The Palaeolithic Diet
Ailz talked to her doctor about her low-carb diet. He was all in favour. He thinks we should eat the way our hunter-gatherer ancestors did- lots of green stuff, nuts and fruit in season, meat when and if- because that's the sort of diet our bodies are designed for.
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There are lots of good Paleo and Primal blogs around, with good recipes to try.
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Thanks for the hint. I'll have a look at some of those blogs.
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I do get fed up with those people who try to say that we should be eating huge hunks of steak and no fruit (one version of the low carb diet). They've got hung up on the macho myth of Man the Hunter and obviously haven't a clue what real hunter gatherers eat.
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There are some good aspects of the paleo diet, however, like eating a lot more greens and fewer processed carbs. The less processed anything is, the better.
A lot of people say they feel better when they drastically reduce carbs. I end up miserable. I mostly eat whole grains, but I do need them or I end up with headaches and lightheadedness and I'm hungry within about 30 minutes of eating. :-(
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Ailz isn't eschewing dairy. The books she's been reading are fine with milk and cream and butter. The diet she's on is low carb rather than no carbs at all. She eats a bit of bread, but has largely cut out potatoes and rice and cereals.
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But it sounds like Ailz's diet is really just more commonsense. Hope it works out for her!
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The reason "Paleo diets" work so well is that they generally lower your carbohydrate intake. However, I'd be skeptical of anyone who insisted on greatly reduced meat intake based on "how we're designed". Pigs (in Europe and China) along with sheep, cows and goats (almost everywhere) were kind of critical domesticates because the turned unfarmable land into viable grazing grounds. That's been true for far too long not to have the relevant genes sweep the population.