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comment by blackbootz
blackbootz  ·  2701 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Meet the Pied Piper of Paleo

mk Remember the interview we listened to the last leg of the wedding? It was with this guy.

Mk made an interesting point at the time. One of Sisson's premises is that 10,000 years is not long enough to substantially change how Homo sapiens metabolize wheat, gluten, other carb-centric foods and associated nutrients, i.e. the modern diet. Therefore, fats and proteins ought to be human staples. But mk said that 10,000 years could in fact be long enough.

On a personal note: I encountered Sisson in 2014 and have maintained what could (generously) be called a steady-state low carb diet since. Huge qualification is that I have high metabolism and naturally lean resting body weight, most likely due to ten years of gymnastics from late infancy through puberty and high sports activity since. But Sisson has been an enormous influence for me on the margins. I have fasted intermittently for four 40-day stretches (am currently on my fifth), undergo routine sprinting, and gulp heavy whipping cream and coffee for breakfast. I think of food differently, in large part because of Mark Sisson. Can't wait to read this bio.

Note: I understand people's wariness of Sisson--who wants to spend thousands of dollars on his certifications? But I haven't spent a dime on his products, and have found that his freely available material is sufficient for stimulating motivation and interest in me.





katakowsj  ·  2701 days ago  ·  link  ·  

What exactly are your fasts like? I've done 72 hour fasts twice now. No calorie intake, just water and tea. They felt surprisingly good. Not something I'd call fun, but a challenge that opened my eyes to my body's resilience. I'm planning on a third one this month.

blackbootz  ·  2700 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I fast for about 12-14 hours in the middle of the day. So I'll wake early and eat a breakfast and won't ingest anything except for water or coffee until about 12 hours later, where I'll eat again. I've also been eating lots of fat and adequate protein during these meal periods. If I know there's an event that day with food that I want to be social for, I'll restrict myself to just that one meal, because I don't want to be a psycho/draw lots of undue attention to myself and not eat while everyone else is being merry.

I did it originally for purposes of self-discipline and mastery. Incidentally, I became much leaner. You realize how often you graze or snack. You learn a lot actually. How much time in the day is spent preparing food. How unused to hunger some of us are. How to live with hunger to the point that it doesn't rule you or your mood (I'm no longer irritable when I'm hungry).

Although, selfishly, all this not-eating means not-cooking, which dovetails with my incorrigible laziness when it comes to meal preparation. I'm trying to learn to undo that.