Who Ever Said Low Carb
Diets Meant No-Carb
by: S.A. Smith
A little information if often
a dangerous thing... and many people trying low carb
diets failed miserably in the long-run because they took the
concept to its extreme figuring that if low-carb diets were
good, then no-carb diets must be
better? Wrong!
One of the primary reasons why low carb diets are so
successful for a lot of people is that it forces them to remove
the nutrient-deficient junk food from their daily food intake.
In the last 20 years the average North American diet has become
so polluted with refined foods, sugars, and unhealthy fats that
the average American is now clinically obese!
Low carb diets owe their success to common sense more that any
“diet revelation”. When was it ever acceptable to consume
donuts, soda pop, Big Macs, deep-fried French fries and pizza
on a daily basis? As people’s lives became busier the advent of
fast food and convenience food grew by leaps and bounds. This
was all very convenient for busy families trying to get food on
the dinner table in time, but only now are we realizing the
true cost of this convenience.
Processed and refined foods alter foods from their natural
complex state, grinding them into fine powders that are easier
to handle, store, preserve, and use in the manufacturing
process. The unintended consequence of this refining process is
that it makes it much easier for your body to absorb the
carbohydrate glycogen energy from these foods, and creates
large spikes in blood glucose levels. This in turn puts
additional strain and stress on your body’s internal processes
as they try to compensate for these glucose spikes, and in the
process tells you body to store the energy as additional fat!
In general, carbohydrates that are consumed in their natural
state take longer to breakdown in your body, and the glucose
release is dampened, leading to lower overall blood glucose
levels.
The success of low carb diets lies more in the fact that it
forces you to eliminate most refined carbohydrates, to eat
foods in their natural state, and eat foods that have a low
caloric density, which ultimately forces you to consume less
calories!
If you’d like more ideas on how to incorporate delicious low
carb foods into your lifestyle you can search the recipe
database at:
www.mylowcarbdietrecipes.com/myrecipes.asp
About The Author
S.A. Smith is a freelance writer, correspondent, and
contributing editor of My Low Carb Diet Recipes resource site
and can be reached at www.mylowcarbdietrecipes.com.
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