Funny thing about hitting the 40's. All that stuff that your body used to shrug off and tolerate? It stops if you were kind of dumb like I was, put in a lot of garbage, and didn't pay much attention to whether you tried to work it off later or not. I guess in a way I can say I'm lucky. I've been hit with a health crisis that while painful and confounding doesn't seem to be leading down the road to an early grave. My body struck me with a clue-by-four. I decided it would be a good idea to listen.
I had been the vegan route about a decade ago. For maybe the first six months, I felt great. I attribute this to the fact my diet had been so poor in comparison that I probably could have chewed cardboard and drunk mineral water and felt better for a little while. Eventually, no matter how hard I tried to balance it, I started getting nutritional imbalances. B-12 deficiency not helped by supplements. Low level anemia. Constant dry skin and a constant brain fog I felt like I couldn't lift myself out of (no doubt a symptom of the B-12 issue). I took up a really active sport and couldn't eat enough to keep up with the calories burned, so I re-introduced meats slowly. Again, I felt better for a while.
Then my good old friends habit and complacency came for a visit. I gradually sank back into the diet that prompted me to try veganism in the first place. My body was older by then. I wasn't able to keep up with the sport due to some pretty bad injuries and deluded myself that I'd jump back on the exercise wagon once I was healed. The truth is I may never recover full functionality from some nerve damage, so I have two choices. I can let that stop me or do what I can with what I have.
I've only been eating RAVF for about three weeks now. My energy is on a radical upswing. For the first time in over two years I actually want to get out and exercise. More than just wanting it, I've done it, and I feel great afterward. Sugar cravings? Gone. Junk food cravings? Nary a one. I'm sated after my meals for extended periods of time. If anything, it is a struggle to get in enough calories because my body is so happy with what I'm eating. That big belly I had right under my breasts which felt hard, bloated, and uncomfortable is extremely reduced. Not to say there's not still some fat there, but it feels like normal fat, not like taut, fluid filled skin painful to the touch. I've dropped six pounds so far. Friends have commented on how amazing my skin looks. My husband has noticed my improved mood.
I'm not eating any refined sugars, grains, or starchy vegetables. I'm eating some fruit--mostly berries-- lots of leafy greens and members of the brassica family, and small amounts of soaked nuts and goat khefir. I've tossed out the cow dairy since it seems to turn my lungs into mucus blobs. My meat consumption is all grass fed or wild. So far bison, elk, and venison with liver and heart added in about twice per week, suet or bone marrow with every small red meat portion, plenty of fatty fishes and raw shellfish. I haven't gone for raw poultry yet. It's very hard to find goose or duck here, and I never liked chicken or turkey much cooked. I'm eating NOTHING cooked because right now my body won't tolerate it, not even little bites.
Unlike some I've read about, I took to the taste of the raw meat right away, particularly the liver. The first time I ate it, I was literally shaking the way I do if I've gone too long between meals and feel a blood sugar crash coming on. It felt like I couldn't eat it fast enough. My body has finally backed off of that ZOMG DESPERATION, but I still find I really enjoy it, and I credit it and bison heart with the upswing in my overall energy.
I'm not looking for nor expecting a miracle cure. Blood work and other tests are still ongoing, so I don't even know yet precisely what's wrong with me. I do know that this change in my diet has made a huge difference in pain levels in my gut, has kept my energy levels steady throughout the day instead of the familiar up and down of too many carbs/too much sugar, and is helping me drop weight more effortlessly than I ever have in my life. For so long I bought into the "fear fats" mantra. Y'all are the ones that helped me break through that with your accounts of what you eat and how good it makes you feel, so thank you. I am definitely benefiting from your experience and discovering it to be the same for me.
I'm looking forward to continuing toward better health, and I like to think I can be taught, even if it did take a clue-by-four to wake me up in the first place.