Guest guest Posted February 21, 2008 Report Share Posted February 21, 2008 I am very glad I found this list, as I have read GAPS and have jumped in and started the diet willy nilly, for reasons I'll explain below. I have an 18 yo biological daughter and a 10 yo adopted son. They are the reason I am on this journey of gut healing, but I know that I am feeling better as a result too. It's pretty difficult to convince a teenager to go on such a diet, but I saw my opportunity with the beginning of Lent, since she usually gives up sugared foods during this time as a religious discipline. She's very good about it, too, so I worked on her for a while to get her agree to do the diet for six weeks. I just wanted her to see how much better she could feel, and then hopefully she'd be more open to making better food choices when she moves out of our house. So far, she has kept to the diet very well, as far as I know, except for one big infraction on Sunday night, when she was gone all evening in the company of another family. They went to Chipotle, and she lost her grip and ordered a burrito. The strangest thing happened though. (Sorry for the graphic details here, but I just have to ask about this) When she got home a few hours later, she tossed the entire thing back up - totally undigested! She felt fine aftwareds and wasn't hungry. Has anyone had this experience on the diet? I am unsure of what to think about this. Maybe it isn't anything to be concerned about at all? Maybe it's a good thing? So far she says she doesn't feel any differently, but she has never been one to be able to tell how she feels. Her symptoms include ADD, Raynaud's Disease, arthritis, lax tendons, sensory defensiveness, migraine, learning difficulties, writing difficulties. My son (b1998 a2001 RAD symptoms, ADHD, anxiety, learning disabilities, speech delay, CAPD, short term memory deficit) on the other hand, is a new boy after 2 weeks on this diet. His tolerance for frustration is much higher, he happily accepts redirection, he even has a bit of a sense of humor about himself. And best of all: no raging. My problem is that he thinks that after six weeks we'll be done with the diet and can go back to eating exactly the way we did before! And there is no way we're going back there aain now that we've gotten to know this new, relaxed and happy kid. I have tried to gently explain to him that things are going to be different even after the six weeks are over, but he just wants to talk about the foods he'll get to eat on and after Easter. He dearly loves chcolate, and he wants so badly to take Lunchables to school (everybody else gets to eat them for lunch - uh huh). So I am wondering what to do when this deadline comes. I know I kind of backed myself into a corner by setting a time limit, but it was the only way my daughter was going to agree to do it. Thanks for listening. I'd love to hear any input you have on any of this. Ann Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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