After reading GCBC, subsequently dropping carbs and seeing nearly every aspect of my life change in some manner for the better, I have endured a sort of internal struggle about how to dispense of this new information. I have yet to take serious action but have had a number of different ideas, some quite radical to get the word out. I realize that GCBC was my first book/anything on nutrition and I have fallen for it hard, but I have done an enormous amount of other research outside this book and am now fine with any biases I still have. I also felt extremely fortunate to come across this information, like I did nothing to deserve it. Why should I reap all the benefits of this diet by nothing more than luck, when there are others that would surely benefit if they could just read the same information?
I have yet to go out of my way to impose my diet on anyone that is struggling though I have talked about my diet to nearly everyone. Its hard not to since so many social situations involve food. I keep it simple and focus on the evils of refined carbohydrates, which is easy enough for everyone to get behind. Even though a good chunk of people think I've got a little crazy in me, I think I've found that there is much more fascination and almost no one except my parents have expressed much concern, only that I get the occasional blood test. Perhaps this is because I hang around people 24-30 years old. I've gotten several of my friends to try raw steak and even got one to crave the stuff to the point where we'd make an early morning run just for that. Its also extremely easy to convince them that it is fine since literally no one has any clue or even seemingly an ounce of quality information outside of what they were taught in health class in 7th grade.
But my real struggle is with those that are suffering. One of my Dad's closest friends died last week from complications with diabetes at 55. He was quite overweight and taking insulin shots multiple times per day. He was very friendly and would talk to me for ages about different business ideas he had in mind for me and my brother. I never once brought up my diet that if I were a betting man(actually I am a betting man but thats another story..) would put at least 50-1 that it would have extended his life indefinitely. I don't actually feel bad, for some reason Im not sure of, but its a strange feeling to know that there is something out there that I am so sure will work to save lives. Perhaps my assumptions are wrong about the probability of this diet working, but I am willing to put my money where my mouth is and if you want to bet against me go right ahead.
I really would love to see a carnivorous diet be open discussion to the public. From all the crazy ideas I've had, which have had me contemplating chaining myself up outside the NIH eating nothing but raw steaks to actually studying for the mcat just to have a face to face with real doctors, I think I've settled on something. Cancer patients seem to be the most likely to try something radical to save their lives. I mean, they literally have a sitting clock counting down to their last breath, why wouldnt they want to try something so simple as a change in diet? There was that time magazine article not too long ago that gave the all-meat diet its first mainstream exposure with very positive results. Apparently, there are more clinical trials going on right now testing the same thing. I think that it could be possible to gain some momentum working specifically with cancer patients, since they are most likely to change their diets. If the carnivorous community could rally behind this one thing we might really have something that is ready to spread.