Are you tired of the never-ending debates about what is a healthy diet? Are you skeptical of cutting out whole food groups or restricting your calorie intake? It’s time to shift your perspective and consider the incredible power of the carnivore diet. By focusing on animal-based foods and eliminating all plant-based foods, this unconventional approach to nutrition has the potential to transform your relationship with food and optimize your overall well-being. The carnivore diet is gaining popularity for its simplicity and potential health benefits. While Carnivore advocates claim that by adopting a diet rich in meat, fish, and other animal products, they have experienced significant improvements in energy levels, mental clarity, and physical performance. But what does the science say? Can a meat-heavy diet really be sustainable and provide all the necessary nutrients for optimal health? In this article, we get a glimpse of the carnivore diet, by examining its potential benefits and risks, and addressing some common misconceptions. We’ll delve into the nutritional science behind it and share tips on how to successfully adopt this approach, if you’re up for it. Get ready to challenge the status quo, expand your nutritional knowledge, and discover the transformative power of the carnivore diet.
We’ve all been there and have seen the weird looks when you mention to anybody about an all meat diet. It’s a foreign idea. Part of the problem is the information being put out and who controls it. For example if you go to Wikipedia and search the carnivore diet, their site paints it as a “fad diet” and immediately points to all the issues, such as: vitamin deficiencies, lack of dietary fiber and an increased risk of chronic diseases. Wikipedia even attempts to further distance the carnivore diet from humans by indicating “for actual carnivore diets, See Carnivore”. The link they provide takes you to a page that elicits that the carnivore diet is reserved only for an animal or plant that eats meat.
People who don’t know any better can easily be duped if you rely mainly on what Google and Wikipedia tell, because all of the above myths have been debunked by renown carnivore diet experts like Dr. Kiltz. He has a blog post on his site called “7 Carnivore Diet Myths: Debunked”. Dr. Kiltz is a great resource and an expert in the area of being on a Carnivore Diet. If you like that blog post, he has a book called “Kiltz’s Keto is Carnivore: A Guide for a Fertile Life & Beyond,” where he discusses all of the chronic issues we have today and how we can go about changing that.
We do that by rewiring our brains from the previous propaganda that has been instilled into our way of thinking through the generations.
To start, the food pyramid that we are well accustomed to. In 1992, the USDA introduced the food pyramid that gave us our recommended daily allowance (RDA). As you can see, the largest daily allowance went to bread, cereal, rice and pasta. Lots of whole grains! That’s good, right? Not exactly. A matter of fact, plants don’t want to be eaten. They lack a physical defense system, so instead their only mechanism of defense is a chemical in the form of lectins.
Well, they are found in a lot of foods that have been recommended for our consumption, like wheat, corn, soy, barley and oats. These lectin poisons puncture holes in our gut lining and get into our bloodstream. From there, they start creating issues, like allergies, auto-immune disorders, inflammation, skin problems and neurological issues.
The 1992 food pyramid recommended lots of pasta, grains, wheat, rice, fruits and vegetables. As Dr. Shawn Baker mentioned in his book, The Carnivore Diet, the food pyramid was created as a guess from some “experts” of what people should be eating. What is the issue with all that? It looks like a well balanced guide. Well, there are many problems with this food pyramid. Let’s break that down from the bottom up:
The last part of the 1992 food pyramid that is of concern is this section. My concern is not healthy fats, but the types of oils and how they’re processed and made for consumers.
Many oils like soybean, corn, cotton seed and grapeseed oils can cause inflammation and have been linked to the risk of heart disease. Many of these oils are genetically modified and used in almost every processed food on the market today, specifically soybean oil. I don’t know about you, but when I hear the word “genetically modified,” it doesn’t sound like something I should be putting in my body.
If the food pyramid was introduced in 1992, then how does that account for the demise of the American diet? Even though the food pyramid was more recent, our diet had changed much earlier. It is believed that our addiction to whole grain yumminess started back in 1894. This is when Dr. John Kellogg invented Corn Flakes, which was the beginning of a billion-dollar industry and the introduction of whole grains into the American diet.
Carnivore Diet Healing is a real thing. Judy Cho wrote a book called “Carnivore Cure: The Ultimate Diet to Attain Optimal Health and Heal Your Body,” where she talks about the Carnivore Cure Food Pyramid. Since meat is the most nutrient dense food you can consume, you can get all the nutrients that your body needs. You’ll be eliminating all the foods that create issues like inflammation, joint pains and digestion problems and receive benefits like mental clarity, pain free and higher energy.
The idea of the Carnivore Cure Food Pyramid is to eliminate all foods that are not meat from your diet. Your body will begin to recover by healing itself without all the toxins or foods that your body is sensitive to. After your body is back to its optimal state, then you can start reintroducing foods to your diet slowly. But I would imagine that if your body is feeling so good, you may not want to reintroduce things that could bring back adverse effects into your diet.
I mentioned the myths of being on a Carnivore Diet earlier in this post, but what can you look forward to While Carnivore? Here are just a few things:
Simplification of Diet: No more hunting through the pantry or running to the store in the middle of the night to satisfy my craving. Just keep a variety of different meats in the fridge that allows you to grab and go when you need it. A few bites will probably satiate your hunger, and it’s simple!
With all the problems that come with consuming things that are non-meat that I have laid out above, hopefully you have a better understanding of what your body needs and what can disrupt your body from running efficiently.
With all the information out there about what we should eat to have a well balanced diet, I want to give readers a mindset shift to the past with a passage from a book written in 1882 by Ellen Richards called Chemistry of Cooking and Cleaning: A Manual for Housekeepers. Ellen Richards was a scientist who wanted to bring science to the home. She wrote:
“1st. If the stored-up vegetable matter has required the force derived from the sun to prepare it, the tearing apart, and giving back to the air and earth, the elements of which it was built up, will yield so much force to whatever tears it down; but a certain amount of energy must be used up in this destruction. 2nd. If the animal, having accomplished this decomposition of the vegetable and appropriated the material, is killed, and the prepared nitrogenous food in the form of muscle is eaten by man, then no force is necessary to render the food assimilable; it is only to be dissolved in order that it may enter into the circulation.
The Force-producing power is not lost; it is only transferred to another animal body. Hence the ox or the sheep can do a part of man’s work for him in preparing the vegetable food for use, and man may thus accomplish more than he otherwise could.”
In translation, she’s saying that plants require a lot of energy to consume for the human stomach, but when an animal consumes plants and stores those nutrients in their muscles, humans can receive those nutrients through eating the animal without expending much energy.
No matter the stage of your journey, be healthier and stronger, While Carnivore.
Disclaimer: some of the links in this post are affiliate links where I make a small commission if you purchase the product through that link. This does not cost you anything extra and helps me to keep this website running.
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It's time to shift your perspective and consider the incredible power of the carnivore diet.
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