I lost 35 lbs on South Beach. I've been holding steady at 120-123 for several months now.
There is a very active forum that covers it.
http://www.southbeach-diet-plan.com/forum/
I'm known as WGirl there.
HTH,
I lost 35 lbs on South Beach. I've been holding steady at 120-123 for several months now.
There is a very active forum that covers it.
http://www.southbeach-diet-plan.com/forum/
I'm known as WGirl there.
HTH,
This bod was designed for carbs (at least while I'm biking). It doesn't work well without them.
I would assume that you believe that SBD is a low carb diet. It certainly is in the first 2 weeks, but after that, it is not.Originally Posted by Geonz
Geonz, read the book. The diet in Phase 3 is the right carbs not low carb. The previous phases are all about breaking you of cravings for sugar - simply like an elimination diet.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.
SBD jump-started my weight loss. I followed phase 1 to help me kick my sugars and refined carbs addiction. It provided a lot of information on what are good/bad carbs.
This is not a low-carb diet. It's a good/healthy carb diet. After phase 1, I felt more prepared to make better food selections and it helped me to make healthier eating a lifestyle change as opposed to feeling I was just on a diet.
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~~Tiffanie~~
Your biggest challenge isn't someone else.
It's the ache in your lungs and the burning in your legs and the voice inside that yells "CAN'T".
But you don't listen. You just push harder.
And then you hear the voice whisper "CAN".
And you discover that the person you thought you were is no match for the one you really are.
Author Unknown
Plus it doesn't have you eating bad fats, like pork rind.Originally Posted by SadieKate
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Dogmama, I don't know what kind of mileage you put in on a weekly basis but I'll share what I did during Phase 1. The diet is low carb for only the first two weeks which is fine for about an hour's road ride at moderate levels (for me). Anything longer or more intense required more glycogen than Phase 1 can supply. The glycogen stores are pretty depleted during this time.
Starting with lunch the day before a long ride, for me Friday lunch, I would eat pasta or rice and stay with a fairly high carb diet through Sunday lunch. I could ride longer and with more intensity (for instance mtb rides) without problem. I would go back to the Phase 1 diet at Sunday dinner. Due to this I extended Phase 1 to three weeks. This modification worked really well for me. I have a friend who tried a pure Phase 1 approach but for some reason insisted on no carbs at all (I don't think he even ate vegetables which isn't part of the plan) and, in his words, "just about died." I tried to get him to understand the relationship between carbohydrates and glycogen stores but he wouldn't and now bad mouths the diet. Agatston even states briefly somewhere in the book that endurance athletes need to be aware of this issue.
The first part of the book is the educational part while the second half is recipes. An easy read and very educational - stuff we all should know. It is very little effort to get up to speed on Agatston's reasoning and make your own decision.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.
Another diet you might look into is The Paleo Diet for Athletes by Loren Cordain and Joel Friel. I haven't read it yet but have heard good things. Controversial again (as all "diet" plans are) but Joe Friel is certainly a well-respected name among cyclists.
Anyone have an opinion on it? The book is in my big bedside pile holding down the floor.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.