Quote:
Originally Posted by mjf
Avoiding greasy food and sugar is a good idea, but some of the foods you mentioned don't really need to be avoided. Peas, beans, and nuts are good for you, unless they have bad stuff added to them, so always check the ingredients (for example, beans may have added sugar or salt; nuts may have added oil). Some starches are good, for example starchy vegetables like sweet potato and pumpkin, and whole grains like brown rice and quinoa.
I'd suggest eating mostly whole foods and try to avoid foods that are highly-processed.
You should be eating more than 1200 calories (probably around 1500), but I don't know how much you exercise so it's hard to give an accurate number. Eating too little will slow down your metabolism and make progress harder.
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I'm doing a cleanse over the first two weeks hence the striped down diet. I'm not exercising at present. I have Endo so for 7 - 10 days a month I can't really do anything strenuous ( even walking is rough). Over the next 8 weeks I'll be gradually adding stuff back into my diet until I'm eating everything again but with better control. I'm staying away from canned stuff though. that one is a long term objective.
I did a plan like this a couple years back an the results were great but it was far more drastic (there was about 20 things I could eat in the first week including hers and spices). I was also limited to about 650 cals a day. Not pleasant let me tell you and not sustainable for me long-term.
The basic plan right now is to continue for 2 weeks at current pace then add back in more and more foods until by week 8 I'm eating everything. Exercise starts when I start adding back in foods at which time I'll be increasing my daily caloric limit