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Opinion: I eat my (low carb) words - thin people are more intelligent than fatties
Times Online (UK) ^
| January 2, 2004
| Stephen Pollard
Posted on 01/04/2004 7:26:23 PM PST by SamAdams76
Next time you see a baker begging in the street, feel free to blame people like me for his plight. It seems that sales of bread have fallen so sharply in the US as a result of the spread of the Atkins diet and what happens there soon follows here that bakers are pondering a bleak future. One, Sara Lee, is attempting to revive its fortunes with a low-carbohydrate brand Delightful Bakery Breads which will go on sale next week; another large company will follow suit in May. Low-carb bread may sound like an absurdly contradictory invention, but I have a pretty good idea what it will be like, since I have already tried low-carb muffins, chocolate cake, crisps, chocolate and breakfast snacks. They have one thing in common. They all taste like ground cardboard.
Ive eaten them because I am a convert to the low-carb, high-fat Atkins diet. This means I am also a turncoat. Last year, I wrote on these pages in response to a report which claimed to find that fatties are thicker than stick insects that Im fat, Im thick and Im proud. Fine in theory, perhaps. But it turned out to be a lie. Soon afterwards, I started dieting.
So much for being fat and proud. I plead just one factor in mitigation. Take a look at the picture next to these words. See what I mean? I think the word is jowly. Less diplomatic souls might say porker.
Lets make a deal. If you have the heart to forgive me my slide from porker to porkies, then I wont mention if you, too, need to follow that January tradition and go on a diet. As millions look in the mirror this morning after the Christmas binge, my message is simple: its a doddle. Within a fortnight of starting, even I had lost 5lb. Five months on and I have lost more than three stone with more to come. For the first time ever, Im on a diet and don t have constant hunger pangs. Im eating plentifully and yet the weight is cascading off.
Ive noticed a common reaction from people I meet. Some are fascinated and want to know all the details. But quite a few are, well, angry. They seem somehow put out that I am losing my jowls so easily and so enjoyably.
Im now used to the looks of admiration and surprise at my success turning, when I mention Atkins, to sneering. Its usually followed by a variation on the theme of well, it isnt a proper diet, as if the only acceptable form of weight loss is one which involves much suffering (lets leave aside the low-carb muffins for a moment).
If these people themselves were fat I could understand their attitude, but my fat friends are generally hugely supportive. No, its normal-size people who seem affronted. Its also an exclusively male phenomenon. Neither I, nor anyone I know following this diet, has ever had such a response from a woman.
One newspaper diary column became mildly obsessed and rather offended by my weight loss, suggesting that its readers send me gifts of stollen and mince pies for Christmas.
The writer wasnt to know that I had already been allowing myself small periods off the diet anyway. I spent last week in Vienna, where it would have been a crime not to eat cake, and stuffed every carb I could find down my throat. But the more potatoes, chocolate and bread I put away, the hungrier I felt. Within a day back on the wagon my appetite had shrunk again and Im finding it as easy as ever to stick to the diet.
Now that the weight is dropping off, Ill happily endorse the fathead report which so annoyed me last year. It wasnt specific about the IQ points lost per pound gained, nor did it say if it worked in reverse.But thats an assumption Im prepared, for the good of mankind, to make. And since Ive lost 45lb, I must have put on quite a few IQ points. So if you have any tricky personal problems that need solving or any philosophical dilemmas which need unravelling, just get started on Atkins or ask me to apply my now enormous, lean, honed, brain power.
In the gym, I try to lift the amount of weight I have shed and wonder how I avoided a heart attack. So yes, this year Im now an evangelist for weight loss. Call me a turncoat if you want. I dont care. I feel better than I can ever remember before. If only I could so easily shed those self-interested charlatans and nutritionists who would stop me and others from losing weight and enjoying it.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: diet; health
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Nuts are dangerous. I have stalled on account of too many nuts. I find that one ounce per day of nuts is all that I can tolerate (weightlosing wise). I alternate my nut intake from almonds to pistachios to walnuts to macadamias. (Peanuts are actually legumes and I have about 2-3 ounces per week of those.)
To: 11B3
Keep in mind that Atkins did not pioneer this diet (it dates to the early 1800s) but a low carb routine works.
I will not give up my alcohol, my caffeine, my cigars, etc. but I can give up baked potatoes and bread w/o a problem. It is the low carb that is so important.
If you are seriously overweight, you may want to follow things strictly. I wasn't and haven't. It works like a charm just to be low-carb.
22
posted on
01/04/2004 7:54:26 PM PST
by
wireplay
To: SamAdams76
Is Splenda better for this diet physiologically, than aspartame? Splenda weirds me out - chlorinated sugar.
To: MediaMole
I think part of the reason why caffeine is verboten is because it's a diuretic, not something you want on a protein diet. I drink a lot of water myself.
24
posted on
01/04/2004 7:55:34 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: SamAdams76
Skinny and dumb here!
25
posted on
01/04/2004 7:55:42 PM PST
by
Revolting cat!
("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
To: HiTech RedNeck
Coffee is banned?Caffeine affects your insulin production and interferes with weight loss according to the Atkins book. I drink Trader Joe's Decaf French Roast and can't tell the difference. Try a good brand of decaf.
26
posted on
01/04/2004 7:57:02 PM PST
by
nycgal
To: HiTech RedNeck
Don't know. I personally find aspartame undesireable (aftertaste) and prefer Splenda becuase it tastes more like real sugar. I suspect that not having sugar or sugar substitutes at all is healthier but sugar substitutes are probably better then having sugar.
To: cyborg
I think they will be. We are a carb-rich, information age society. We mainly sit around computers, etc. doing little exercise and being tempted by carb-laden foods. The Brits are no different. I think that a protein-centric diet will be the wave for modern societies. The fast-food guys need to adapt and adapt quickly. NO ONE I have ever spoken to about an Atkins-like diet has regretted it.
28
posted on
01/04/2004 7:58:50 PM PST
by
wireplay
To: SamAdams76
>>Sara Lee, is attempting to revive its fortunes with a low-carbohydrate brand Delightful Bakery Breads
This is available in my area right now. It is by far the best low-carb bread I have tasted. 9 carbs a slice, 45 calories, and no transfats.
29
posted on
01/04/2004 7:59:11 PM PST
by
Keith in Iowa
(The only recent good news for Democrats is they could save $$ by switching to Geico.)
To: wireplay
I ate the best hamburgers when I was there, from Pret A Manger so they have a lot to work with. Plus the best cheese I ever had was in France (giggles).
30
posted on
01/04/2004 8:00:27 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: SamAdams76
Some people just can't accept the fact that meat, eggs, cheese and nuts are actually good for your So can you eat as much of that as you want, so long as you avoid other stuff?
31
posted on
01/04/2004 8:01:38 PM PST
by
Mulder
(Fight the future)
To: cyborg
British food can be downright humbling with how good it can be...provided you find the right places.
They have a bad habit of deep-frying everything and putting whole fishes in aspic but there are also great food places.
Curry, fish and chips, bangers and mash (sorry, carb-laden), kidney pie, etc. - Great food! England will never abandon carbs...the pubs are too enticing. But I think they will cut down.
32
posted on
01/04/2004 8:04:44 PM PST
by
wireplay
To: Mulder
"As much as you want" is subjective. I simply eat as much as it requires to not be hungry. I could certainly eat much more than I eat currently but once I am no longer hungry, I stop. I find that exercise suppresses my hunger pangs as well. It is easier to exercise under this kind of low-carb diet.
To: cyborg
Some people rather be sloppy and ugly than slim and healthy.
Not all people who are not slim are sloppy and ugly and unhealthy. Be kinder than that would you?
To: wireplay
I go next door and get curry goat, chicken,fish,etc. and eat that with salad. I can run on that for a good five hours. When on Atkins it's easy to forget to eat lunch or dinner.
35
posted on
01/04/2004 8:06:04 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: SamAdams76
Some people just can't accept the fact that meat, eggs, cheese and nuts are actually good for your (as well as vegetables, berries, cheese and did you mention, cheese?
To: Mulder
After you start, hard-core, you won't want to eat too much. You feel 'satisfied' most of the time. There are limits but, in my experience, you don't hit them much since you are basically 'full' a lot. When you start going into ketosis, the weight drops very rapidly.
I have seen people lose dramatic amounts of weight in a month. Within a couple of months, people are astonished.
37
posted on
01/04/2004 8:07:36 PM PST
by
wireplay
To: cubreporter
I wasn't referring to the whole world. I was referring to those people revel in their fat, their ugliness and their digsuting habits like Michael Moore for instance. I know that not everyone who is fat is sloppy, and not all thin people are nice.
But I'll try to be nicer :-)
38
posted on
01/04/2004 8:09:24 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: squidly
You got it. Exercise...walking, jogging, aerobics, weights...without it you just cannot eat anything you want. With it you can eat what you like in moderation but...exercise is the key.
To: cyborg
I have actually gotten to the point where I cook well enough to be very choosy in where I eat out. I cook my own curry (green and yellow) and do pretty good. Since I did my kitchen remodel, not very keen on eating other's cooking unless it is pretty upscale.
I just enjoy slinging my own food...and I can make it as carb laden, or not, as I want to.
40
posted on
01/04/2004 8:11:22 PM PST
by
wireplay
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