Gimpy
The Living Force
Laura said:I would use ground cashews since I canNOT tolerate almonds. They are evil and deadly!
Fwiw....they are all evil and deadly. (tree nut allergies stink)
Laura said:I would use ground cashews since I canNOT tolerate almonds. They are evil and deadly!
anart said:Laura said:While we intend to stay ketogenic most of the time, and definitely for the duration of the current experiment, we ARE planning on some Christmas feast goodies which will include cakes and pies - all gluten and dairy free, of course - and maybe cookies made with nut flours. AFTER the holidays, we'll go back to total ketosis and see how we do through that challenge.
Just be prepared to put on 8-10 pounds over a three week period. ;)
Gimpy said:Laura said:I would use ground cashews since I canNOT tolerate almonds. They are evil and deadly!
Fwiw....they are all evil and deadly. (tree nut allergies stink)
Laura said:
anart said:Laura said:
Laura said:While we intend to stay ketogenic most of the time, and definitely for the duration of the current experiment, we ARE planning on some Christmas feast goodies which will include cakes and pies - all gluten and dairy free, of course - and maybe cookies made with nut flours. AFTER the holidays, we'll go back to total ketosis and see how we do through that challenge.
Psalehesost said:It is a strange concept - celebrating by eating unhealthy things that objectively keep everyone from being at their best, physically and mentally. Frankly, it is clear that you are still programmed in this respect.
Laura said:Psalehesost said:It is a strange concept - celebrating by eating unhealthy things that objectively keep everyone from being at their best, physically and mentally. Frankly, it is clear that you are still programmed in this respect.
Undoubtedly! But there are such great cooks and bakers in this house, and we have such wonderful holiday meals that are fairly righteous, and we enjoy making them and having others enjoy them so much, we just figure that this is one program we'll allow to continue to run for very short periods of time. I mean, having a wonderful feast in the middle of winter when things are so depressing, no sun, cold, etc... well, it just feels warm and cozy!
Laura said:Psalehesost said:It is a strange concept - celebrating by eating unhealthy things that objectively keep everyone from being at their best, physically and mentally. Frankly, it is clear that you are still programmed in this respect.
Undoubtedly! But there are such great cooks and bakers in this house, and we have such wonderful holiday meals that are fairly righteous, and we enjoy making them and having others enjoy them so much, we just figure that this is one program we'll allow to continue to run for very short periods of time. I mean, having a wonderful feast in the middle of winter when things are so depressing, no sun, cold, etc... well, it just feels warm and cozy!
Odyssey said:Laura said:Psalehesost said:It is a strange concept - celebrating by eating unhealthy things that objectively keep everyone from being at their best, physically and mentally. Frankly, it is clear that you are still programmed in this respect.
Undoubtedly! But there are such great cooks and bakers in this house, and we have such wonderful holiday meals that are fairly righteous, and we enjoy making them and having others enjoy them so much, we just figure that this is one program we'll allow to continue to run for very short periods of time. I mean, having a wonderful feast in the middle of winter when things are so depressing, no sun, cold, etc... well, it just feels warm and cozy!
Surely our paleolithic ancestors were'nt in ketosis 100% of the time. Perhaps Grok and Grokette stumbled upon some roots and berries, bagged a couple of wild boar and everyone feasted and knocked themselves out of ketosis for a day or two then went right back to business as usual the rest of the time.
A well functioning meat sac with lots of wild mtDNA should be able to handle a feast on high holiday then be able bounce back without too much difficulty, imo. Whoever tries it should just take note and see whatever physical "fallout" is worth it.
However for me, at least, I am certainly nowhere near that stage of being. Buying back into the illusion of food, and emotional attachment to it, would undoubtedly have other effects on me besides the minor physical poisoning, as whenever I do this it seems to lower my 'FRV' and feeling of being on the right path. Even just some almond flour shortbread, I can almost feel it directly feeding the predator within.
My guess is that for a perfectly healthy (physically and psychologically) individual to knowingly indulge in the false pleasures of 3D, it wouldn't be too much of an issue. However for those of us on the road to healing, it is just another unnecessary setback.
Odyssey said:Note that Laura referred to "righteous" meals, not pizza and cookies (at least not prepared the usual way with wheat flour). When I think of feast I think of foods higher in carbs and protein than a ketogenic diet would call for but still within the realms of gluten free etc. and tolerable to one's own system. But those are just my thoughts.
Meager1 said:However for me, at least, I am certainly nowhere near that stage of being. Buying back into the illusion of food, and emotional attachment to it, would undoubtedly have other effects on me besides the minor physical poisoning, as whenever I do this it seems to lower my 'FRV' and feeling of being on the right path. Even just some almond flour shortbread, I can almost feel it directly feeding the predator within.
My guess is that for a perfectly healthy (physically and psychologically) individual to knowingly indulge in the false pleasures of 3D, it wouldn't be too much of an issue. However for those of us on the road to healing, it is just another unnecessary setback.
Yup. I have to agree with you.
I fell off the paleo wagon while on vacation this summer and now I`m finding it next to impossible to get back on and stay on. I come up with all kinds of weak excuses to eat trash food.
I recently had beer at a family reunion, telling myself, I`ll just have to start over again "tomorrow".. well tomorrow just seems to bring some other excuse, and I`m struggling to get back and stay back, now.
It seems like it was all for nothing, if you can`t stay with it!
And now after a year or more with no weird dreams, I`m right back to having the shamanic type dream thing going on again! Coincidence? I doubt it.
I have tried the bone broth, but just can`t make myself drink it.
Seems I actually "hate" the smell of it and just can`t do it.
I know that I can stick with the fatty meat and very low carbs, but that bone broth stuff is out of the question!
It`s really, really hard to get back, once you have fallen off the wagon and now the craving for junk food is just horrible!
A new battle every day.
Laura said:Psalehesost said:It is a strange concept - celebrating by eating unhealthy things that objectively keep everyone from being at their best, physically and mentally. Frankly, it is clear that you are still programmed in this respect.
Undoubtedly! But there are such great cooks and bakers in this house, and we have such wonderful holiday meals that are fairly righteous, and we enjoy making them and having others enjoy them so much, we just figure that this is one program we'll allow to continue to run for very short periods of time. I mean, having a wonderful feast in the middle of winter when things are so depressing, no sun, cold, etc... well, it just feels warm and cozy!