Atkins Diet Yes or No
by: Loring Windblad
As of now, January 2005, more
than half of all north Americans are struggling with
obesity. The “quick fix” for “fat” for the last 40+
years, becoming ever more popular, has become the Atkins
Diet. The Atkins Diet was first
popularized in the U. S. Air Force during the
1960’s.
The Atkins Diet is very simple --- restrict your
carbohydrate intake. And guess what? It actually works. But Dr.
Atkins, after the initial few years of his popularized diet,
began to make modifications and refinements to the original
basic diet. And several other people have taken the basic
Atkins Diet, modified it just a little, and come up with a new
and very workable diet.
The first thing you must understand is that, across the entire
human spectrum, each of us is very different from one another
in the chemical makeup of our body. Thus, each of us,
individually, should have our own highly personalized, custom
built diet, created by a dietician using a chemical makeup
assessment, usually a $200 hair analysis, of our particular
body type and individual nutritional needs. So far as I know,
this technology and this type dietary assessment is still
available only through certain holistic health practitioners
and it is becoming more and more expensive. As an example, it
typically costs now between $200 and $300, whereas in the
mid-1970’s it cost between $100 and $150.
There are three major misconceptions to the Atkins diet. The
first common myth is many people believe this means don’t worry
about the amount of calories or fat you eat so long as its not
carbs. The second common myth is many people believe all
carbohydrates are equally bad. The third common myth is that
the Atkins “Lo-Carb” diet is actually a “Hi-Protein” diet. All
of these, however, are enormous misconceptions.
The first myth: many dieters who use this program believe that
calories and fat do not matter when eating low carb food, but
in some cases this has proven to be fatal. Depending upon your
particular body chemistry, when eating high fat food your
cholesterol could climb and climb, leading to a heart attack or
stroke. Also, it has now been proven that the older we become
the less our body is able to metabolize the “high fat” portion
of the Atkins “lo carb” diet, leading to additional dietary and
health problems.
The second myth: The Atkins Diet is actually a “Lo-Carb” diet,
not a “No-Carb” diet. What should be cut out are breads, rice
and potatoes. Fresh fruits and vegetables should not be cut
back and many should be somewhat increased. Finally, after the
first month you can “safely” add breads and potatos --- in
limited quantities. One friend of mine eats 1 bite of
breads/toasts, etc., served with his meals, such as garlic
breads. One bite and not a morsel more.
The third myth: Mention the Atkins Diet and most people’s
reaction is “Oh, yes, the ‘high protein’ diet.” Not true at all
--- it’s a “Low Carb” diet – protein intake remains unchanged.
Some carbs only, not all, are restricted (versus eliminated
completely); fats, particularly in older people, need to be
restricted; protein should be kept to 4-6 ounce portions per
meal, the lower values for breakfast and lunch. What you need
to increase is your intake of high-fiber foods such as celery,
etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Topics for further
online research:
high calorie low carb
foods
low carb diet menu plan
foods for low carb diet
low carb foods for
diabetics
high protien low carb foods
foods that are low carb
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The reason why the Atkins Diet works is because your
body metabolizes its stored fat (carbohydrates) in order to
burn --- digest --- the protein, fiber and fat you are eating.
The Atkins Dieters tend to leave out several food groups,
including fruit and vegetables, since they are “high carb
food”, and then tend to grab a steak instead, which has very
low carbohydrates.
This is ridiculous. Why? Because the elimination of
carbohydrates and the reduction of the fresh fruits and
vegetables actually throws your health into a major imbalance.
Overloading your unbalanced diet by an excess of protein intake
(adding that steak, above) to “increase the volume” to a
satisfying level merely exacerbates this imbalance.
The true danger of the Atkins Diet, however, lies in the fact
that, for people who already have health challenges, the Atkins
Diet actually worsens some conditions and creates other health
challenges that did not exist before the Atkins Diet. The worst
of these is Gout. If you have a tendency to suffer gout, no
matter how well controlled you have it, a strict Atkins Diet
will create a severe gout condition and gout attack for you. If
you merely had the tendency for gout with no active gout, the
Atkins Diet will precipitate an actual condition of gout in
your body. A severe case of gout requires medical intervention
to correct as well as long-term dietary control and change. The
long-term danger of gout is an increased tendency for heart
attack and stroke. See Native’s Gift for one proven help for
gout.
If your body type and chemical makeup is suitable for the
Atkins Diet then by all means use it. Remember that there are
several similar alternatives out there which may be more
suitable than a strict Atkins, to include some of Dr. Atkins
own later work and recommendations. If you have health
challenges, to include a tendency for gout or actually suffer
from gout, or have diabetes or any of several other disorders,
the Atkins diet is definitely something you need to avoid.
And not just the Atkins Diet. Any and all diets which highly
restrict or eliminate one of the essential food groups we all
need to maintain optimal health is equally bad. Stop the
insanity and use a REAL diet --- the only proven diet which
will work for virtually everyone.
What is it? Its actually two things: A food diet and exercise –
yes, simple exercise, like walking a mile a day. A completely
balanced, restricted calorie, diet containing a little bit of
everything. Eat three meals a day, get your sweets, carbs,
veggies, fruits, juices, protein and keep it to 1200 calories a
day. Eat your breakfast and go out and walk the dog – if you
don’t have one, take your neighbor’s. Give this diet a year of
your life, weigh yourself every Monday and keep track of your
weight, see where you are with it…..and make the change for the
rest of your life. When you get to your target weight you may
increase the diet to 1600 calories a day.
About The Author
Loring Windblad has studied nutrition and exercise for more
than 40 years, is a published author and freelance writer. His
latest business endeavor is at www.organicgreens.us.
info@organicgreens.us
|