Guest guest Posted July 12, 2004 Report Share Posted July 12, 2004 In a message dated 7/12/2004 8:10:16 AM Pacific Standard Time, n7eoj@... writes: I thought I was entering into the discussion, rather than hitting a " stumbling block " . I am at fault for using the term " debating " . I was asking for clarification or justification of the 45 & 80 g/meal " limits " relative to the 180g/day average I was told. What are the sources? How did they arrive at those figures? I'm OK. I'm operating midway between those extremes, but am curious how they are derived. Hi , as I explained last time, it is the normal " starting point " for a diabetic, 45 grams of carbs for meals, 15 or 20 for a snack. This is changed to a lower number if the person is very inactive or on a weight loss program. I have a friend on another loop, who is a strong athlete, and is allowed even more carbs because of his endurance training. Not many of us are like that though ;-) My observation about counting carbs is the same as doctors make about counting calories. It is the total at the end of the day, or better, the average over days relative to physical activity that matters, not everytime you consume or consider consumption. Controlled portions and physical activity relative to consumption is probably better operational practice than counting individual carbs or calories. , while I see you seem to work fine like this, for the average diabetic, the dieticians would ratcher see 6 small meals (less than 45) than even a 45 meal. This is less likely to give you a high BG reading. This actually does woek, and your A1c is much better for it because it does not have the highs. This is a Discussion group. Through Discussion we learn, update and possibly discard obsolete or miss-information. This group currently has 450 members. That's 450 different opinions on every topic. It is human nature for each of us to believe we are experts on our respective areas of interest. Some are more correct than others, but all have reached that perception through some form of personal inquiry and rationalization. Open Discussion helps us all re- evaluate our internalized information. I agree that discussion is good, it makes an interesting read, for all of us. I don't think that too many of us are considered " experts " in the medical field. But, we do know a lot about the disease we all study. It is important to everyone, if they see something that they disagree with, they should raise a question. I have no problem with this, I just think we should try to do it from a positive position. Agreed? >> Through friends that have coverage and therefore access to the >> needed classes, I've been told to limit carb intake to 180g/day or >> 60g/meal. I'm simultaneously told it is better to eat 4-6 times a >> day rather than the old standard " 3 meals a day " . On here, I see >> lively discussion debating " limits " between 45-80g/meal. >> It gets confusing. It seems to me, a daily " limit " or average >> would make more sense and be easier to live with. > , does it make the term " stumbling block " come to mind? :-) Those " stumbling blocks " motivate me to search for answers consistant with logic and some kind of disciplined inquiry. The Internet is full of self-proclaimed experts with a wide range of facts on every topic. Passive acceptance of anything read, especially on the Internet, is dangerous. I absolutely agree. I also agree if you tell diabetics they can habe 80 carbs at a meal, they are going to be in real trouble. Just like saying to them, here is your limit, do it anyway you want. This may work with a weight watcher like program, but it willnot and cannot work for a diabetic. > This is exactly what I feared. When you come out and say things > that are in complete opposition to what they are learning, you > throw them off. It is a sad disservice to humanity dear friend!;-) It is sadder disservice to humanity to force passive acceptance of a righid single point of view without active inquiry. All of scientific discovery is based on questioning and testing established facts. Over time the majority of facts are improved upon through this process. This is a service to humanity. I am not in the habit of forcing passive acceptance on anyone. I just made the point your theory is dangerous and needs to be corrected, before it causes damage. > I hope this has shown you if you want to debate, do it off list > where it does not throw a monkey wrench into their thought > patterns. Does this imply that all information presented in this Discussion group is absolute fact and there should be no public discussion or debate regarding sources and contradictory scientific findings? If so, this should be a Newsletter rather than Discussion group. What qualifies the expert facts to be presented? You will have to seek that from , it is his group. I just know as far as I am concerned, it is important to correct misconseptions. Passive acceptance of any source of information is a monkey wrench in one's thinking process. It is easy and mandatory for us to check the facts stated by anyone and decide whether they are valid. The only problem , is, that many people will just accept this as true, simply because they read it. If you see something that is wrong, it can be challenged for corectness, right? My Discussion groups are just that. Only if the Discussion goes tangentially off topic or too emotionally charged, do I suggest they take it offline. This is what I am concerned about, also. This is the most informative, positive, friendly, comfortable group I've encountered on this topic. I'm glad I found it. My thanks to all that have put the time, effort and interest into making it that way. I hope it continues to have an unimpeded flow of good, valid information...and recipes! See, we finally found something to agree on! Hugs, Marilyn Marilyn Moderator for Diabetic_Recipes dnevessr@... Opinions expressed are solely my own and should not be mistaken for Professional advice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.