I think whole grain cereal should be fine for breakfast. If you were eating Froot Loops everyday, that would be a problem.
And having a healthy, filling breakfast is important for losing weight.
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Today I had a doctor's appt - actually my annual physical. My TSH was elevated, so a little hypothyroidism going on, my cholesterol is 204, but my HDLs, LDLs and Trig were within normal(desireable) limits. So she's prescribing something for my thyroid. BTW, I'm overweight and need to lose. She asked about my diet, eating habits. I told her I've been eating breakfast of either cold cereal(honey nut cheerios, raisin bran, or grape nuts) or oatmeal, sometimes with multi-grain english muffin with peanut butter. She told me not to eat cereal, carbs in the morning(after the age of 40 or 50) is the worse thing to eat. I'm suppose to be eating egg beaters, cottage cheese with fruit or veggies. She said I will never lose weight eating carbs for breakfast. I don't know if I totally agree with not eating cereal, its not like I'm eating a whole box at a sitting. So what's for breakfast? Any advice or comments?
2011 Specialized Secteur Elite Comp
2006 Trek 7100
I think whole grain cereal should be fine for breakfast. If you were eating Froot Loops everyday, that would be a problem.
And having a healthy, filling breakfast is important for losing weight.
That's funny. I'm in my 40's and my cardiologist told me no rice, bread, or potatoes in the evening, that eating carbs late in the day is a sure-fire way to gain weight because it's too close to bedtime to burn them off.
I'm to the point that I take anything most doctors say with a huge, heaping pile of grains of salt.
"How about if we all just try to follow these very simple rules of the road? Drive like the person ahead on the bike is your son/daughter. Ride like the cars are ambulances carrying your loved ones to the emergency room. This should cover everything, unless you are a complete sociopath."
David Desautels, in a letter to velonews.com
Random babblings and some stuff to look at.
My trainer is also a nutritionist. She wants me eating whole grains for breakfast and lunch and very few carbs at dinner. I've been following her plan pretty well and I've lost six pounds and 3.5% body fat in about 6 weeks.
I wrote about what I eat for all my meals in my blog.
Veronica
Although...
http://www.diet-blog.com/archives/20...ou_get_fat.php
timing plays a big role in a Sumo Wrestler's weight gain.
I eat eggs and toast a few times a week, and simple cereal, like oatmeal the other days. For cold cereal, I like Cascadian Farms brand of multigrain squares, which has 4 grams of sugar per serving. I'm really careful about consuming sugar in the morning. I notice it will make me hungry all day.
Surgtech, it sounds as if your doctor is not giving the most complete info. I tend to agree with what the others have been advised ..avoiding bad carbs and sugars in the evening.
To control any tendencies of becoming diabetes 2, even though I'm not overweight, I must control the amount of carbs and sugars. Plus maintain or increase the amount of regular exercise. This is from my family doctor...AND from my sister, who is a family doctor. 2 physician opinions, ok?
My doctor-sister LOST 50 lbs. after she changed her diet and ramped up her exercising due to her near-diabetes 2 sugar blood test results She was overweight. She avoids eating much rice, carbs..and if she eats them, in morning or for lunch.
Dear sister recommended me this database on identifying foods with safe glycemic index: http://www.glycemicindex.com/
I have noticed for myself in the past 1.5 yrs., if I eat too carb or too much sugar at supper, I don't feel well.
I am 50 yrs. The sister who lost weight, she was 38 when she lost all that.
Last edited by shootingstar; 05-04-2009 at 04:09 PM.
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遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.
People need to remeber that there is a difference between refined carbs and complex carbs (fruits and veggies). Perhaps she should have implored you to eat more complex grains and add some protein and a bit of fat to your breakfast.
I adore cereal, but hardly eat it now. Breakfast is cottage cheese, a whole bunch of fruit (usually watermelon, grapes, and few raspberries, blueberries) and a bit tablespoon of natural PB. It fills me up and I am not tired. Sometimes I will have oatmeal and about once a month, I have a big bowl of whatever cereal I fancy. But afterward, I notice I never feel that great, so even that will change.
My MIL, a fine devotee of all things refined, even though her weight is fine for her height has developed high blood sugars. She was told to cut out the refined/white stuff. There's a lesson there somewhere.![]()
"You can't get what you want till you know what you want." Joe Jackson
2006 Cannondale Feminine/Ultegra/Jett
2012 Trek Speed Concept 9.5/Ultegra/saddle TBD
I mostly eat a high protein breakfast, some days with a little "good"carbs.
I live on egg white omelets, with either low fat cheese, veggies, or a small amount of chicken or low salt ham. I have a piece of fruit with that. Some days, cottage cheese, fruit and maybe one slice of ww bread with soy nut butter. I also eat tuna fish in a red pepper and pieces of chicken, rolled up with low fat cream cheese inside.
A couple of days a week I will splurge and have a very small bowl of multi grain cereal and skim milk or a whole wheat bagel, with the egg whites or cottage cheese, or chicken.
I allow myself to have a big breakfast one day a week... usually waffles and turkey sausage.
Life is too short to give up egg yolks!
The doctor's advice seems totally out of context. There is more to that story she's telling. I eat oatmeal every day for breakfast, and I've lost 45 lbs since I started doing it.
But, I didn't make that change in a vacuum. There are a million other changes that I made. Gives and gets. Trade-offs. I'd discount that advice, since you don't know why she said it.
Karen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
insidious ungovernable cardboard
It's always better to eat some protein with your carbs. I think the doctor may be referring to spiking your insulin with an all carb breakfast. When your metabolism is slow, as you age, etc. simple carbs are converted directly to fat (except when you are exercising). If you don't have a weight problem, you don't have to think about this stuff so much.
----------------------------------------------------
"I never made "Who's Who"- but sure as hell I made "What's That??..."
Nancy, I eat a breakfast very similar to yours fairly often, and I've lost 20 pounds so I'm down to my high school weight at age 58. I don't eat meat, so my diet tends to be high in carbs. I do exercise a good bit, but nothing extreme.
For me, weight loss is a matter of eating fewer calories than I burn.
Pam
I've been following a medically supported program for one week and have lost five pounds, this after struggling with weight for more than 12 years while exercising frequently. I have cut way way down on carbs (no bread, pasta, rice, cereal or any grain) and am eating a lot of low-fat and nonfat protein.
And tons of water. It really works! I've never been more thrilled in my life. However, I must note that this is medically supervised, and I wouldn't do it any other way!
If I don't eat a good helping of protein and fat at breakfast, I will be ravenous within two hours. Total blood sugar crash. And that's if I eat unsweetened whole grain oatmeal or a low-sugar cold cereal with unsweetened hemp milk.
That said, I do still eat cereal, I just throw a large handful of nuts into cold cereal or 2-3 tablespoons of PB in oatmeal.
But I'm pretty sure I could dispense with the cereal altogether and be even healthier.
ETA: If I'm going for a run or a ride in the morning, then I definitely want carbs for breakfast. But never exclusively carbs.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 05-04-2009 at 06:36 PM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Even docs are not immune to the no-carbs hype.
You don't say HOW overweight you are, but you do realize that being hypothyroid makes it easy to gain and hard to lose weight, right?
Oatmeal is never a bad thing. As long as you're not heaping the sugar on it.
Processed cereals are another matter. Not so much for the carbs in the cereal itself, but all the sugar they add to processed foods even if you're not heaping the sugar on by the spoonful.
Get your thyroid balanced, make sure you're eating a balanced diet, exercise regularly, then re-evaluate where you're at.
If we listen to all the diet advice out there:
No carbs/low carbs
No fat/low fat
Cutting back on protein and substituting carbs instead
The "blood type" diets
The "rotation" diet
The "raw foods" diet
etc etc ad nauseum
There wouldn't be anything left to eat.
By charity, goodness, restraint, and self-control men and woman alike can store up a well-hidden treasure -- a treasure which cannot be given to others and which robbers cannot steal. A wise person should do good. That is the treasure that cannot be lost.
- Khuddhaka Patha
The word of God comes down to man as rain to soil, and the result is mud, not clear water
- The Sufi Junayd