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The Paleo Diet
Do you like eating huge slabs of raw meat? How about a workout that involves tossing rocks barefoot in the frigid outdoors? Do you enjoy fasting for days at a time? This may be the diet for you. Here's a description from a New York Times article: - LINK-
Some questions to get people talking: Would you be willing to try the Caveman diet? Why or why not? How do your eating habits differ from those addressed here? Do you feel that their claims of increased vitality are valid? Have you incorporated fasting into your current diet plan? If so, do you feel it is beneficial? What is the longest you have voluntarily fasted, and what kind of a meal did you eat to conclude the fast? Quote:
My response: Would you be willing to try the Caveman diet? Why or why not? No. The very idea is repulsive. I'm not fond of the taste of meat. Fear of pathogens are enough reason to keep me away from raw meat. Besides, didn't they have fire? How do your eating habits differ from those addressed here? I am a lacto-ovo vegetarian. I like the concept of living off the grid and being able to prepare all of my own food from scratch - I can raise chickens, I can raise plants. I can't kill. I enjoy eating plants, I take far more pleasure in preparing plant-based meals. Do you feel that their claims of increased vitality are valid? Anyone who takes an account of their daily caloric intake and attempts to reach peak fitness could experience similar vitality. Have you incorporated fasting into your current diet plan? If so, do you feel it is beneficial? My current diet does not have room for regular fasting. I have incorporated fasting into my diet in the past, while I was still eating meat, I found it was a good way to clear my system, always felt like a fresh start. Usually just 24-hour fasting. On a veggie diet, I don't feel the same urge to fast. |
I wouldn't do this, because it's stupid.
Modern life is what it is. We have access to more information than ever before about how the body processes, stores and uses the food we eat. We know in a general sense what sorts of foods will help us in the long run, and what sorts will do us harm. It is true that many modern health problems arise from a combination of improper diet and lack of exercise. The solution, however, isn't to eat like a cave man. Shockingly enough, it's to eat right and exercise. Constant fasting is going to throw your metabolism out of whack, and lead to weight fluctuation. Too much reliance on red meat for energy leads to an imbalance, with way too much protein and saturated fat, and not nearly enough carbohydrates or dietary fibre. These guys may sneer at the vegans now, but they'll not be doing so in twenty years when this stuff catches up to them. My limited experience with vegans leads me to believe that many of them are hyper-aware of what they eat and how it impacts their bodies. You'd have to be, to function on a diet with no animal protein whatsoever. Throwing out 5000 years of dietary science for some misguided ideal strikes me as unbelievably foolhardy. |
A diabetic on a paleo diet = a dead diabetic
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You're not tracking down a mastodon for 20 miles with a few of your friends, only to catch up with it and kill it with spears, all in one day. You're getting low-quality meat and cramming way too much of it in your face. High protein/low-carb diets really miss the point to health. Also, humans seem to have adapted quickly (quickly from an evolutionary perspective) to a diet that includes grains. I digest whole wheat just fine, and I get plenty of nutrients from that foodstuff.
As Martian said, eat right and exercise. This means fruits, veggies, lean meats, whole grains, all balanced along with at least 30 minutes a day of exercise. That's the whole ballgame. |
It's completely silliness, based upon some cocked-up ideas about 'how paleolithic man ate' plus the (wrong) idea that people were healthier 10k years ago than they are now.
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Appeal to antiquity is a logical fallacy for a reason. Cavemen didn't have nearly the life expectancy that we did, either.
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Hold on a second. I'm reading the Paleo diet, and in theory someone on this diet would not have the same life expectancy as a human living over 10,000 years ago. I don't eat a lot of grains simply because I prefer a diet heavy in veggies and my life expectancy is in the 80s. People on the Paleolithic diet can still utilize everything from safe, public drinking water to antibiotics, which dramatically increase health and increase the likelihood of living a long life.
Let's review. The Paleolithic diet promotes eating fresh fruits and veggies, nuts and seeds, and lean meats and suggests against grains and processed foods. That's perfectly reasonable and completely healthy based on our understanding of modern health. The only real questionable thing I saw skimming the article was the fasting, which seems quite stupid simply because hunter-gatherers were (according to my reading of archeology) perfectly capable of rationing food in order to regularly eat. If you throw out the fasting, the diet really isn't harmful at all. I'm not going to do it, and I can't see myself recommending it, but let's not indulge in hyperbole. |
One issue I have specifically is the desire to remove grains and legumes almost entirely from the diet. It overlooks the role that these foodstuffs played in our survival: food security, replacement of animal protein during shortages, the establishment of stable and secure societies.
It seems to me that there are those who support this diet who view grains and legumes as an inherently bad food choice. This despite the evidence that they play important roles in nutrition and have many health benefits. |
But I won't die at 55 simply because I don't eat grains and legumes. My current diet is mostly veggies, fruits, nuts, and meat. I do have some grains, but not a lot, certainly not the amount in the food pyramid. All the nutrition one needs can be attained from non-grains and legumes.
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You are right Will - the diet is in fact very healthy. It says eat whole foods, not processed. Eat the food we evolved with over millions of years - meat, nuts, veggies and fruit. As to the fasting, there is nothing wrong with a little fasting. I don't do it myself, but about a billion Muslims around the world do it regularly and they don't seem any the worse for it. Going to extremes is a little out there, IMO, but fasting for 12 or 24 hours is not going to hurt anyone. |
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