Tuesday 23 July 2013

Back on Track

Can't believe it has been close to six month since I posted last. In that time I have attended Cannes film festival, graduated from university, given up smoking and begun my new and exciting post-academia life.

During the last 5 months I have fallen on and off the dietary wagon many a time but feel I'm finally starting to find some balance.

At the moment, I would say, I'm 100% vegetarian, 98% vegan and about 90% raw. Within all of that I try as much as possible to stick to the Dr Doug Graham formula of 80/10/10 - that is, 80% carbs/ 10% fat/ 10% protein.

There are healthy and unhealthy ways of eating vegan and of eating omnivorously but it has come to be my belief that the optimal healthy diet is one free from meat, dairy and preferably wheat as well.

When you don't eat like the vast majority of the population, this kind of eating lifestyle can seem odd or restrictive but for the first time ever I've been able to make major positive shifts in my eating habits without it feeling like a chore or a punishment.

So many health benefits are thrown about with relation to eating raw - abundant energy, needing less sleep, weight loss, clearer mind. Although I think a lot of it is exaggerated, even at this early stage I feel it's not all complete nonsense.

The energy thing is 100% true. Sometimes I feel I have so much energy I might burst if I don't go for a jog or do some kind of exercise. It's kind of like drinking a big coffee except without the heart palpitations, the inability to concentrate and the almighty crash as the caffeine wears off.

Needing less sleep...I should cocoa!!! The day I need less sleep is the day I'm worshipped for miracles. I don't need less sleep but I wake up a lot less groggy than I used to. I have been getting a lot less sleep than I usually do but most of that is down to stupid hot weather and the sun coming glaring through the windows at very unseemly hours of the morning!

Weight loss - hmm...I must say I had a good old panic when I first started eating High Carb Low Fat. I don't tend to weigh myself but I do measure my waist and in a matter of days I gained two inches round my waist and looked like I'd swallowed a beach ball. I was very disheartened. I wasn't overly worried about losing weight, I'm no bikini model but I'm a UK 10 so certainly not obese either.....but GAINING weight! That was not something I hoped for!! Not after it took me so long to lose all the 'living in America' weight in the first place.
HOWEVER, this weight gain was easily sorted out when I realised it was water weight, bad food combining and some serious bloating as my body got used to the amount of fruit I was eating. I now try not to mix anything other than greens with my fruit meals to help with digestion and after about 1-2 weeks my body seems to have adjusted to the fibre content of my new lifestyle.

Clearer mind- I'm still in the early stages and my diet is not 100 per cent clean so maybe I'll never notice greater clarity but as I mentioned earlier, I am a lot less groggy in the mornings. I would also say, unless I'm imagining things, that my moods are a lot less swingy and that in turn is helping my brain with the no cigarettes.

So, HOW has my diet changed? Here is a list of a typical day. It is not perfectly vegan, it is not perfectly HCLF raw either but for the sake of being honest, here it is:

Breakfast (about 8 or 9 o'clock)
A four banana green smoothie (bananas, water and greens)
2 banana pudding (bananas and cocoa)

Lunch (about 12 or 1 o'clock)
A four banana green smoothie

Snack
Some salt and vinegar snack-a-jacks and either a packet of polo mints or a very small chocolate bar. (This is where I slip the most....but I wanted to be honest)

Dinner
Varies but is usually a cooked vegan meal involving brown rice or gluten free soba or wakame noodles.

After dinner
Peppermint tea

That's pretty much it....though I'm not hungry after dinner, after a couple of hours, I do psychologically feel the need to eat something more, so sometimes I give in to that and will have a piece of fruit and bloatiness be damned.

This usually means I take in somewhere around 1800 calories or more. I do struggle a little with making sure to get enough protein but I'm usually only slightly under and I'm monitoring that and figuring out ways to increase it without the fat content skyrocketing...though again, it differs from the 80/10/10 raw food ideal..I may strategically eat a few almonds or macadamias as an if all else fails alternative.

A slight side note with regards to fibre and the amount of fruit you need to consume to get enough calories...when I first started to eat 6 bananas worth of food in the morning, it was a real struggle and hurt my stomach to the point of being uncomfortable and er..not to be too graphic..but it didn't seem to hang around too long after I'd eaten either.
However, after less than two weeks, my body has adjusted to the caloric density and breakfast has become the high point of my eating day.
If and when I start to increase exercise I reckon I'd have no trouble upping the fruit some more.

So, there you have it. I plan to keep this blog updated with how things are going and to be honest as possible about how I'm doing and how I'm feeling about it all. My way of eating right now is still  a work in progress and will, fingers crossed, become closer to the 80 10 10 ideal. However, I know myself fairly well and I am aware that if I were to be a zealot about such things, I would only rebel against myself and be doomed to failure (failure = S.A.D diet...(is that right way to say it Standard American Diet diet??). This is my own personal food-body experiment and I'm excited to see how it goes and if these will be, as I hope, lasting changes.