Category Archives: weight loss

Intermittent fasting: Gina’s take.

My takeaways from the book about fasting: Life in the Fasting Lane by Jason Fung, Eve Mayer and Megan Ramos.

Recently I was in an internet squabble with a woman who declared that pulses (do NOT come at my pulses!) were bad for you and you should never eat them. Then she told me to look up Dr. Jason Fung and I would learn everything. So I did. And because we live in the future, I was able to grab three of his books from the library.

Fung and his coauthors are selling a system they promise will work with your hormones and do not involve a calorie deficit. They will allow you to eat all the food you want. They claim that modern doctors have no clue how to deal with weight loss, and that anyone who tells you calories in calories out is misinformed.

Ok, that’s an interesting take.

They then proceed to teach an intermittent fasting method. In their method you fast for anywhere from a few hours to a week or more. Perhaps the biggest thing that hit me is the emphasis on eating normally* on the days you ‘feast’ (‘feast days’ are just days you eat a normal amount, not a day you splurge, like Thanksgiving). Oh, and you need to cut out all snacks- they want you eating 2 healthy* meals a day, not too large, and that’s it. So what do you get if you go from 2-3 meals a day with 1-2 snacks a day to 2 meals a day with no snacks AND skipping 2+ meals a week?

Say it with me- a calorie deficit!

How they managed to convince the thousands of people who like their program that this is not a simple calorie deficit is beyond me. There’s a lot of talk about hormones and basal metabolic rates and how fasting isn’t going to make your body think you are starving because literally ‘starvation isn’t voluntary, fasting is’ I don’t get. I don’t get how one of the authors ‘cured her PCOS’ by fasting- PCOS is currently incurable. You can reduce the symptoms with diet and medicine, but no one can possibly cure it. I have it. This woman who made this claim is a ‘clinical researcher’, so she ought to know.

Another thing that ‘clinical researchers’ ought to have caught is the authors interpretation of the studies which say that insulin causes weight gain. The studies they referenced watched diabetics gain eight after receiving insulin. The researchers continued to explain that as a result of the insulin, the people studied were more able to absorb nutrients from food, and the weight gain was prevented by reducing calories in a high protein, high fiber, moderate fat and carb diet.

I was also concerned with the ‘don’t talk to your doctor’ suggestion in the book. Saying that your doctor will think fasting is a fad (when it’s been around for 1000s of years) and advise you not to do it is a red flag to me.

Another red flag to me is the attitude towards food through out the book. People are not eating, they are ‘stuffing their faces’. Birthday cake should be avoided at all costs. Eating lasagna is a ‘bad day’. Remove yourself from dinner with the family so you aren’t tempted to eat. These just sound like they are promoting a poor relationship with food. And, of course, saying to avoid my beloved pulses, in addition to not eating potatoes, rice, mangoes, oranges, or bananas, just demonizes foods that are not in the least bad for you.  

Overall I found the book to be not helpful. It seems to be a warmed over Keto/Atkins style diet with little advice on how to have a healthy relationship with food.

My eating hobby: Step 1

I follow diet and nutrition trends as a hobby. I love learning about it and talking about it. I am NOT an expert and am NOT qualified to professionally chat about diet and nutrition (although for 12 weeks and $600 I could be, so should I crowd source that? LMK 😉 )
All this is is me collecting my current personal thoughts into one place. This is not health or nutritional advice, I am not a medical professional, talk to your doctor before starting anything.
If you have ever felt shame when eating, hidden eating (not including a bag of chips when the kids are about), or feel that your body will never be ‘enough’, or ever used food ((or exercise) as a reward or punishment, SEE A DOCTOR to rule out an eating disorder.

Ok, that is going to start every page of this series of summaries if what I like and I think works for eating plans.

I love reading up on diets and food plans. I love watching the changes over the decades of what is healthy and what is thrown out. And I love all the parts of our diet— not the ‘weight loss diet’ that is what everyone thinks of nowadays rather than ‘diet’ meaning the food you eat as part of your culture and your personal taste. Most ‘diets’ to read about are for weight loss. So, I read about paleo and low carb and keto and all the like just because I get pleasure from it. Most all the ‘diets’ are garbage. I recently read the Noom book, and in discussing it, some people mentioned being interested in a low stress low energy way to look at food to eat healthier. So that’s what spurred this series.

Most (weight loss) diets come down to the same thing: calories in have to be less than calories out. No matter the gimmick, no matter the formula, no matter the way it’s presented, that is the *only* way to lose weight. So many plans dress that up and make it uselessly fancy, but that’s it. There is no magic bullet that will help you lose weight, no one change that will make it work and keep it working except that. So the basic plan for any weight loss program is to help you understand how to eat, and how to think to keep at a healthy weight for a long time.

So here: Step 1 to Gina’s self plan for eating to a healthier weight: breathe.

Breathe. We (yes, I will use the editorial we for this) have this. We have a body that is working for us, doing what it’s supposed to be doing, and we are going to show it the love and care it needs. It’s important to love our bodies because any depression or hate going into this relationship will throw up boundaries.
So we’ll think of three things we love our bodies for RIGHT THIS MINUTE and give our bodies a hug.
It’s a good body. It’s a good home, and it deserves to be praised for all the work it does.

See you on the next step.

Chick pea Marbella (etc)

Chick peas Marbella, bulgar, zuchini

Chicken Marbella was a hot and happening dish in the very early 80’s, and swept the country as a company dish. It’s got a complex flavor with some odd seasoning choices that make you go what? when you cook it and mmmm when you eat it. And it is a pretty good company dish.
But when you want a meat free pulse based meal… well, turns out, this works with chick peas.
It’s what we had last night for dinner. And that one change made the meal vegan as well as high fiber.

To about 3 cups (2 cans) of chick peas (garbanzo, ceci, hummus) add

1/4 cup chopped prunes
2T capers
2T red vinegar
2T olive oil
2 T brown sugar
2 T white wine
12 sliced green olives
1/3- 1/2 head garlic chopped
1 crumbled bay leaf
2 tsp dried oregano
1/2 tsp salt AND pepper

Pour into a shallow pan and bake about 40 minutes.
I assume letting this sit overnight would make a good cold salad for a hot day, but right away, the chick peas were bland.

That’s literally it, for a dish my omnivore family prefers to the meat version.

Last night I also discovered that bulgar cooks on the range in minutes. I always prepped mine for tabouli, by pouring boiling water on it and letting it sit for hours, so I never thought of it as a ‘fast’ starch. But it is, faster than pasta, slower than couscous. Took less time than the zucchini took to prep and cook.
It was 1 cup of medium ground bulgar, 2 cups water, 2 T oil, pinch of salt in the pot together, covered, for about 10 -12 minutes. Then off heat, the last of the water was absorbed.
2 medium zucchini, 3 cloves garlic, 1T oil, salt and black pepper. Cooked with cover on, mostly.