Goodbye Sandman
A symptom that disappeared that I'm not sure whether I reported in the past or not: "sand" in the eyes. I no longer ever get this, regardless of how few or many hours of sleep I get, since going VLC. So perhaps the sandman only visits those who eat substantial carbs? Any other VLC/ZCers experience this?
Wolfing Down Food
I find that I paradoxically have a greater appetite and can wolf more food down more quickly while at the same time never experiencing bad hunger or stomach upset, bloating or pain. I think this is in part because my digestion is much improved. I can eat more like the wolf, intermittently fasting and feasting, running and playing for much of the day without developing pangs of hunger and later gorge without feeling stuffed or nauseas.
Low-carb Plant Food and Seaweed Experiment
I still do have constipation and get some belching from fats, though, so I apparently have a ways to go still. I've been experimenting with small amounts of the following foods that might approximate the wild plants that Stone Agers may have eaten more commonly before they started drying and cooking tubers and eating them as staple foods (but I won't bother to continue eating ones I don't like the taste of or have other issues with—I no longer regard veg as so healthy that one should force oneself or one’s children to eat them if enough meat, fat and organs, and maybe blood or seafood or iodine and magnesium, are being consumed and no problems are being experienced)...
> seaweeds (creatures that are midway between plants and animals): kelp, seaweed salad [interestingly, seaweeds are not weeds or even plants--they're midway between plants and animals, with aspects of both]
> Asteraceae: lettuce (young), endive (chicory), dandelion root, chamomile [avoiding: sunflower, safflower, artichoke]
> Apiaceae: chervil, anise, carrot, celery, fennel [avoiding: parsley, parsnip]
> Rhizomes: ginger [avoiding: asparagus]
> Brassicaceae (aka cruciferae, crucifers): cabbage, broccoli, mustard (especially greens), radish, horseradish, wasabi, watercress, bok choy, arugula [avoiding: rapeseed, brussels sprout, kale, kohlrabi, turnip, rutabaga, cauliflower]
> Allium: scallion, leek, shallot, garlic [avoiding: onion]
> Extra virgin olive oil
> Sesame (the seaweed salad sold at my market includes it and it’s in some of the sushi dishes I occasionally eat)
Some plant foods I tried in the past that I will avoid:
Amaranthaceae: chard, spinach, beet, quinoa, sorrel (Spinach Dock) [other than sorrel, which is sweet, these plants taste crappy to me; the large sorrel sold in markets is expensive and the various species of sorrel are apparently more toxic than most greens]
Flax—works wonders on the skin and wounds but never did anything much for my insides, no matter how much I consumed
Results so far: I don't notice any benefits from these plants/seaweeds, but neither do I notice significant ill effects, other than maybe feeling a little more optimal on days that I only eat meat/fat/organs.
Fear and Avoidance vs. Courage and Robustification: Avoiding all risk vs. making onself Robust/Resilient to Risk
From Wikipedia: "Robustification is a form of optimisation whereby a system is made less sensitive to the effects of random variability, or noise, that is present in that system’s input variables and parameters."
Time and again in recent weeks I've noticed that Mother Culture preaches the gospel of fear, dread and avoidance. MC advocates trying to avoid all risks. This is an impossible feat. Paradoxically, while reducing minor risks, it tends to result in greatly increasing the chances of major risks. For example, by dreading, avoiding and killing bacteria in general, as though they were all "bad", MC has generated new superbacteria that are more virulent and harder to kill than their natural precursors.
Instead of trying to avoid all risks (ex: all bacteria), we should focus on the major ones (ex: botulinum) and robustify ourselves (eat raw meat, high meat and other probiotic foods) to them.
Brilliant folks like Nassim Taleb and Benoît Mandelbrot are applying robustification to other fields beyond diet. It has already become one of the key principles of the 21st century.