ItsTheWooo said,
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I personally think that for most people, living on induction is not healthy. While it may be possible to get all your nutrients, it is far more difficult to do than when eating a diverse diet. It certainly would require a conscious effort to rigidly structure your meals: you would need to choose certain foods and make sure you eat them to avoid deficiencies. Then there is the psychological factor. Eating more carbs and allowing yourself more choices (low sugar fruits and nuts, for example) may be the difference between success and failure for some.
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Induction is not a time period as many believe. Ongoing weigh loss is required before moving off induction. Any weight gain requires moving back down in the carb level and staying there. I gain weigh by eating one small apple per day. I have run all kinds of test in the last four years. Most nuts do the same thing. Actually, eating low sugar fruit and nuts are one of the main reasons people fail to lose weight on the low-carb diet.
Many people think the Atkins’ low-carb induction phase is lacking essential nutrients because of lies propagated by opponents. Their reference is the US Food & Drug Administration (USFDA) Nutritional Guide for Daily Values (DV) as shown on all nutrition labels.
The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Guide Pyramid was developed by vegetarians with an agenda. Nathan Pritikin and Senator George McGovern were the perpetrators. There is no science behind the Food Guide Pyramid. It was a scam from the beginning. A make believe nutritional plan to limit the consumption of animal products. The results has been rampant heart disease, cancer, diabetes, osteoporosis, intestinal diseases and a medical handbook full of other ailments.
The USFDA Nutritional Guide is based on the Food Guide Pyramid. This is easily proven. Simply go to a food count book or
http://www.fitday.com and enter a 2000 calorie diet exactly according to the pyramid. The results will show every nutritional requirement to be perfectly achieved. It’s all a scam. No science is involved in the establishment of the daily nutritional requirements.
In contrast, the Eskimos with whom Arctic explorer Stepansson lived for several years beginning in 1906 ate only salmon. They ate salmon three times a day. They ate salmon for snacks. They ate salmon for dessert. The heads were especially prepared and were highly praised as a delicacy. The medical and nutritional experts of the day claimed this was not possible. They claimed the Eskimos would surely get scurvy because the fish contained no vitamin C, no fruit and no vegetables. Nutritional food count books and programs say the same thing today. But the Eskimos did not get scurvy. The “experts” continue to claim a very low-carb diet is not sufficient for long-term health. Actually, the lower the carbohydrate level the better the long term health. The Eskimos proved modern nutritional rules to be nonsense. The Eskimos had no heart disease, no cancer, no osteoporosis and absolutely perfect teeth without a single cavity in the entire population.
One must discard the modern nutritional myths and start over with real science in order to correctly understand human nutritional requirements. The scientific human requirement for carbohydrates is zero. Fruit is nature’s candy. Fructose in an apple is the same as fructose in a Coke sweetened with high fructose corn syrup. Fructose is fructose. Atkins’ allowance of some berries with a few antioxidants was a neat move to take the heat off. He did so instead of forbidding all fruit that seems like a very harsh limitation to modern day fruit worshipers. Eating berries shouldn’t be taken as a requirement of any kind. It just helped sell books. The better attitude is to assume a few berries won’t harm one’s health very much.
After all, the body can convert 58% of protein to glucose. Eating carbs is not required to restore glucose stores. That is just simply scientifically false.
Kent