Weight Loss Surgery If you've had it, or are considering it, share your discussions here

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Old 07-19-2007, 07:53 AM   #1  
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Default The Atkin's diet?! (long)

After reading this article, am I going to be on the Atkin's diet the rest of my life?!?! I was excited when I saw WLS cookbooks that showed a lot of different recipes and now this article. I hated the Atkin's diet!
Copied From Bariatric Support Center International:

“Just This Once Won’t Hurt . . .”

by Ken Miller

I’ve had the opportunity to closely watch the weight-loss journeys of hundreds of WLS patients during the last two or three years as I’ve studied those who are very successful and those who struggle.

Almost everyone has plateaus along the way. Some lose weight rapidly and consistently; they reach their goal weight quickly and are able to easily maintain their weight when they get there. Meanwhile others lose weight much more slowly and some never reach their goal weight. Most of those who lose slowly, with extended plateaus along the way, usually struggle much harder to maintain their weight once they reach their goal than those who lost weight quickly and consistently.

The number one factor that affects a WLS patient’s rate of weight-loss and the ease with which they are able to maintain their weight after they reach their goal is the intake of refined carbohydrates.

When they start their journey everyone wants to know . . . “How fast will I lose weight?” “Do you think I can actually lose all this weight?” “Do you think I can do it in a year?” Those are difficult questions to answer because we can’t predict, just by looking at them, which people will lose quickly and which ones will lose slowly.

The number one factor that affects a WLS patient’s rate of weight-loss and the ease with which they are able to maintain their weight after they reach their goal is the intake of refined carbohydrates.

Of course there are rare exceptions, but my observations clearly show these two facts:

Those WLS patients who say to themselves, “Just this once won’t hurt anything . . . I’ll go back to no carbs tomorrow,” and eat refined carbohydrates struggle to reach their goal weight and then, if they do reach their goal, they have a much harder time maintaining their weight than those patients who don’t.

Those WLS patients who eat only complex carbohydrates and who do not eat any refined carbohydrates lose weight rapidly and consistently and they have a much easier time maintaining their weight during the following years.

So, here’s my advice to those who might be interested; Don’t make the mistake of saying to yourself, “Just this once won’t hurt anything.” It will. The consequences of that decision won’t be immediately evident to you; it will take time before they show up. But, they WILL show up, and by the time they do, it will be too late to go back and “fix it.”

Don’t cheat yourself out of the final success that you can achieve and maintain for the rest of your life, by trading it for “Just this once . . .” The Carb Monster shows no mercy; not today, and not tomorrow, or next year.

I know that’s very black and white advice. It’s not sugar coated; it doesn’t taste good, or feel good, and it might create fear in some WLS patients who have already cheated themselves. I hope so. The good news is that the sooner you banish the Carb Monster from your life, the easier the rest of the journey will be for you. I also hope it will scare every new patient enough that they’ll use those initial few months following surgery to banish the Carb Monster forever. There will never be an easier time to do it. It only gets harder later.

I expect there will be those who want to express their opinion on this subject . . . both those who believe they are exceptions to what I’ve said, and those who are willing to take a couple of minutes out of their lives to warn other WLS patients about what happened to them when they said, “Just this once won’t hurt . . .”

Ken Miller, President ([email protected])
Bariatric Support Centers International
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Old 07-19-2007, 08:55 AM   #2  
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NANCY!!! stop panicking! the emphasis is on NO REFINED CARBS - not NO CARBS. so, we SHOULD eat only whole grains - that stuff that melts in your mouth [aka refined carbs] - like pretzels, chips, cake, muffins, etc - are not good ideas, other than as an occasional treat - just like with everyone else.

and that's the way everyone, regardless of whether or not they've had surgery, is supposed to eat [take a look at the updated FDA food pyramid]. the main difference, however, is that we have to eat more protein than other people. as a practical matter, since we physically can't eat as much as everyone else, we DO appear to eat 'atkins' style. but we're also supposed to watch the fat intake, which runs contrary to most people's interpretation of Atkins.
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Old 07-19-2007, 09:48 AM   #3  
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I whole heartedly agree with the artice. I was one of those who tested limits and was eating any and all refined carbs. I never reached goal and experienced a 30 lb regain before I said enough is enough. I do not follow adkins, I follow the sugar busters diet which allows low glycemic carbs. I have been following it for 3 weeks now. Weight is coming off slowly (yes, I am also exercising) but a pleasant surprise is that some irritating problems that I had like lots of gas, feeling bloated, energy depleted, even my chronic constipation is improving. On sugarbusters I get to eat lots of veggies, low sugar fruit, whole grain breads & pasta's in moderation along with the protein.
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Old 07-19-2007, 10:35 AM   #4  
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This isn't WLS specific, but I've been reading up on this website lately. http://www.atkinsexposed.org/ Kind of scared the bejeezus out of me.

Maybe you want to step away from the "being on a diet forever" mentality and think of transitioning to a better way of eating you can live with, and maybe even like, forever. Even if you've had WLS I don't think you'd have to have an "extreme" diet to be healthy.
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Old 07-20-2007, 08:28 AM   #5  
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Atkins is a very good diet "when followed correctly."

Most people think Atkins its all you can eat bacon, ribs, cheese and butter when its not. Once your on maintenance your adding more good carbs into your diet and if you stay away from the lowcarb frankinfoods you eat very clean following the plan.

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