Read Keto Clarity: Your Definitive Guide to the Benefits of a Low-Carb, High-Fat Diet Online
Authors: Jimmy Moore
Tags: #Health; Fitness & Dieting, #Diets & Weight Loss, #Low Carb, #Nutrition, #Reference, #Reference & Test Preparation
DOCTOR’S NOTE FROM DR. ERIC WESTMAN: Sometimes the number on the scale can be misleading. Our total weight is a combination of body fat, lean muscle mass, and water. In our clinic, a special scale separates out the fat weight from the water weight, and when the total weight hasn’t changed, we often we see that the fat weight has gone down (which is good) while the water weight has gone up (not so good). If the water weight builds up a lot, an obesity medicine doctor like myself might recommend a diuretic to assist in removing the excess water weight.
Why do I have to eat more dietary fat on a ketogenic diet if I have plenty of fat on my body to burn as fuel?
Insulin resistance increases glucose and insulin levels, trapping fat within fat cells so it can’t be released for energy. People with insulin resistance already have excessive body fat, and because of their high insulin levels, this fat isn’t readily available for energy production. This pushes the body and brain to rely almost solely on glucose for energy, and this is clearly not a healthy metabolic state. Think of this as your body and brain on a Twinkie—not a pretty metabolic picture! |
– Dr. Bill Wilson
It may sound strange that you need to eat fat to burn fat, especially for those who are overweight or obese.
It comes down to the purpose of consuming fat. Dietary fats fill in the gaps left when you cut down on carbohydrates and proteins. These fats help to fill you up and begin the process of creating ketones. Once you’re in ketosis, you’ll use not only the dietary fat for fuel but also stored body fat.
Some people erroneously think they can cut way down on their fat intake to try to burn more of their body fat. But doing this would be perilous to what you are trying to accomplish in your ketogenic lifestyle. You’d be hungrier and more irritable, you’d experience intense cravings (mostly for carbohydrates), and you’d probably get so frustrated by all of this that you’d simply give up. It’s not worth going through all of that when all you really need to do is embrace consuming more fat in your diet so you can lose the fat on your body.
Remember, it makes sense to eat fat when your body is a fat-burning machine!
I’m a woman who’s approaching menopause. Can ketosis bring back balance to my hormones without the need for medications?
Ladies who are dealing with the frustration of hormones that have gone all whackadoodle, be of good cheer. A ketogenic diet is an incredibly effective way to balance your hormones and bring them back in line. It may not happen overnight, and complete healing may take some time depending on the severity of your personal situation—you may need to consult with a physician who can help you work through these issues. But consuming a low-carb, moderate-protein, high-fat diet can certainly be a powerful modality for helping you deal with menopause without medications like hormone replacement therapy.
Atkins nurse Jacqueline Eberstein has herself gone through the struggle of trying to manage her weight and stabilize her hormones through the inevitable changes of menopause. Describing it as “an eye-opener,” Eberstein realized she had to cut way back on her carbohydrate intake, to around 20 grams a day, and even that kept her just “barely in ketosis.” Staying ketogenic is more of a challenge after menopause, and you may see the return of hunger, cravings, and other hormone-induced symptoms.
Eberstein says all of this can be discouraging for older women who desperately want to feel “normal” again, but staying within your personal carbohydrate tolerance and protein threshold while eating plenty of healthy saturated and monounsaturated fats to satiety will put you in the best position possible with your health. For her, it took several years of “hard work and establishing a bioidentical hormone regimen” along with a ketogenic diet to get back to where she was before menopause. Staying low-carb and high-fat helped Eberstein keep from gaining more weight, and eventually she got her weight back under control. These days, she consumes 20 to 30 grams of carbohydrates daily because that’s all she can tolerate. “But the alternative is unacceptable,” Eberstein says. “I can live happily with this.”
This is by no means a comprehensive list of questions you may have about ketogenic diets, but we’ve done our best to share some of the more common ones. If you have a specific question about keto that isn’t addressed here, please feel free to email us at [email protected] and we’ll try to find out the answer for you.
Coming up in the next chapter are eight inspiring success stories of people who have turned their life around as a result of being on a ketogenic diet. If you need a swift kick in the pants to get you going, this is the chapter to make that happen.
Key Keto Clarity Concepts
When you start a ketogenic diet, I recommend writing down your goals and keeping a daily log of your progress. This will help keep you motivated and accountable. The key to success with any change is consistency and persistence.
– Dr. Bill Wilson
Perhaps you’ve been reading this book with an open yet skeptical mind so far and you’re wondering how ketosis works in the lives of real people. In chapter 16, we’ll begin revealing what the scientific literature says regarding being in a state of ketosis. But there’s nothing like the inspiring testimonial of a life that has been changed forever for the better.
I’ve already shared my own weight and health transformation story, and now I want to introduce you to eight more people whose lives have been radically altered since they began following a low-carb, moderate-protein, high-fat, ketogenic nutritional plan. Let their stories inspire you to give it a go for yourself.
Lynne Daniel Ivey
Durham, North Carolina – Age 53
Lynne started her dieting efforts at the tender age of ten when she attended her first Weight Watchers meeting. In the decades that followed, she continued to struggle with managing her weight despite going on diet after diet, feeling hungrier and hungrier each time. She desperately wanted to get thin, stay thin, and never feel the agony of being constantly hungry ever again.