No, I'm saying it is possible that one of the reasons for megafauna extinction was because we hunted them all.
And these extinctions occurred much farther back than 10,000 years, and once they were extinct they were no longer available to be eaten and other foods had to be consumed.
One hundred grams of wild blueberries (alaska native) only contains about 10 grams of carbohydrate.
Wouldn't the example of Eskimo wild berry eating suggest eating similar foods today (such as cranberries, wild Maine blueberries, or wild black raspberries, for example, which are all available to me), rather than avoiding all berries? How does one get the notion to eat zero carbs from a population that ate some carbs?
Plus, Stefansson normally included some potatoes in his diet (outside of his temporary all-meat phases like the one-year Bellevue Experiment) and in his recommended protocol and he also reported witnessing inland Eskimos eating wild potatoes. Plus, Eskimos traditionally also ate other carb-containing foods like roots, animal stomach contents, glycogen-rich fresh raw liver, eggs, and tree saps and barks. Why would we use their example to justify avoiding these foods that they ate?
I find that using some discipline and not eating as much sugary foods as would be dictated by taste and smell has done me a world of good.
Sure, same here. One nice thing about resistant starch is that it's not sugary at all. Instead, it generates butyrate, a fat, so one could think of it as a fat. Another nice thing about the butyrate RS generates is that it helps modulate blood sugar and the immune system so that sugars don't cause as much damage.
Not everyone is as harmed by sugary foods as I am, so I don't just assume that my low carb tolerance is natural or normal. I looked to see if there was any way to address the underlying problems causing the carb intolerance, instead of just coddling it with a very restricted diet forever. I found something in RS that seems to be helping.
experience shows me that there's little difference between zero and low low carb... I think this is nit picking here.
If there's little difference, then why not eat those small amounts of carbs? Why bother restricting the diet more severely than even the Eskimos traditionally did just to attain zero carbs without significant additional benefit? Don't you like some carby foods? If a little bit doesn't do harm and you find them tasty, why not eat the amount you say makes "little difference"?
Overall health doesn't involve just the health of the external shell of the human body - it also involves internal elements, such as the gut microbiome. Have any of the people who are assuming that they're doing great on VLC/ZC gotten their gut microbiome checked, or their IGM or IGG antibody levels? According to this physician, there may be problems that you're not even aware of:
You won’t know what’s wrong with you until it progresses to the point of severe immune deficiency. For example, I developed IgM deficiency, igg subclass deficiency and hypocomplementemia after, let’s see hardcore 12 months(?) of ketosis. What symptoms do I have? None except a chronic runny nose that’s only midly bothersome. My Vit D is at 80 and I don’t take flu shots and I don’t have respiratory infections. But the low-grade runny nose is constant all seasons. Plus I react to airborne particles and have umpteen food allergies. That’s why I keep saying, you really don’t know how you’re jeopardizing your health. Just because it feels good doesn’t mean you’re healthy. That’s why the carbs ad libitum argument is flawed. You might be on top of the world VLCing but you have no idea what it’s doing to your immune system.
Autoimmunity and immunodeficiency are stealthy and creepy disease states; you’ll only be made of its encroachment through specialized blood tests and the appearance of mild and vague symptoms, which in many cases you won’t be able to connect to VLCing. Think of it as a frog being boiled alive on your stovetop.
- Spanish Caravan, http://freetheanimal.com/2014/02/ketogenic-diets-news.html#comment-558674
Brady, Miles, Lowenherz, and me have all been provided (by multiple people who remember these cases) as examples of people who fared better when they added some carby food or some sort of plant food back into their diet. Listing these examples doesn't mean that these were the only examples. Anyone who has read this forum for some years knows there were more. Feel free to list all the counter examples you like, preferably (where possible) supported with objective evidence, like basal temperature, resting heart rate, fasting blood glucose, post prandial BG, gut microbiome test results, triglycerides, LDL, LDL-P, immune system test results, ... --not just opinions, excuses and hypotheses.
Rosedale has treated diabetic patients for over 25 years with vlc. I would suggest contacting him to verify your results/suspicions.
Interesting coincidence that you should mention Dr. Rosedale. I have read some of his blog, watched one of his presentations and chatted with him briefly in Internet comments in the past and commended him and Paul Jaminet on their civil and informative debates. Are you aware that Dr. Rosedale's carb recommendation (at around 20% of calories as carbs, on avg) is only 5 points lower than the safe-starch-guy Paul Jaminet's (at around 25% of calories as carbs, within a range of 20-30+%)?
My guess is that there is value in RS, and, that you've something else going on within. I have read where constipation has been a problem for you. Peristalsis happens by at least two mechanisms; one being the acidic level in one's colon which triggers peristalsis, and another is simply pressure put on the colon wall by feces themselves.
And one of the interesting things about peristalsis is that butyrate in the colon, generated by bacteria, helps to promote it. Resistant starch and other prebiotics fill in so many missing pieces of the puzzle that there is just too much to cover without making it my full time career.
I use to buy directly from a culture scientist who made bacterial cultures for companies all over the world. One of which he received a patent for that literally helped solve South Korea's problem of stomach ulcers due to bad stomach bacteria. They incorporated his bacterial strain into yogurts that are sold like candy out of vending machines throughout Korea. He and I speculated as to whether it made sense to actually go to Africa and collect fece samples from the healthiest Masai tribesmen living as close to their natural ways. Then isolate the strains of bacteria, and grow them to be sold as a probiotic here in the US. I still think it had merit.
The current general thinking is that using probiotics to help generate more bacteria in the gut isn't likely to work well if one isn't feeding the bacteria. There's also some thinking that probiotics don't actually populate the gut with bacteria, but work in another way. If true, that would explain how probiotics using dead bacteria could work.
I haven't heard about the probiotic you mentioned, but I have scoured the Internet in the past for the most highly touted probiotics, some supported by studies, and tried several of them and even wrote a bit about this in the past, though I don't remember if I put anything in my journal, specifically. Right now I'm using Prescript-Assist, which is currently touted as one of the best and has a study supporting it. I haven't noticed any benefits like I have with RS, but I haven't given up on probiotics, despite the past failures with it, sometimes expensive. I also eat some probiotic foods. So I'm on board with you on probiotics.
And I do think that the bacteria in the colon science is going to be the Big health possibility of the future. Should be an interesting ride for you.
Agreed, thanks.