Read It Starts With Food: Discover the Whole30 and Change Your Life in Unexpected Ways Online
Authors: Melissa Hartwig,Dallas Hartwig
Medical professionals agree that our general recommendations and Whole30 program are safe, healthy, and effective for those with
IBS
(irritable bowel syndrome),
IBD
(inflammatory bowel disease) and similar digestive disorders. However, having a serious digestive disorder does require you to follow some protocols specific to your type of inflammation. These modifications should make your transition easier.
In addition, those with IBD (Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis) should also adopt our autoimmune protocol, especially with respect to eggs and nightshades. Only after you have seen symptomatic improvement and, ideally, improvement in inflammatory lab markers, would we recommend reintroducing these foods, starting with eggs first, and then nightshades.
Finally, understand that your digestion may get
worse
before it gets
better
. As your GI tract starts to heal, your mucosal layer will adjust, unhealthy gut bacteria will start to die off, healthy bacteria will begin to repopulate, and the intestinal lining will start to rebuild itself, plugging gaps and filling in holes. This can lead to gas, bloating, diarrhea, or constipation. In conditions such as IBD and IBS, it’s not uncommon for digestive issues to continue for three to six months after making such radical dietary changes—but it is a
necessary
first step in restoring normal, healthy gut integrity.
Note, there are other food groups that may potentially be inflammatory or digestively disruptive— like FODMAPs (see page 119), high-oxalate foods, or high-histamine foods. If you’ve been following the Whole30 and these special protocols for sixty to ninety days and are still experiencing digestive issues or other autoimmune-related symptoms, consider working with a qualified nutritionist or functional-medicine practitioner to help you arrive at an ongoing protocol that will work for your particular condition and symptoms. A food journal can also help you identify potentially “healthy” foods that may be triggering unpleasant symptoms. Write down all the foods in your meals and snacks for a week, and note the severity and type of symptoms you experience after each to try to pinpoint the culprit(s).
This may seem like a no-brainer, but we get plenty of questions from people asking if they can follow our plan if they are allergic to eggs, seafood, nuts, or avocado.
The answer is, yes, of course! Just don’t eat the foods you are allergic to.
You want to
completely
eliminate
your exposure to any potentially inflammatory compound during your Whole30, so avoid that food or food group. None of the foods on our shopping list are mandatory—and there are plenty of healthy options in each category (protein, vegetable, good fat), so it should be easy for you to make appropriate choices.
In addition, your “allergy” to certain foods may not be a
true
allergy
—it may just be an intolerance or sensitivity, in which case, it
may
be reversible. Many have reported the reduction or elimination of food “allergies” after successful completion of their Whole30. Perhaps by eliminating intestinal permeability and restoring normal gut flora and fauna, your body’s immune system will relax enough to permit the reintroduction of certain foods.
However, this process requires at least six months of absolutely
no
exposure to the problematic food, and may not be safe or feasible for those with long-standing, life-threatening allergies. Work closely with your doctor and test this cautiously, please.
These particular lifestyle choices do present more of a challenge to our nutritional recommendations and Whole30 program. While our diet is not exclusively carnivorous, we do recommend the inclusion of animal protein for optimal health. However, it is still possible to reap many of the benefits of our healthy-eating plan while still honoring your ethical or religious obligations.
If your primary reason for becoming vegetarian or vegan was for health, we certainly hope we have made you reconsider! We don’t believe you can enjoy optimal health without eating animal protein (dairy doesn’t count), and we think we’ve provided a well-reasoned, well-sourced argument to back up our position. So if this is where you are coming from, give our plan a try! Go back to eating high-quality animal protein for thirty days (while implementing the rest of our recommendations) as a self-experiment. We’d be shocked if your health did not dramatically improve!
If you’ll eat some animal products (eggs, fish, etc.), then we recommend getting the bulk of your protein from these sources and supplementing with plant-based sources as little as possible. If your concerns are largely ethical—animal welfare, sustainability, your local economy, or global economic factors—know that there
are
ways to responsibly, ethically source meat, seafood, and eggs and supporting those efforts sends a strong message (financial and otherwise) to the large corporations invested in factory farming. We believe it is important to create an alternative food-supply system, but that cannot be done without the support of committed consumers.
If dairy is a viable source of protein, we recommend putting pastured, organic, fermented sources like yogurt or kefir at the top of your list. You could also use whey protein powder from grass-fed, organic sources, which would provide the protein you need with fewer downsides than other dairy products, including all forms of milk and cheese.
If you don’t eat any animal products, or if you find you still need to supplement your diet with plant-based protein sources, your best choices are minimally-processed, fermented soy products like tempeh or natto, or organic edamame (soybeans). You can also include nonfermented soy (like extra-firm tofu) and various legumes in rotation, making sure to soak them for twelve to twenty-four hours, rinse, and boil them for at least fifteen minutes to reduce the anti-nutrient and inflammatory compounds. A hemp- or pea-protein powder is also an option for you.
Avoid all grains and grain products, including seitan (which is made from wheat gluten) and pseudo-cereals like quinoa, as the downsides are too numerous. In addition, vegans will need to eat more carbohydrate and fat, to cover the missing calories from their relatively low protein diet.
You can download a free copy of our shopping list for vegetarians and vegans on our Web site (
http://whole9life.com/itstartswithfood
). In addition, refer to Appendix B for responsibly-sourced animal and vegetarian protein.
If you exercise regularly or play a sport, you’ll need to support that activity with extra nutrition and calories. Remember, your energy stores function like gas in your car. The more you drive, the quicker you’ll use up the gas in your tank.
Lower-intensity activity, like casual cycling, walking, hiking, or golf, burns more fat than carbohydrate, so you may not need to load up on starch on a daily basis. However, if you participate in high-intensity activity (like CrossFit, P90X, sprinting, or basketball) or longer-duration activities, like running or biking, you will probably need to include more carbohydrate than the average (less-active) person in your daily meals to maintain adequate glycogen stores. Throw in some carb-dense veggies like sweet potato, butternut squash, acorn squash, beets, pumpkin, or parsnips, and perhaps bump up your protein and fat and/or add an extra meal.
“High intensity” means the exercise is brief and you are close to an “all-out” effort. Often, it’s based on the rate of perceived exertion (RPE), how hard you
think
you’re working. You could also use heart rate to determine the level of your intensity, especially if you’re new to this of kind of training. If you are working above 75 percent of your max heart rate (conversation is impossible, save for short phrases or one-word bursts), that’s generally considered high-intensity effort. From our perspective, high-intensity training generally lasts less than ten or fifteen minutes—any longer, and you simply cannot continue to sustain near-maximal output. However, some exercise programs include workouts that last longer than that and expect participants to work as hard as possible the entire time. For the purposes of this discussion, we’ll call these training sessions “high intensity” too.
In addition, for those participating in either high-intensity or longer-duration activity, you’ll need to support your training session or athletic event with proper nutrition to help you fuel and recover.
All high-intensity exercisers need protein post-workout, but whether to include carbohydrate depends on the type of activity and metabolic status. If you are lean, muscular, healthy (insulin sensitive), and performance-oriented, you have a totally different context than someone who is overweight, metabolically deranged, and trying to get back on track with his health. For that reason, we recommend following our “post-workout carb curve,” which accounts for both your particular health status and the type and duration of activity.