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Hi Holly,

>

> Hello all! I just read " the book " and am very interested in

starting

> the diet. I've been gluten-free for almost 7 months and dairy-free

> for a little less than that. I'm not really sure about how to go

> about starting. Since I've been dairy-free for several months,

> should I start with the yogurt and dry cottage cheese... or should

I

> just wait and add that stuff later?

It depends on your reasons for going dairy free.

Some start the diet including the dairy but a larger portion wait a

while before trying some dairy. Many of those gradually try homemade

goat yogurt. Goat milk proteins are smaller than cow milk proteins.

Some continue to be dairy free and use dairy free recipes and nut

yogurt and/or dairy free acidophilus capsules/powders.

There is lots of great info at www.pecanbread.com

specifically for newbies:

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#transition

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#intro

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#menu

http://www.pecanbread.com/recipes.html

Also, I'm not understanding why

> it's okay to eat butter? Isn't butter made with cream? Any other

> advice for a n00b would be appreciated. Thanks! :)

This link explains why :

http://www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info/knowledge_base/kb/cultured_but

ter.htm

Sheila 44 mos SCD, 20 yrs UC

mom of 29 mos SCD

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Hi Holly,

>

> Hello all! I just read " the book " and am very interested in

starting

> the diet. I've been gluten-free for almost 7 months and dairy-free

> for a little less than that. I'm not really sure about how to go

> about starting. Since I've been dairy-free for several months,

> should I start with the yogurt and dry cottage cheese... or should

I

> just wait and add that stuff later?

It depends on your reasons for going dairy free.

Some start the diet including the dairy but a larger portion wait a

while before trying some dairy. Many of those gradually try homemade

goat yogurt. Goat milk proteins are smaller than cow milk proteins.

Some continue to be dairy free and use dairy free recipes and nut

yogurt and/or dairy free acidophilus capsules/powders.

There is lots of great info at www.pecanbread.com

specifically for newbies:

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#transition

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#intro

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#menu

http://www.pecanbread.com/recipes.html

Also, I'm not understanding why

> it's okay to eat butter? Isn't butter made with cream? Any other

> advice for a n00b would be appreciated. Thanks! :)

This link explains why :

http://www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info/knowledge_base/kb/cultured_but

ter.htm

Sheila 44 mos SCD, 20 yrs UC

mom of 29 mos SCD

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Hi Holly,

>

> Hello all! I just read " the book " and am very interested in

starting

> the diet. I've been gluten-free for almost 7 months and dairy-free

> for a little less than that. I'm not really sure about how to go

> about starting. Since I've been dairy-free for several months,

> should I start with the yogurt and dry cottage cheese... or should

I

> just wait and add that stuff later?

It depends on your reasons for going dairy free.

Some start the diet including the dairy but a larger portion wait a

while before trying some dairy. Many of those gradually try homemade

goat yogurt. Goat milk proteins are smaller than cow milk proteins.

Some continue to be dairy free and use dairy free recipes and nut

yogurt and/or dairy free acidophilus capsules/powders.

There is lots of great info at www.pecanbread.com

specifically for newbies:

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#transition

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#intro

http://www.pecanbread.com/foodprep.html#menu

http://www.pecanbread.com/recipes.html

Also, I'm not understanding why

> it's okay to eat butter? Isn't butter made with cream? Any other

> advice for a n00b would be appreciated. Thanks! :)

This link explains why :

http://www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info/knowledge_base/kb/cultured_but

ter.htm

Sheila 44 mos SCD, 20 yrs UC

mom of 29 mos SCD

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  • 9 months later...

Welcome...you will love it on the beach !

-Beth

Newbie

Today is the day I regain control my life again. My name is Jill, I'm

47 (yikes!), married to Ric, my son and his wife are giving me my

first grandbaby in January.

I had limited success with the Atkins diet a few years ago, but was

unable to stay with it long term. From what I've read and heard, the

SBD is the answer I've been looking for. I'll probably have a lot of

questions, so please bare with me while I work out the kinks.

My primary goal is to be able to run and play with Charly Marie when

she reaches toddling age, and not be the grandma that can't do all

those fun things with her. I have over 100 lbs to lose and by

spreading the lose out over a couple of years I think it's very do

able.

- Jill

Please send your recipes for inclusion in the Files to the Moderator at:

South-Beach-Diet-Getting-It-Right-owner

Reminder: The South Beach Diet is not low-carb. Nor is it low-fat. The South

Beach Diet teaches you to rely on the right carbs and the right fats-the good

ones - and enables you to live quite happily without the bad carbs and bad fats.

For more on this Way Of Eating please read " The South Beach Diet " by Arthur

Agatston, MD. ISBN 1-57954-814-8

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In a message dated 10/3/2005 11:50:29 AM Eastern Standard Time,

jill_in_tx@... writes:

I have over 100 lbs to lose and by

spreading the lose out over a couple of years I think it's very do

able.

Welcome, Jill!

I'm about 87-90 pounds down in my quest to lose 100+. I started four years

ago and had reached the above number only to put back 20. I've since taken

about that off again with South Beach, I started the last week in August.

Your plan is doable - you just have to put the work in. Good luck to you!

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Hello Jill!

Welcome to the group!

I too used to be on the Atkins diet before I got tired and concerned

about the heavy foods I had to eat. You will definitely find that the

SBD is a healthier solution to weight loss.

Just stick with the foods allowed and you will do fine. There are also

a lot of resources and information on the group's page (recipes, ideas

etc....). I definitely recommend you check them out.

Congrats on your first grandchild. I too am pregnant and am due in the

beginning of January. :)

Paola

--- Jill wrote:

> Today is the day I regain control my life again. My name is Jill, I'm

>

> 47 (yikes!), married to Ric, my son and his wife are giving me my

> first grandbaby in January.

>

> I had limited success with the Atkins diet a few years ago, but was

> unable to stay with it long term. From what I've read and heard, the

> SBD is the answer I've been looking for. I'll probably have a lot of

> questions, so please bare with me while I work out the kinks.

>

> My primary goal is to be able to run and play with Charly Marie when

> she reaches toddling age, and not be the grandma that can't do all

> those fun things with her. I have over 100 lbs to lose and by

> spreading the lose out over a couple of years I think it's very do

> able.

>

> - Jill

>

>

>

__________________________________

Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005

http://mail.yahoo.com

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Thanks for the warm welcome! I made it through my first day with no

problems. I ate snacks between meals, even though it felt totally

wrong to be on a diet and having to eat snacks! lol

Do any of you keep a daily diary of what you eat? I think I'm going to

do it, at least for awhile, since I'm not sure of what I should be

eating and this will at least give me something to refer back to.

- Jill

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Hey Jill! Congrats on the future grandkid!! I have a almost 4 month old son

and a 21 month old daughter. My mother has the problem of not being ablt to run

with the grandkids; she cannot even hold them most of the time. She had a rough

child hood growing up and her body is paying for it now. She recently found out

that the muscle in her arms is seperating from the bones and that is why she can

no longer hold the kids. She can't do her housework anymore either. A million

surgeries and none have done any good; she had her carpel tunnel drilled out and

some nerve work done on her elbow and wound up with fingers that have no feeling

in them and a left hand that is useless. Had her knee replaced only to be in

more pain afterword. I know I am getting off track here sorry everyone; please

those of you who pray keep her in your prayers please. My mom is a very

sensitive subject with me; I have had to grow up watching her in pain.

Jill wrote:Today is the day I regain control my life

again. My name is Jill, I'm

47 (yikes!), married to Ric, my son and his wife are giving me my

first grandbaby in January.

I had limited success with the Atkins diet a few years ago, but was

unable to stay with it long term. From what I've read and heard, the

SBD is the answer I've been looking for. I'll probably have a lot of

questions, so please bare with me while I work out the kinks.

My primary goal is to be able to run and play with Charly Marie when

she reaches toddling age, and not be the grandma that can't do all

those fun things with her. I have over 100 lbs to lose and by

spreading the lose out over a couple of years I think it's very do

able.

- Jill

Please send your recipes for inclusion in the Files to the Moderator at:

South-Beach-Diet-Getting-It-Right-owner

Reminder: The South Beach Diet is not low-carb. Nor is it low-fat. The South

Beach Diet teaches you to rely on the right carbs and the right fats-the good

ones - and enables you to live quite happily without the bad carbs and bad fats.

For more on this Way Of Eating please read " The South Beach Diet " by Arthur

Agatston, MD. ISBN 1-57954-814-8

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Wow Mellisa I had no idea you had lost so much!!! What an insperation you are

to everyone!!

I'm about 87-90 pounds down in my quest to lose 100+. I started four years

ago and had reached the above number only to put back 20. I've since taken

about that off again with South Beach, I started the last week in August.

Your plan is doable - you just have to put the work in. Good luck to you!

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  • 5 years later...
Guest guest

Dena, is WOE " way of eating " ? Welcome. hope you read some of the posts and especially the book titles. A good place to begin is " eat when you are hungry " and " stop when you are full " but there is so much more to it.   Sandy

 

    I am Dena from NC. I am 57 and have been trying to lose weight for 20 years.  I have tried every diet under the sun and am very interested in this WOE.



Dena

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Guest guest

Dena, is WOE " way of eating " ? Welcome. hope you read some of the posts and especially the book titles. A good place to begin is " eat when you are hungry " and " stop when you are full " but there is so much more to it.   Sandy

 

    I am Dena from NC. I am 57 and have been trying to lose weight for 20 years.  I have tried every diet under the sun and am very interested in this WOE.



Dena

IM Letter Created by franki ~ Incredible Creations

Just think about all the Stats and Personalized Tags you are missing by not joining PowerHouse IM

Come Join Us at Let It Snow Year 'Round ~ Font is CluffHmkBold

No Copyright Infringement Intended ~ Art from Group Share

" Snow Couple " BF370_12.21.09 ~ My Fotki 

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  • 3 months later...

Hi Christen,

I have the same problem. I can eat a lot of food before I feel a sense of

" fullenss. " All my life, I've either binged or starved, to the point where I

really didn't know when I had had enough, except when my stomach began to hurt,

but that's full beyond satiation.

I did go to a nutritionist who works with disordered eaters. She did not suggest

banning any food from my diet, to the contrary, she suggested eating the things

I like. She did, however, give me guidelines as to the amount of food of varying

nutrients a typical woman of my height and age needs to eat per day, and that

eating a little protein, carbs, and fats at each meal keeps me satisfied the

longest. I decided to stick with this simply to learn what it feels like to be

satisfied. I divided the amounts by four, made up my own menus to include

whatever foods I liked to eat, and added more as various cravings came up. I am

eating what I want, but i do have limits on portion size. If I want something

junky, then I go ahead and replace a meal with the junk food if it's something

I'm really craving, but within a certain portion size. My goal is also to become

a healthy eater.

For me, that helped tremendously to learn what it feels like to be satisfied. I

often must pull myself away after eating the specified amounts, but the eating I

want to continue with is not due to hunger, because once I am away from the

food, I am not physically hungry for several hours. I am not having the extreme

swings from binging to starving that I once had.

It's critical to wait until I'm physically hungry thought, because I can never

get enough of anything I'm not physically humgry for.

Sara

>

> Hello everyone! It's so refreshing to see a community of people helping and

encouraging one another and I have very much enjoyed reading the messages on

this site.

>

> I have been practicing IE for 2 months now. After years of depriving myself

my mind and body had finally had enough and things needed to change. I read

Fain's " The Self-Compassionate Diet " and Albers " Eat, Drink, and be

Mindful " .

>

> For me the most difficult part of this philosophy is knowing when to stop

eating. The dieting part of my mind tells me I am no longer hungry after a

glass of water while the binging side of my personality tells me to keep going

until it's difficult to move.

>

> Any thoughts and suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

>

> ~Christen

>

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Replying to my own post, I have spent some time today reading about intuitive

eating. I think maybe what I was doing is a form of dieting, or bordering on it.

But it did help me to learn what satiation feels like, which is for me the point

where my stomach feels neither hungry nor full. I am not aware of having a

stomach, just as I'm not aware of having an elbow or an ear as I go about my

day.

The thing I wonder about with intuitive eating is this....If there were only

natural foods available, I can see where the process of using intuitive eating

would work. But in a world where so much highly processed food abounds, I wonder

if the processing can override the body's intuition, I mean high salt, sugar,

fat. There was an article in our local Sunday paper about research now showing

that these have the same effect on brain chemistry as alcohol. Yet there are

many people in our society who do not have overeating issues.

> >

> > Hello everyone! It's so refreshing to see a community of people helping and

encouraging one another and I have very much enjoyed reading the messages on

this site.

> >

> > I have been practicing IE for 2 months now. After years of depriving myself

my mind and body had finally had enough and things needed to change. I read

Fain's " The Self-Compassionate Diet " and Albers " Eat, Drink, and be

Mindful " .

> >

> > For me the most difficult part of this philosophy is knowing when to stop

eating. The dieting part of my mind tells me I am no longer hungry after a

glass of water while the binging side of my personality tells me to keep going

until it's difficult to move.

> >

> > Any thoughts and suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

> >

> > ~Christen

> >

>

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Replying to my own post, I have spent some time today reading about intuitive

eating. I think maybe what I was doing is a form of dieting, or bordering on it.

But it did help me to learn what satiation feels like, which is for me the point

where my stomach feels neither hungry nor full. I am not aware of having a

stomach, just as I'm not aware of having an elbow or an ear as I go about my

day.

The thing I wonder about with intuitive eating is this....If there were only

natural foods available, I can see where the process of using intuitive eating

would work. But in a world where so much highly processed food abounds, I wonder

if the processing can override the body's intuition, I mean high salt, sugar,

fat. There was an article in our local Sunday paper about research now showing

that these have the same effect on brain chemistry as alcohol. Yet there are

many people in our society who do not have overeating issues.

> >

> > Hello everyone! It's so refreshing to see a community of people helping and

encouraging one another and I have very much enjoyed reading the messages on

this site.

> >

> > I have been practicing IE for 2 months now. After years of depriving myself

my mind and body had finally had enough and things needed to change. I read

Fain's " The Self-Compassionate Diet " and Albers " Eat, Drink, and be

Mindful " .

> >

> > For me the most difficult part of this philosophy is knowing when to stop

eating. The dieting part of my mind tells me I am no longer hungry after a

glass of water while the binging side of my personality tells me to keep going

until it's difficult to move.

> >

> > Any thoughts and suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

> >

> > ~Christen

> >

>

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Replying to my own post, I have spent some time today reading about intuitive

eating. I think maybe what I was doing is a form of dieting, or bordering on it.

But it did help me to learn what satiation feels like, which is for me the point

where my stomach feels neither hungry nor full. I am not aware of having a

stomach, just as I'm not aware of having an elbow or an ear as I go about my

day.

The thing I wonder about with intuitive eating is this....If there were only

natural foods available, I can see where the process of using intuitive eating

would work. But in a world where so much highly processed food abounds, I wonder

if the processing can override the body's intuition, I mean high salt, sugar,

fat. There was an article in our local Sunday paper about research now showing

that these have the same effect on brain chemistry as alcohol. Yet there are

many people in our society who do not have overeating issues.

> >

> > Hello everyone! It's so refreshing to see a community of people helping and

encouraging one another and I have very much enjoyed reading the messages on

this site.

> >

> > I have been practicing IE for 2 months now. After years of depriving myself

my mind and body had finally had enough and things needed to change. I read

Fain's " The Self-Compassionate Diet " and Albers " Eat, Drink, and be

Mindful " .

> >

> > For me the most difficult part of this philosophy is knowing when to stop

eating. The dieting part of my mind tells me I am no longer hungry after a

glass of water while the binging side of my personality tells me to keep going

until it's difficult to move.

> >

> > Any thoughts and suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

> >

> > ~Christen

> >

>

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