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I know we live in a day and age where pretty much everything has been through some sort of process, and I'm okay with that. I intend to primarily eat whole veggies, fruits, nuts, grains and proteins (meat, fish, shellfish, etc.) but there will definitely still be dairy in there. How do you feel since having switched to that sort of diet? Do you EVER eat anything else? I plan to even have my "treats" be whole foods/organic/natural. (Has anyone else made that same choice?) |
Joss- I think it has helped me to feel fuller, since I am usually getting more bang for my buck. And I don't have as much rebound hunger, which I would get after I ate or drank something altered to be "light", etc.
I still eat ice cream, dark chocolate, pizza, etc. The biggest change for me was my twice daily mocha. I always made it at home, but coffee creamer had to go. I used just cream for a while, but it wasn't the same. It took a month, but I eventually just stopped wanting it. Such a small thing! And I get annoyed when I can't find something like tortillas without them being made with crap. Like, hello...it's a freaking tortilla. Why is is made with extra junk?? So I make my own. Like my general approach to eating and exercise, if I can't do it for the next sixty years, I'm not doing it! ;-) I enjoy being able to have the convenience of packaged foods when necessary, so I don't think I'll ever go "au natural". |
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This. This. This! |
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I still straight up calorie count and have "junk" but it's been happening less frequently |
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Thank you so much for all the chit chat so far! I'm really pumped about this little change. :) |
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That being said, I'm happy I'm making this change! I will admit that my coffee this morning wasn't as creamy with almond milk in place of the sugar-free coffee mate creamer I was using, but next time I get to the store I'll find a better creamer to use. Like Chickie was saying, I just have to keep trying things! |
I eat about 90% of my foods whole/unprocessed, but I'm just bad at making breads, so I try to just make the best choices I can at the store.
I have a four year old and I feed her similarly, but she's more like 80% whole foods. Because she likes things like ketchup and BBQ sauce, I make my own. Tortillas and flatbreads aren't too hard to make, but the first time I made homemade "goldfish" they were delicious, but entirely too thick and didn't puff up the way they were supposed to. I can cook my azz off, but I'm a bad baker! |
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Congrats, Joss - that's a noble goal in a difficult world. :) The angst I have left is that sifting through the PRODUCE is now a complicated operation. Going "whole" is a huge improvement - making that final step into "organic" is where it gets touchy. We are trying hard to eliminate all GMO from our foods - and now, it's becoming hard work. California's Prop 37 will give consumers the right to choose whether they eat this stuff or try to avoid it ... and if it's so freaking safe (it's not - see latest Norwegian 10-year study on GMO corn), then golly, the manufacturers can proudly label it. So goes California, so goes the nation. Knowledge is NEVER a bad thing!
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Wow, Joss. That sounds like an amazing plan.
For a while, I was doing what I have heard referred to as 'Frankenfood.' Protein bars and SlimFast kind of choices. I finally realized that I just didn't feel good when these foods accounted for most of my calories. Now, I do lean protein and produce almost exclusively. I need simple. And I feel way better. I haven't decided not to eat those foods, and I do have either a protein bar or shake after I lift, but even just the shift to getting the bulk of my calories from whole foods has been amazing. |
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Have you tried the Ezekiel bread? It's actually not really hard to find. A lot more stores carry it than I would have thought. |
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Right now I'm just focusing on making my choices more natural; trying to stay away from packaged foods, and choosing items with fewer ingredients when I do have to go packaged... no artificial chemicals and such... eventually I would like to buy more organic foods as well but they are so hard to come by in this area and soooo expensive. I buy my eggs free range and organic, but that's about it. This weekend I'm actually going to try making a couple of recipes I found for salad dressings. I can't seem to find any in the stores that are both natural AND low calorie, so I'll make my own! :) |
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I would rather have bread that is 80 calories a piece and is natural than have a piece that is full of crap for 40 calories. |
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Just wondering how everyone is doing? This is an inspiring thread for me. Like others here I'm not following a diet and I'm trying to eat clean. One thing I've done is starting to make my own salad dressings, condiments etc. and I feel so much better because I know what's in them.
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