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~~HoneyComb~~
2009-09-27, 04:46 PM
This is a list that helps you understand how daily intake of carbohydrates effect the way you gain or lose weight. It's been helpful to me and there was a time when I was in the Steady, Insidious Weight Gain & the Danger Zone:nono:. It's very interesting and a good way to keep mindful of your carbs.


300 or more grams/day - Danger Zone!
Easy to reach with the “normal” American diet (cereals, pasta, rice, bread, waffles, pancakes, muffins, soft drinks, packaged snacks, sweets, desserts). High risk of excess fat storage, inflammation, increased disease markers including Metabolic Syndrome or diabetes. Sharp reduction of grains and other processed carbs is critical unless you are on the “chronic cardio” treadmill (which has its own major drawbacks).

150-300 grams/day – Steady, Insidious Weight Gain
Continued higher insulin-stimulating effect prevents efficient fat burning and contributes to widespread chronic disease conditions. This range – irresponsibly recommended by the USDA and other diet authorities – can lead to the statistical US average gain of 1.5 pounds of fat per year for forty years.

100-150 grams/day – Primal Blueprint Maintenance Range
This range based on body weight and activity level. When combined with Primal exercises, allows for genetically optimal fat burning and muscle development. Range derived from Grok’s (ancestors’) example of enjoying abundant vegetables and fruits and avoiding grains and sugars.

50-100 grams/day – Primal Sweet Spot for Effortless Weight Loss
Minimizes insulin production and ramps up fat metabolism. By meeting average daily protein requirements (.7 – 1 gram per pound of lean bodyweight formula), eating nutritious vegetables and fruits (easy to stay in 50-100 gram range, even with generous servings), and staying satisfied with delicious high fat foods (meat, fish, eggs, nuts, seeds), you can lose one to two pounds of body fat per week and then keep it off forever by eating in the maintenance range.

0-50 grams/day – Ketosis and Accelerated Fat Burning
Acceptable for a day or two of Intermittent Fasting towards aggressive weight loss efforts, provided adequate protein, fat and supplements are consumed otherwise. May be ideal for many diabetics. Not necessarily recommended as a long-term practice for otherwise healthy people due to resultant deprivation of high nutrient value vegetables and fruits.

Here's the website link:

http://www.marksdailyapple.com/the-primal-carbohydrate-continuum/

Mom23
2009-09-27, 05:11 PM
Thanks for sharing...I have been mindful of my carbs while trying to lose these last few pounds. I usually have them at breakfast and maybe lunch, but rarely at dinner, and that seems to be working out well for me.

~~HoneyComb~~
2009-09-27, 05:15 PM
Thanks for sharing...I have been mindful of my carbs while trying to lose these last few pounds. I usually have them at breakfast and maybe lunch, but rarely at dinner, and that seems to be working out well for me.

I try not to have carbs in the evening either--breakfast or lunch only--for dinner and late night snacks it's mostly protein:yep:

ltown
2009-09-27, 05:38 PM
Great information I needed this during the BFC challenge. thanks

Naturallong81
2009-09-27, 05:57 PM
Thanks for sharing. I'mm looking at my intake right now.

misseyblue
2009-09-27, 07:51 PM
This was helpful, thanks for sharing.

Chromia
2009-11-11, 04:31 PM
:bump:

This is helpful. I recently started avoiding carbs in the evening when I saw Brownchiq's food guide (it's here (http://www.longhaircareforum.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7716609&postcount=14) for anyone who hasn't seen it). If I want rice, pasta, bread, etc. I'll have it at breakfast or lunch.

I'll have vegetables and maybe some fruit or wheat bran (30 calories and 6g fiber!) at dinner, but that's it for carbs in the evening.

MizzBrit
2009-11-15, 12:33 AM
thanks!.im gonna try the no carbs for dinner thing

~~HoneyComb~~
2009-11-15, 06:36 AM
I saw a "health site" the other day that suggested that diabetics take in 200-300 grams of carbs a day. According to this curve, that would put them in the "steady insidious weight gain" catagory, and it produces a higher insulin-stimulating affect--a nono for diabetics. Makes me wonder what is the real motive of so-called "healthy websites" like that.

Babylilac
2009-11-15, 12:05 PM
Thanks Honeycomb my love with carbs has to be limited to 50-100g a day .

Avaya
2010-02-10, 01:28 PM
Bumping as a reminder to all!

~~HoneyComb~~
2010-02-10, 01:39 PM
I've been keeping between 0-50 no more than 100 grams a day for months now.

I'll never go back to 200-300 grams of carbs a day--that was awful for me.