When you start a new health journey, knowing what to eat can seem confusing — there is tons of conflicting advice.
The truth is, the best diet depends on which one works best for you.
A custom diet plan starts with real food
With that said, one basic rule still applies: Eat whole foods.
Ditch foods that have been processed (cereal, chips, etc.), artificial colorings, additives, and preservatives, industrialized fats, and too much sugar.
This means sticking to the produce, meat, and nut sections in the grocery store. Eat natural fats such as coconut oil and olive oil. Avoid vegetable oils and hydrogenated fats.
You have to learn new habits but you’ll start feeling so much better you’ll likely feel enthusiastic about it.
When eating real food is difficult
Trouble digesting real foods is a red flag digestion is in trouble.
Do you feel heavy after eating meat? Your stomach may be low in hydrochloric acid (HCl), which is necessary to digest meats.
An increase in fiber from eating more produce may cause digestive problems in some people. This could be due to overgrowth of bad bacteria, low HCl, deficiency in pancreatic digestive enzymes, or gut inflammation.
In these cases work on restoring gut health while slowly easing into eating more produce.
Blood sugar and stress handling
Most Americans eat too many carbss and sugars, which are a foundation to lifestyle inflammatory diseases. However, not everyone fares well on a very low-carb diet.
People with chronic hypoglycemia and adrenal fatigue may need to eat smaller meals more frequently while others find eating three meals per day ideal.
Some people feel great on a very low-carbohydrate, or ketogenic, diet, while it gives others anxiety and insomnia. Finding an appropriate amount of carbs to keep blood sugar stable and lower inflammation can take some trial and error. As your blood sugar and stress handling improve, you may be able to reduce frequency of meals.
(Photo by Elena Mark, Creative Commons)
Good post and photographs. Interesting and informative. Quite intriguing.
Hi @funcneuro - Welcome to Steemit! Great to see your input. Please tag some of your posts with paleo as well. Over on the paleo tag, we're aiming to build a community of people using real foods for healing. You'd be a valuable resource, from what I've read of your posts so far. On the concussion one, you mentioned the autoimmune diet - do you mean Autoimmune Paleo, as written about by Sarah Ballentyne? That's been on my list to write about for ages - maybe you'll beat me to it. Upvoted and followed.
Will do, thank you! Yes autoimmune paleo, it is foundational to the func med/neuro topics I write about. Thanks for helping out :)
Oh, and, it's best to stick to no more than 4 posts a day for optimum recognition and reward.
Excellent, good to know! I've been meaning to search out tips for posting here. I doubt I'd ever post that many but you never know.
It looked like you've already posted 7-8 in the last 25 hours, which is why I mentioned it. :-) I understand the flush of enthusiasm of wanting to share such great info!
Oh does that include comments too? I thought you meant posts. Good to know!
Oh no, you're right, I have done that many blog posts lol.
Here are some tips from @paleo-trail
https://steemit.com/paleo/@paleo-trail/introducing-paleo-trail
And a while back I also curated for health-trail and this is what I posted to help people. Ignore the bit about the curators (as that has changed) and go a bit further down for tips
https://steemit.com/health/@health-trail/introducing-health-trail-part-of-the-steemtrail-curation-initiative
Thank you so much for helping me out, I will read up!
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