Quote:
I lost 130 lbs on what most people would consider to be a fairly low-fat, fairly high carb plan (averaging 25-30% protein, 15-20% fat, and around 50-55% carbs...what satisfies ME is vegetables (and lots of them!). For someone satisfied by higher amounts of fat, my plan would never work in a million years...that person wouldn't be satisfied and would have food cravings, causing them to eat more calories than they might have otherwise. But a low carb plan would never work in a million years for me, because I wouldn't be satisfied either, and would be diving headfirst into too much food.
This is pretty much my experience as well.
That being said, the only numbers I really, really track are my
calories.
But of course wanting to get the very most from each and every precious one, I choose those calories very, very carefully. Being so choosy keeps all my
other numbers "correct". And I need/require
VOLUME.
I do eat fats, but I limit them as they have 9 calories per gram as opposed to the 4 grams that proteins and carbs have. When I do eat my fat - I make sure it's healthy fat. Salmon, avocado, olive oil, the occasional nuts sprinkled on a salad. I don't eat beef. But I was never a beef eater.
I eat tons of carbs. Tons. But they're the
complex ones. My carbs have to work
for me, not
against me. My carbs come from tomatoes, cauliflower, turnips, carrots, cabbage and all the other tons of vegetables I eat on a daily basis as well as from fruit.
The simple carbs - the stripped down ones (pasta, rice, bread, muffins, crackers, cereal, etc.) leave me craving for more carbs.
Then there's the protein. The chicken and turkey breast, the no fat yogurt, beans, fish, the occasional soy product.
Wanting to get the most bang for my buck calorie wise, I need to choose foods that satisfy me, keep me full, keep my sugar levels in check, provide me with the most volume and nutrients. Veggies. Veggies. Veggies. Protein. Protein and Fruit.