Plant-Based and Yummy!!

I can’t wait to try some of these recipes!!

I have a friend who makes some dope t-shirts who invited me to a night market his business was attending, so husband and I went out to support. There was SOOO much cool stuff, but the reason for this post…the vegan food.

So, you all know, I briefly told you about the benefits of plant-based diets before. There isn’t a single diet modification with as much evidence behind it when it comes to cardiovascular benefit and cancer prevention, and it is also excellent for weight control, preventing and reversing insulin resistance and metabolic disease, and most of my patients who suffer from inflammatory disorders generally feel better if they go plant-based.

Anyway, I met this lovely woman who apparently is already quite well-known on the vegan scene in Houston, the chef behind Tay’s Vegan Eats!. I’m super excited, though, because I got a copy of her cookbook, and I now have a resource for my patients who don’t believe plant-based can be flavorful and fun! Honestly, I can’t wait to try some of her stuff in my kitchen–one of my biggest barriers to trying vegan myself is not having a resource of go-to recipes.

My husband tried the mac and cheez and liked it—and guys—this man calls himself a carnivore (though I did correct him and tell him he was an omnivore—though not a very good one, cuz he’s a little like a toddler when it comes to veggies). I wish I’d gotten a pic of him eating it—so bad at that part. He was being stingy with it!

Anywho…check out her pages! Her food is delish!

See her Facebook and Instagram.

Another Win for Intermittent Fasting

So intermittent fasting is easily my personal favorite diet modification. I’m not sure I should call it a diet modification, as it can be done with any diet…it’s more about timing.

For those who aren’t familiar, New England Journal of Medicine is a very respected medical journal. It recently published a review article touting the benefits of intermittent fasting as including everything from anti-aging, to weight loss, improving insulin resistance and diabetes as well as some of the complications from diabetes, to improving the body’s response to stress, to potentially reducing incidence of cancer!

More studies are being done in most areas, but it’s beginning to hold its own as something that the authors feel should be introduced at the medical school level.

I will tell you, I fell in love with this concept when I read The Obesity Code by Jason Fung, and have found it beneficial personally. I was able to lose my baby weight, and my A1c was the best it has ever looked…ever.

It’s definitely something I tend to recommend, but you definitely have to have a conversation with your physician, particularly if you are on medications.

For more information on what all intermittent fasting entails, see my previous blog post here.

A Leap of Faith

Soulful Sundays: Once a week I will have an installment that speaks to my spirituality, because, as I’ve said, to me, spiritual wellness, is essential to complete wellness. Because I am Christian, my spirituality is heavily based on my relationship with the Trinity and the Christian Bible. If reading about God, Jesus, or the Spirit will offend your sensibilities, these posts aren’t for you–be advised

“For God gave us not a spirit of fearfulness; but of power and love and discipline.”

1 Timothy 1:7 ASV

Over Christmas, I was engulfed in unexpected quality time with my present past—family members with whom I don’t get to spend enough time and with whom I definitely don’t get to speak on the level I did this holiday. It was exactly what I needed.

One such interaction was with family, not blood—but family, indeed, who I haven’t seen in years. We were talking about…life…and how uncertain I am these days. Before this she had been speaking on how I didn’t have to necessarily overwhelm myself trying to get these experiences to set myself up for future endeavors, that God is always preparing you for exactly what He has for you, and He will use your experiences to shape you. I said something about how I’ve been praying for direction and she said something profound—at least for me. It was something to the effect of, “I think we pray wrong sometimes. We’re praying waiting for some grand sign on where to move next. God gave us free will. He’s waiting on us to move.” And here I was having something of an epiphany, because she was definitely hitting on a struggle of mine, and I said, “And trust that He’s going to be there and work it out.”

Y’all, since this conversation, some things that I was really confused about really clarified themselves for me. It was exactly what she was sent to tell me.

Sometimes, we’re sitting back, waiting. And God has completely prepared us to DECIDE the next step. And He’s waiting on us to step out on faith, ask for what we want and believe that He will do more than we could imagine for ourselves.

“Ye did not choose me, but I chose you, and appointed you, that ye should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide: that whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, He may give it you.”

John 15:16, ASV

I kept struggling with whether it was in His purpose. But my purpose is to glorify Him with my gifts, and there are so many different ways I can do that. Sometimes, what He wants is my show of faith; my ability to ask for what I want in accordance with that will, and trust that He can and will support me in it. I believe it’s yours too. Nothing more, nothing less. So much peace in that.

“And we know that to them that love God all things work together for good, even to them that are called according to His purpose.”

Romans 8:28 ASV

New Commitments to a Different Growth

So happy to be able to bring in the new year in my pink camo onesie!!!

Funny, I’ve never really been one for New Year’s resolutions. They just seem too cheesy and cliché for me. But for some reason, what I have always found is there is this natural closing at the end of the year. A natural reflection that lends itself to a reset. And this year has been no different.

The past month has been a month full of returning to relationships that had me come face to face with the old me. It reminds you of the growth that has taken place. It is also amazingly grounding. There is nothing like watching your children play with the children of your onetime best friend who you no longer really get to keep in touch with due to…life; standing there, remembering the uncertainty and anxieties you shared during adolescence and young adulthood, proud to see how far you’ve both come.

Nothing like spending one on one time with your dad and meeting one of his long-time friends; getting to see him in his professional element.

Nothing like long talks with your mom wrapping presents, on the way to a women’s book club, shopping.

Nothing like Christmas with the aunt, uncle and cousin, who are more like members of your core family, for the first time in more years than you can remember.

Nothing like sitting with your “big sister,” who apparently got on your page, read some of your posts, and came to do what she does with her wisdom in a full-on therapy session that was so needed.

Nothing like sitting up until 5am with your big-little brother—just talking.

Nothing like meshing your past and present together at a time in your life that seems so uncertain and unsettled.

It was perfect, exactly what I needed.

It’s very interesting. 2019 wasn’t all bad. I mean, I moved into my new home, traveled to some pretty cool places, and have seen some growth in some areas professionally despite my illness. My children are growing, and healthy and appear to be thriving. However, I must be honest, I can’t wait to see this year go.

It’s been hard, y’all. Professionally, physically, mentally, physically, emotionally—every way you can think. I have been tried as mother, wife, woman, human, physician and professional. I have grown. I am growing.

What am I grateful for in 2019? Lessons. Friends—finding out who the real ones were, strengthening some bonds, finishing my circle. Growth. Strength. Faith. Health. Income. Shelter. Family. Learning the meaning of Margin. Defining my struggle with perfectionism. Life.

So 2020? I will continue to grow. I feel grounded. I feel ready. I have some perspective that without this time meshing past with present, I don’t think I would have gained—so amazing how these things work out (look at God!). I’m grateful for the opportunity to continue to work on protecting margin in my life, defeating perfectionism, practicing gratitude and enjoying the blessings I have right now, rather than hustling so hard for…what exactly?!

I’d like to have more peace in 2020. Here’s to true wellness. 

Ketogenic Diet, Part 2

I was asked by a patient of mine who has had really amazing success with this lifestyle modification to do a post that has a bit more information about keto and my stance.

I had previously posted a very broad statement. As I told her, it’s hard when you’re doing a public blog to get across how open you are to whatever your patients are willing to do to get on the road to a healthier version of them.

So, she gave me permission to give you a glimpse of her story.

She approached me, wanting to lose weight, and wondering if I would oppose to her trying Keto. So many doctors immediately rebuke patients for wanting to try this lifestyle modification for differing reasons.

Some simply don’t know the data: keto has been shown to reduce insulin resistance, and if done appropriately can improve fatty liver disease, and lipid panels (cholesterol) over time. What we have seen with different diet modifications for weight loss is whatever you feel you can do consistently is something that will work for you.

Some have huge reservations about the amounts of meat: again, I say that we don’t have enough data. I do council my patient about the risk, but I also say that a patient that is going to continue to worsen their insulin resistance by continuing to eat meat AND high carb diet is likely harming themselves worse. I am willing to get behind a behavior that is an improvement in any direction. Additionally, there are ways to enter ketosis that would not necessarily be high in the animal products—in fact, you can be vegetarian or vegan, and be keto.  

So, anyway, I was completely supportive of her decision. I counseled her on the risks of eating too much bacon/butter—we know that studies show that these things are tied to heart disease, but there will also be some offset risk with significantly decreasing her intake of unhealthy carbohydrates—her body will process these fats differently, but she shouldn’t overdo it.

And SHE ROCKED IT!

She went, and she researched, and she became so much more knowledgeable than me about the lifestyle. She didn’t cheat. At 6 months, her cholesterol looked just as I expected, and it’s the other reason some docs freak out about this lifestyle—it was  WAYYYY up. But guys, this happens in weight loss outside of keto. Your body is breaking down fat, and it’s floating around, and I’m catching it before your body has had a chance to get balanced. In keto, we do see things go higher—because you’re eating way more fat than most, and your body is mobilizing fats like crazy. I expected that by 1 year, we were going to see things normalize.

And that’s exactly what happened. Her labs made my month! And her weight was down tremendously. And, of course, she was happier than I was—it was her life, her choice, her way! She hadn’t really cheated in the year, and I really do credit this to why I was seeing this level of success.

The safety of living in ketosis isn’t studied in trials long term (past 1 year) in mainstream medicine, so I always give my patients this information.  However, if a patient is willing to accept the risk for themselves, I am willing to engage in their journey in a non-judgmental way, and I get so much joy as I remove medications from medication profiles!

It has been 18 months, and she’s going strong. She’s added more unhealthy fats than I’m generally comfortable with (HELLO LARD!!), but she feels better and has more energy. Again, she’s drawing energy from fats, so this is new territory for me. And guess what!! Her cholesterol still looks amazing. Her weight is still decreasing. Her A1c looks great. She’s happy, and I’m happy.

She introduced me to a Houston Keto group on Facebook that has support and information for anyone interested in keto. Like any lifestyle modification, it requires LOTS of research. The more you know and prepare, the more likely you are to succeed. Like any lifestyle modification, it won’t be for everyone. But if you know you aren’t going to do vegan or vegetarian, moderation isn’t something you do well, and you are continuing to see your health decline, you need to do something. Keto is a reasonable option that I have seen work. Consider it!

Resources for Keto

(Disclaimer: I may or may not necessarily agree with everything that is written in these blogs or said on the videos, but these resources were recommended as helpful by people I know successful with keto)

Keto for Beginners

Keto Diet Food List

3 Keto Diets Explained

Dr. Ken Berry—What is the Ketogenic Diet

Gratitude

Soulful Sundays: Once a week I will have an installment that speaks to my spirituality, because, as I’ve said, to me, spiritual wellness, is essential to complete wellness. Because I am Christian, my spirituality is heavily based on my relationship with the Trinity and the Christian Bible. If reading about God, Jesus, or the Spirit will offend your sensibilities, these posts aren’t for you–be advised

“Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful.”

Colossians 3:15

The preacher said something that struck home today. “If you are never satisfied with yourself, how can anyone else satisfy you?” Well, he said it differently—I don’t think he used you—I think he said a person who isn’t satisfied with… But I heard it the way I wrote it. Because I’m that person.

I have always had a goal. When I finished residency, I don’t remember feeling accomplished, I remember wondering what I was going to do next. Self-improvement is a core-value of mine and improving upon everything I touch kind of my mantra. At some point recently, I realized that this strength was also my biggest weakness—perfectionism. I’m still trying to fully define my particular brand of perfectionism, my motivations, but it’s what I’m struggling against, nonetheless. I had told myself that this wasn’t affecting my close relationships—I don’t hold everyone else to the impossible standards I hold myself to—but I’m pretty sure this was a huge case of denial. Of course, it affects my relationships.

I am constantly struggling between being satisfied with who I am and continuing to strive for self-improvement. After all, even the Bible says we will never achieve perfection. So where is the balance?

I’m honestly not sure. I think I may spend a lifetime trying to answer this question. But I’m coming to believe that it may just begin with gratitude—being thankful.

Don’t get me wrong. If we go back to the moment of residency completion, there isn’t a doubt in my mind that God brought me through. And of course, I did my obligatory thank you. But I mean, truly sitting in the space, appreciating what He’d brought me through. Understanding that if I didn’t do anything more, He’d done enough–I’d done enough.

I don’t list my complete resume here, partially because when it comes to blogging and social media, while you can likely figure it out, I don’t want to accidentally seem to represent any of my organizations when I am only representing myself. But let me tell you, God’s been good, and I’m not necessarily unimpressive (it’s even hard for me to type that…lol). You know what, I’ve got to do better. I’m pretty impressive—and I’ve got to say that because it’s a testimony to who God is. And it’s the beginning to what I’ve got to start doing.

Gratitude. It starts with being okay with being impressed with where God has brought me. It’s giving him credit for what I have today and being okay if I don’t achieve anything else. I don’t think that stops me from listening when He calls me to more. In fact, I think it will focus me, and help me discern when the more is mine (vs when I need to say no).

16 Rejoice always, 17 pray continually, 18 give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

1 Thess 5:16-18

Immune Support Supplements

I did not take these photos. I am not endorsing these particular products–but I do use 3/4 of them.

Elderberry

The most commonly studied are the supplements from the flowers and berries from the plant Sambucus nigra, commonly known as European elder.

I think I first heard about this supplement from my dentist. I bought some of the syrup to try for myself, thinking I was going to take it daily to prevent getting sick. Well I bought the syrup, instead of the gummies, and instead of mixing it in water, I take it to the head. It tastes like really concentrated prune juice—so daily dosing is a no for me.

I decided to take it at first sign of cold symptoms, when I could tell I was feeling run down, and I noticed, I didn’t really progress to the severe symptoms of day 3-4 if I was able to catch it early. I didn’t want to tell my patients about it yet—I mean, I try to only really speak on things as “Dr. Sims” that I can put some evidence behind. But this was AMAZING!

I did a few colds without it and—nope, it definitely worked—cuz those colds without it were awful.

And finally, I had had enough colds prevented that I felt comfortable giving the “Dr. Sims” subjective stamp of approval. But then, I looked it up. And turns out, there’s some evidence showing that my subjective findings, may not be subjective after all (YAY!!!).

This article from Cleveland Clinic highlights some studies that show that it may just boost our immunity.

This article showed that it shortened cold duration in air travelers, and this one further supports findings that it may have anti-flu activity (NOT a good reason to skip the vaccine though!).

Considerations: If buying elderberry syrup from your neighbor or friend who makes it, please be aware that consuming undercooked or under-ripe berries can result in cyanide toxicity if done in excess. This is also true for the other parts of the plant. Please consume supplements responsibly, and under the counsel of your physician.

Vitamin C and Zinc

Vitamin C and Zinc are well established for immune support. Important points to make:

  1. They are best used to shorten the course of a viral illness, and not in prevention. The best prevention is hand hygiene and a healthy lifestyle (fruits, veggies, whole grains in diet, exercise, good sleep). The evidence for zinc is stronger than that for Vitamin C.
  2. Zinc is best in lozenge form and slowly sucked. This allows it to have prolonged contact with the oropharynx, which is where the virus is multiplying.
  3. Zinc can cause nausea—you will want to have had something to eat prior to having your zinc supplement.
  4. The dosing and delivery of these is unclear. I generally dose a zinc lozenge at least twice daily and up to 3 times daily with meals, and double the supplemental dose of Vitamin C. You should discuss recommendations with your physician.

References for Vitamin C and Zinc:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3273967/pdf/JFP-60-669.pdf

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5418896/pdf/10.1177_2054270417694291.pdf

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/common-cold/expert-answers/zinc-for-colds/faq-20057769

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/23440782/?i=5&from=/19432914/related

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/19432914/

Garlic

This article highlighting the benefits of garlic shows that garlic not only may help shorten the life of your viral illness, but also may be useful in helping prevent it. Main downside here is that many people find the quantities needed for efficacy very difficult to tolerate.

The Giving Tree

I read the article in The New York Times Parenting column and thought it was quite interesting. The Giving Tree was one of my son’s favorite books because he was particularly fond of trees. But I hated this book. And I felt he was too young for me to fully articulate why. The most I said was, “the boy isn’t a very good friend to the tree, and it makes me sad.” He was 4 or 5 at the time.

We don’t read it very often anymore for that reason, but now, I don’t think I’ll mind. This article, entitled “We Need to Talk About ‘The Giving Tree'” has given me some very good discussion points, and quite honestly, they’re good for young and old alike, and it inspired a train of thought PERFECT for my first post on wellness.

In The Giving Tree, a little boy befriends a tree. The tree loves the little boy and gives him whatever he asks, just for the boy to leave for long periods, grow, and return downtrodden, looking for his “friend” to give him something to fix his next problem.

The tree had no healthy boundaries, and gave him whatever he asked, only to be left at the end, with nothing, but a stump to show for this “friendship.”

I saw a parallel in life, right in my office. I have people in front of me all the time, not following their health care regimen, not finding time to eat right, exercise, check their blood sugar or blood pressure because they are taking care of a family member, over too many church ministries, bogged down at work…you name it, I’ve heard it.

My “patient non-adherence” problem is generally filled with a story about how this person has put themselves on the back burner for so many others. NO. BOUNDARIES. It’s what the giving tree did. And she gave until she was only a stump, with nothing left to give, and the boy had everything.

Many times we talk about self-care, we think, spa day, massage, etc. I read this piece a while back that shared my opinion that self-care is so much more and defined true self-care as building a life from which you don’t need escape. That requires excellent skill in setting boundaries.

Here are some wonderful quotes from the article that are great take-aways:

“Self-sacrifice is not sustainable, and it isn’t healthy either. Research shows that people who care about others and neglect themselves are more likely to become anxious and depressed.”

Adam Grant and Allison Sweet Grant

“Generosity is not about sacrificing yourself for others — it’s about helping others without harming yourself. It’s not about giving to takers — it is giving in ways that nurture more givers. It’s not about dropping everything any time someone needs you — it is prioritizing your needs along with theirs.”

–Adam Grant and Allison Sweet Grant

I thought I was very good at boundaries. And I was okay at it, but I’ve learned that for people I really care about, I have a hard time sticking to my guns. I really rely on their respect for me, and that’s a mistake—we must be comfortable with requiring that respect regardless of whether it is offered.

And actually, let’s take it a step further. Not only did this tree give everything, but it asked for nothing. This is where I have the MOST room for growth: asking for, and receiving, help from others. It’s essential to wellness. Not only does it allow others to express love for you, it allows your tank to be filled in ways you truly need but can’t provide yourself. It is also a practice in humility. It strengthens relationships, because, when we’re honest, there’s a bit of power that comes from always being the helper, never the helped. The closeness that comes from the vulnerability of you allowing someone to help you can really strengthen the bond of friendship (I think I learned this from Brene Brown).

But it’s not just me. These same patients, horrible at boundaries, tend to be givers who need to be convinced to accept help from others. Who either have a hard time humbling themselves enough to receive, a hard time realizing their worthy of the very same help they are wasting away giving others—or some combination of the two.

So, in my inaugural wellness blog post, I choose not to necessarily focus on exercise, or healthy eating, or meditation. But to focus on boundaries and vulnerability. Because the balance between these two things are essential to formulating the inner peace that is required to live well, and I always say, true health starts with mental and spiritual health.

P.S. For more information on these topics, I highly recommend Brene Brown, who is the vulnerability guru. See links to her books on amazon below (I am making NO MONEY FROM THIS—I JUST LOVE HER STUFF):

The Gifts of Imperfection

The Power of Vulnerability

Rising Strong

Intermittent Fasting

A patient may have made my 2019! She came to see me for the first time in April. She was already doing a great job with weight loss on her own but looking to optimize. She had been diagnosed with diabetes, so she has what we call “metabolic disease” and she was seeing an endocrinologist.

We got into a discussion about a theory on weight loss that I’m very excited about, but truthfully, has little evidentiary support: Intermittent fasting. I read The Obesity Code in 2 days while I was nursing my second while on maternity leave. I had recently certified in obesity medicine, in what was something of a whirlwind. I went to an introductory class and literally saw the science of my lifelong struggle with trying to maintain a healthy weight being researched and used to treat what had become an epidemic in our country. I began studying immediately and became certified. What we knew, is that the age-old “wisdom” of calories in-calories out just wasn’t effective, because our bodies are very smart and learn to adapt. We had been blaming and stigmatizing people for something that wasn’t their fault—something that was behaving as much like an independent disease as diabetes or hypertension and is modulated by hormones and brain functions and instincts. However, where I remained frustrated was that when it came to the practical portion of a medical weight loss plan, calories were still the mainstay.

NOT SO WITH THIS BOOK! This book utilized the hormone theory that we had to learn to certify in obesity medicine—the hormone theory that is becoming so important for the new medications that we are using to treat obesity. When I tried to get my patients to understand their diet plans from a calorie perspective, there would ALWAYS be a loophole, but there doesn’t seem to be a loophole with this theory. REMEMBER THOUGH, it IS a theory, and what we must remember with moving forward with this type of diet is that much like the calorie theory of calories in-calories out, theory doesn’t always translate into practice. The more we learn, this too, may prove to have its own pitfalls. For now, it’s very promising. And my patient’s FIFTY, that’s right FIVE ZERO, pound weight loss since April, is one example of how this can be effective if you use the understanding of the theory to help you make healthier choices all the way around.

It is important to note that she DID not stick to his SUPER LOW CARB diet, nor does she fast for entire days.  She uses the more common-sense approach of a 16:8 fast and remembers what she learned about how her hormones respond to certain foods and uses this to make healthful choices on a regular basis, and she has seen her body respond beautifully.

Not is her blood sugar average in normal range, but I had to stop her blood pressure medication because her blood pressure has been dropping too low. Can I tell y’all how much joy it gives me to STOP MEDICATIONS?! So, what are we talking about here?

Insulin Resistance

So the basics of the theory rest on this: insulin is a storage hormone, that in excess, causes the majority of our problems with metabolic syndrome, and helps make obesity a chronic health problem. Much of our counseling in recent years to combat obesity has been the opposite of common sense in say, the 1950s which was 3 square meals, early dinner, no snacking. We became a society that snacked all the time on refined foods, much of which contained very refined carbohydrates which caused our bodies constant exposure to insulin. This led to insulin resistance.

To understand Insulin resistance, I’ll compare it to alcohol tolerance. If you have one glass of wine, and you don’t drink, that glass of wine might really affect you. But what if you drink a glass nightly? Now you have to have two glasses to feel the same effects that one glass did. Now what if you have 2 regularly? Now you need 3-4 to feel the same effects that that one glass had at the beginning.

In insulin resistance, our bodies have been exposed to non-stop insulin, because we are always in a fed state—always snacking, always eating, and always causing an insulin release. So, our bodies don’t respond to the same amounts of insulin to move the sugar—it needs more. This (in theory) caused the type 2 diabetes epidemic. However, insulin is still telling our bodies to hold on to all those calories that it’s storing, it’s not letting the calories be used for anything—this (in theory) caused the obesity epidemic. It’s a storage hormone. But when you’re in a fasting state, insulin levels fall, and lets those calories, or sugar, in the cell, be burned, like they’re supposed to.

Thought behind it:

What Dr. Fung proposes in this book is that if you keep your body in a state with insulin removed for long enough, you develop sensitivity to insulin again, and you reverse the dysfunction that the resistance to insulin causes. You have smaller amounts of insulin around, so you’re storing fewer calories. You not only reverse obesity, but you reverse metabolic syndrome and constant hunger as well. Believe me, I have not done this topic justice AT ALL. I am far oversimplifying for the sake of space—the man wrote a book, and this is a blog. You should definitely buy the book if you want to understand the full theory behind this. But know this about intermittent fasting: IT will not work if you are drinking sweet drinks or artificially sweetened drinks in the fasting state. IT will not work if you snack between meals. This type of diet is all about resetting the hormones, and it will not work if you try to game the system. The more you know about WHY you are doing what you are doing, the more likely you are to get it right. *Please note, his theory is just one and the latest theory in intermittent fasting. For a great, short article on some interesting research on intermittent fasting, click here.

Warning:

If you have ANY chronic health issues, this is NOT something you should try without close follow up with your doctor. You may have to stop some of your medications. Your health problem may not allow for this type of lifestyle (for instance, right now, with my migraines, it’s not something I’m trying to do, though I don’t know I’d always be limited from something like a 16:8).

16:8

The schedule above suggests that you have an 8-hour window daily that you eat, and you do not eat for 16 hours daily. This tends to be what I most often suggest as a lifestyle as it makes the most practical sense to me. It’s probably just what our bodies are craving. It could look like eating from 5 am to 1pm (I wouldn’t suggest this) or 8 am to 4pm (more reasonable) or 1 pm to 9pm (again, a little extreme). Any of these work though, and you can pick a time that fits best with your lifestyle (i.e. family dinner for people with children, work schedule, evidence that eating earlier is better for LDL cholesterol).

24/30-hour fast

Some people participate in longer fasts. The important. A 24 hour fast would begin at the close of dinner one day and end with the start of dinner the following day (so you would skip breakfast and lunch of one day) while a 30 hour day is more what you would think of as a full day fast.

Fasting

The key to fasting, whether 16, 24, or 30 hours, is HYDRATION, HYDRATION, HYDRATION. You can have liquids including water, unsweetened tea or coffee, and broth including small amounts of bone broth. Up to 2 teaspoons of heavy whipping cream are acceptable additions to beverages, but no artificial sweeteners as these cause insulin spikes although they do not cause sugar spikes. This is all that you have during the fasting period and between the three square meals during fed periods.

So these are the basics. Honestly, you can combine this thought process with whatever healthful diet you would typically be eating otherwise, plant-based, low carb, ketogenic, or low fat. This is more about understanding the importance of timing when eating meals. As I’ve previously stated, I am no one-size-fits-all physician. I do not know that this is something that will work for everyone. I do know that with everything I know about obesity, and with the research that is being done on this topic, it is a very promising theory, that shouldn’t be ignored as we continue to understand the complexities of our health.

As always, I look forward to questions/comments on this topic! Discussion drives learning.

(Update 1/5/2020: More benefits discussed briefly here.)

Plant-Based Diets

If we’re looking at diets that cut one particular type of food, plant-based diets may just have the most data to support its benefit to health. I do find that people, for some reason, are the most resistant to this thought, but it could have something to do with the fact that I’m located in the great and interesting state of TEXAS!

Truth is, Americans eat WAY more than their share of protein, and we really don’t need animal protein to meet this requirement if we eat a wide variety of plants to fill this need. You do have to do your research and make sure that you get all your essential amino acids daily, and generally will need to supplement with vitamin B12 since we do get the bulk of this from animal products.

Plant based diets tout benefits such as reducing risk of cardiovascular disease and cholesterol, reducing insulin resistance, and reducing body weight, in addition to other health benefits including reduction in some gastrointestinal cancers. I will likely go further into some of the benefits in later blogs, but we’ll stop here as an introduction.

Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is an organization that is passionate about plant based diets. Please find some of their excellent links below to get you started if you are interested in this lifestyle!

A 21 Day Quickstart Program

More guidance on Nutrition

A Vegan Starter Kit

Recipes

Vegan for Atheletes

Vegan in Pregnancy

Nutrition for Kids

(Update 1/5/2020: Houston Vegan Chef with Great Food)

Free Email Updates
We respect your privacy.