Using Ironmaidens guide - am i doing this right?
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Using Ironmaidens guide - am i doing this right?
So I've decided on a low carb diet, since I've never really craved bread, pasta or potatoes. I don't even particularly like hot chips... I may be a different species...
I've been eating anything I want for the last few months, and haven't really gained much weight. I mean I've certainly lost a bit of muscle since I stopped working out, and gained a bit of fat, but my weight hasn't fluctuated as such.
Anyway I decided to do a cross between the Atkins Induction and include some of Ironmaidens recommendations when I can't stand the Induction strictures. But I'm not sure whether I'm doing it correctly. My diet for the last few days has consisted mainly of meat (primarily... steak, chicken breast, turkey, and canned fish, etc.), salad, cucumbers, celery, tomato, etc... about 70g blue cheese (or cheddar) and about 2 tablespoons of natural peanut butter a day. Anyway today I went to this chinese restaurant and couldn't really find anything without noodles or something, so I had dried fried squid with salt and pepper and chilli (about 2/3 of it anyway) and some vegetables. (I read somewhere that fried squid or chicken wasn't bad as long as it wasn't bread crumbed or coated in flour and fried).
I also take a multivitamin, psyllium husk, and about 6 x 1000mg fish oil capsules a day.
What I'm worried about is this: How do I make sure my calories don't sky-rocket, but keep my protein intake up? And should I be eating at certain times? It's sort of all over the place right now, but I'm making sure to keep my carbs under 20gs a day. It just seems too easy at the moment. Yesterday was a bit of a nightmare, because I think I went through some serious carb crash symptoms (headache, nausea, dizziness, etc. I was craving a can of coke) but that's completely gone today. I don't crave sugar at all, I feel full pretty much constantly, and I feel like I'm bursting with energy.
I don't get it and I'm worried I'm doing this wrong.
I know there is a lot of info on this but can someone see any obvious flaws in my approach?
Cheers.
I've been eating anything I want for the last few months, and haven't really gained much weight. I mean I've certainly lost a bit of muscle since I stopped working out, and gained a bit of fat, but my weight hasn't fluctuated as such.
Anyway I decided to do a cross between the Atkins Induction and include some of Ironmaidens recommendations when I can't stand the Induction strictures. But I'm not sure whether I'm doing it correctly. My diet for the last few days has consisted mainly of meat (primarily... steak, chicken breast, turkey, and canned fish, etc.), salad, cucumbers, celery, tomato, etc... about 70g blue cheese (or cheddar) and about 2 tablespoons of natural peanut butter a day. Anyway today I went to this chinese restaurant and couldn't really find anything without noodles or something, so I had dried fried squid with salt and pepper and chilli (about 2/3 of it anyway) and some vegetables. (I read somewhere that fried squid or chicken wasn't bad as long as it wasn't bread crumbed or coated in flour and fried).
I also take a multivitamin, psyllium husk, and about 6 x 1000mg fish oil capsules a day.
What I'm worried about is this: How do I make sure my calories don't sky-rocket, but keep my protein intake up? And should I be eating at certain times? It's sort of all over the place right now, but I'm making sure to keep my carbs under 20gs a day. It just seems too easy at the moment. Yesterday was a bit of a nightmare, because I think I went through some serious carb crash symptoms (headache, nausea, dizziness, etc. I was craving a can of coke) but that's completely gone today. I don't crave sugar at all, I feel full pretty much constantly, and I feel like I'm bursting with energy.
I don't get it and I'm worried I'm doing this wrong.
I know there is a lot of info on this but can someone see any obvious flaws in my approach?
Cheers.

As long as you aren't conciously trying to overeat, it's hard to overeat. That part is easy. Don't worry about the calories. The hard part is not giving in to your cravings. 3 or 4 weeks from now, that won't be hard either. I find it helps to make my own salad dressing. Olive oil, red wine vinegar, a little ground mustard, herbs, salt & pepper to taste. This avoids added sugar and veg oil sneaking in.
I can imagine getting the occasional sugar craving, but a sugar hit every couple of weeks can't be that bad can it? Isn't it actually necessary to spike the insulin occasionally anyway?
I'm just quite enjoying it at the moment. I used to binge on carbs every night. Just eat and eat and was never satisfied. But now I just eat a portion of cheese, a cucumber and a couple slices of chicken breast and it just lasts and lasts. I love it.
I can see how the initial 48 hours are difficult, and that the sugar cravings will return occasionally, but right now I'm very happy with it. I've always much preferred meats and salads and cheeses than starchy veggies. I just never realised what an addiction the sugar actually is.
I'm just quite enjoying it at the moment. I used to binge on carbs every night. Just eat and eat and was never satisfied. But now I just eat a portion of cheese, a cucumber and a couple slices of chicken breast and it just lasts and lasts. I love it.
I can see how the initial 48 hours are difficult, and that the sugar cravings will return occasionally, but right now I'm very happy with it. I've always much preferred meats and salads and cheeses than starchy veggies. I just never realised what an addiction the sugar actually is.
It certainly is an addiction. I would give it 3 weeks and then start adding in carb refeed days. In my house it's spaghetti once a week. It's actually good to overdose on carbs for 1 day and you'll be sick of them for another week. It's the insideous little snacks that add up over time that you need to watch out for. If you fall off the wagon, don't worry about it, just put it behind you and carry on. As far as insulin spikes go, no, they're not needed but they are somewhat useful after workouts.
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- Deific Wizard of Sagacity
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the amount of red meat you eat young man, that'll probably not be too long, kidney failure coming your way!Jebus wrote:i'll probably be here till I die.
(JOKING i know high protein diets don't hurt your kidneys)
And Ballophun about what you said, it's a funny one isn't it? For all we know no one on this forum even actually lifts... To be honest though I don't think anyone on this site lies about their accomplishments, but on other forums I'm sure it's rife. A friend of mine emailed me a t-nation forum thread where some kid had posted 'progress pics'. He'd photoshopped himself into pictures of a powerlifting meet. Unlucky for him he'd done a terrible job of photoshopping it and got called out straight away. Imagine actually doing that! Kinda sad in a way that you'd need to try and fake achievements just so folk would give you kudos.
I once had a picture with my face photo-shopped onto the body of a body builder, that I was going to use as an avatar, but it was meant to be funny. The size proportions weren't right, and the body builder was African-American, and I'm pale white. I couldn't get the res low enough with the software I had at the time, and I gave up on it.