's whining because folks don't agree with you. Poor thing. Maybe you should take that focus and work on increasing your speed. That oughta keep you occupied.

Koffee

Koffee,

I must admit you are one of a kind... here you go resorting to name calling... feel better? Did they teach you this in your certified Nutritionist class?? LMAO!!!

Now really, who here is the whiny little girl????
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Old 01-30-06 | 08:34 PM
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Originally Posted by mrfreddy
I started to respond to this rubbish, but no, I think not....
Rubbish is asking for proof, then when its placed in front of you, discounting it as pc mantra.
Rubbish is beleiving a geek with a blog over the harvard medical department
Rubbish is spending 4 years 'low carbing it' and still having a weight problem then telling everyone else who successfully defeated their weight problem, that they are doing it wrong.
Rubbish is only beleiving 'studies' when all you need for proof is a mirror.

Face it, you been low carbing for 4 years, and you stated your still overweight, either you or your diet choice is a failure. I'll let you pick which it is.

Edit : To everyone else who chooses low carb diet to lose weight, go for it. Whatever works for you is good. I just disagree with all the "everyone else is wrong crap"
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Old 01-30-06 | 08:40 PM
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Originally Posted by Jarery
Face it, you been low carbing for 4 years, and you stated your still overweight, either you or your diet choice is a failure. I'll let you pick which it is.
"
Colpo says that weight loss is about calorie deficit, no matter what type of diet is followed.
https://www.theomnivore.com/calories_do_count_baby.html
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Old 01-30-06 | 10:01 PM
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Originally Posted by Mike Cavanaugh
Koffee,

I must admit you are one of a kind... here you go resorting to name calling... feel better? Did they teach you this in your certified Nutritionist class?? LMAO!!!

Now really, who here is the whiny little girl????
You are.

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Old 01-30-06 | 10:38 PM
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Originally Posted by koffee brown
You are.

Koffee

LOL

I know you are but what am I?
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Old 01-30-06 | 10:52 PM
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Koffee,

I know that you really are a good person. I think it is safe to say that we will not agree much on the whole low carb thing... All I ask is that you keep your eyes open to new possabilities. Don't approach people with the "I am a certified nutritionalist so I know my **** and you don't... and you are doing everything wrong, and you are going to fail." There is no doubt that you know more than me when it comes to general nutrition. Don't let that fact make you ignorant to new studies and research that may show that some of the basic principles you believe in could be less than 100% accurate.

Low carb diets work for some people. There are plenty of cases where people have lost a huge amount of weight... all of their medical numbers are fantastic, and the weight has stayed off for a long time. Right now it is working for me. Maybe in time I will get to the point where I am tired of low carbing... or perhaps I will hit a wall and will stop loosing weight.... You could very well get a private message from me asking for specific information in regards to some other kind of diet... who knows.

Don't be so quick to shoot something down. There is a lot of evidence out there that suggests strongly that there is something to low carb dieting. And that pile of evidence keeps growing.

Have a good evening,

Mike
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Old 01-30-06 | 11:44 PM
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Mike, good job on the 80 mile ride. What did you eat/drink during the ride and in the 2 hours afterwards? How long did you ride the next day, and the day after that? How long until you can do 50 miles at a pace above 18mph on flat roads?
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Old 01-31-06 | 08:22 AM
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Originally Posted by WarrenG
Mike, good job on the 80 mile ride. What did you eat/drink during the ride and in the 2 hours afterwards? How long did you ride the next day, and the day after that? How long until you can do 50 miles at a pace above 18mph on flat roads?

your questions....

The ride was 77 miles.... I ate nothing during the ride.... there was no need to. i had a good breakfast (egg omlet) and an early lunch of tunafish with real mayo and a bowl of salad. I drank pleny of water that morning. I did not start the ride until 12:30pm. During the ride I had a total of 4 big bottles of water. I could have used a 5th like I said, I ran out of water for the last 10 miles or so. After the ride, I continued to drink water (no idea how much, but it was quite a bit) About an hour or so after the ride I ate dinner... A fantastic, tender, rare cut of steak with mushrooms, garlic, peppers, lots of real butter.... A big surving of brockley / cauliflower mix, and a side salad. The next day I did a 35 mile easy does it ride. Yesturday I did not ride because of the crappy weather. Today I will ride. I can do 50 miles at a pace at or above 18mph on flat roads now.
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Old 01-31-06 | 09:12 AM
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Originally Posted by 531Aussie
Colpo says that weight loss is about calorie deficit, no matter what type of diet is followed.
https://www.theomnivore.com/calories_do_count_baby.html
colpo is right about that, and I am living proof!
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Old 01-31-06 | 09:22 AM
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I have an online acquaintance, a woman in her 30s with four children who was recently diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma. It's very aggressive, and her chances of survival are kind of fuzzy. She's an example of why I'd like to be as proactive as possible with my life and my health.

https://jncicancerspectrum.oxfordjour...nci;91/20/1751
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Old 01-31-06 | 09:35 AM
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Originally Posted by mrfreddy
colpo is right about that, and I am living proof!
I don't think anyone disputed that fact. However, the diet one chooses, and the ability to embrace it as a long term lifestyle change is important. My years of experience (and others as well) suggests that diet alone won't work. I found it near impossible to maintain a healthy diet without an adequate dose of exercise. Without *adequate* exercise I found that I was able to lose a limited amount of weight before I plateaued and lost interest in the whole thing. I've never been able to do what I've done in the past three years...lose the weight, gain a phenomenol amount of strength, and do physical activities that I was never able to do, even in my teens.
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Old 01-31-06 | 10:10 AM
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Originally Posted by SimiCyclist
I don't think anyone disputed that fact. However, the diet one chooses, and the ability to embrace it as a long term lifestyle change is important.
I agree. Any diet works, few are lifelong. I have a close friend who routinely yo yo's from 165 to 210 lbs as he tries a diet, then drops it.

There are many things to think about in trying to find which you'r willing to do for the rest of your life.
Having a social life can make a large impact on success of certain lifestyle choices. Staying at home its easy to eat only what works for your system. Being on any kind of restricted diet makes it hard to eat out at restraunts, parties, etc. Not that it cant be done, its just harder. Even Mrfreddy in his posts has mentioned he 'takes a break over the holidays'. This is all too common I think and natural in most people.

If your very active socialy your always out at pubs, restraunts, pot luck parties, etc, etc. Its a lot harder to remain adherent to a restricted diet than a wide open one.

Any diet works, but once your at a target weight you need to maintain good eating habits, for the rest of your life.....
Even if my 'balanced' diet is proven to have a few faults down the road, Its probably the easiest to maintain as a lifestyle and eat socially.

But, whatever works for ya. If it works, it was correct choice
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Old 01-31-06 | 10:16 AM
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Originally Posted by Jarery
Rubbish is asking for proof, then when its placed in front of you, discounting it as pc mantra.
um, haven't seen any actual proof supporting a high carb/low fat diet, nor any that supports the contention that sat. fats in a low carb diet are bad for you.

Rubbish is beleiving a geek with a blog over the harvard medical department
the evidence supports the geek, along with a lot of highly respectable scholarly scientific types. I like the direction Harvard seems pointed in, unfortunately, they still take a stand against sat. fat, a stand that is simply not supported by science. Every study done in a setting where carbs are controlled proves that a high fat diet that includes sat. fat actually IMPROVES your indicators for heart disease.

as to why you can't trust Harvard, I can only guess. could be careerism, someone, or a lot of someone's have based their careers on the lipid hypothesis and they can't turn back now, could be a lot of things. could be they are so arrogant that they haven't even seen the studies.

Rubbish is spending 4 years 'low carbing it' and still having a weight problem then telling everyone else who successfully defeated their weight problem, that they are doing it wrong.
Rubbish is only beleiving 'studies' when all you need for proof is a mirror.

Face it, you been low carbing for 4 years, and you stated your still overweight, either you or your diet choice is a failure. I'll let you pick which it is.
quite clearly the failure is my own, ha haaa... I know exactly why I'm overweight, I love to eat, and I love to drink. by drink, I mean beer, scotch, wine, etc. and I have only been, at best, sporadic with the workouts (till now, I've turned a new leaf. I'm starting my 4th week of working out 6 days a week,w/out fail).

I hesitate to respond to you point about my weight, becuase it's just so darn silly. I have a friend who is mick jagger skinny, he eats cheeseburgers, fries, pizza, ice cream, the works, and he stays rail thin. does that mean his diet is a good one?

I stick to low carb for a lot of reasons beyond wt. control, although wt. control is one of them. without changing anything else, I can keep my wt. down 30 pounds below where it was, simply by following low carb guidelines. I also do it because I like to eat this way, I love never being hungry, I love the satisfied feeling I have, I love steaks, I love fish, I love pork, I love chicken, I love broccoli, I love spinach, I love butter, I love mayonaise, etc. I also do it because it seems to affect my mood, I am always much calmer and more relaxed. this is impossible to prove or quantify, but I can feel it for sure. I also do it because all of my health indicators are better than before. My LDL and HDL (although I think these are pretty much meaningless) are far better, blood sugar is better, triglycerides are way better, etc. etc. etc. I stick with it because it works,a nd because none of the things that the cert. nutritionalists of this world tell you about low carb are actually true. Unless you're a sprinter. apparently that is true, you can sprint faster and lift heavier wts. etc. with your body loaded with glucose and water. If I were a competitive athlete on a serious level, this would mean something to me, and I might consider carbo loading for the slight advantage it provides (and I mean slight), but I'm not, so it isn't worth it to me.

Edit : To everyone else who chooses low carb diet to lose weight, go for it. Whatever works for you is good. I just disagree with all the "everyone else is wrong crap"
if I ever said everyone else is wrong, I apologize, I certainly dont feel that way. apparently you can follow a high carb diet, and as long as you exercise a lot, you can stay healthy (<cheap shot warning==>tho it didn't help Jim Fixx or the Power Bar folks!). my real point here is that I can chooose the low carb route and exercise and see vast improvements, and that I disagree with those would tell me that I must have carbs to reach my goals, or that I must avoid sat. fats to stay healthy, or that a low fat diet is somehow healthier than a low carb diet. it just aint so.
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