twinkes have suger we need no suger and veggies a vitiamn this dire will work for you do not for me and the diet you ask me to eat is mostly suger suger is bad from mat blake
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here is me matt blake in photo need a diet menu
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Originally posted by matbla View Posti can not pick i need a menu and the diet you chose is all fat
not nutiroion at al . i need a menu for a week from matt blake
If you don't like my menu what is wroing with it? What would be a BETTER menu than that???
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Resident Groaner
- Jun 2003
- 2118
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There are no second chances.
“Anyone can give up, it's the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold it together when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that's true strength.”
Originally posted by Tom YumGhost, you are like rogue from x-men but with a willy.
*drools*
no one is going to do all the work for you, write out a typical day of what you have now so we get an idea what you like and what you are doing right now.
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saturday i eat brekfast was an egg and sauage and cheses on a muffin
lunch i ate a small salad for dinner i went to last saturday supper at church for homless and had two slices of cheese pizze and a small salad and milk and cup of coffee plese help me out i am called fat matt blake and need help from matt blake
Comment
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Resident Groaner
- Jun 2003
- 2118
-
There are no second chances.
“Anyone can give up, it's the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold it together when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that's true strength.”
Originally posted by Tom YumGhost, you are like rogue from x-men but with a willy.
*drools*
some questions
1) do you live alone or with family?
2) can you do your own shopping or is there someone you can give a shopping list to?
3) do you feel you have a basic understanding of the difference between good and bad foods and why they are good and bad?
Comment
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Resident Groaner
- Jun 2003
- 2118
-
There are no second chances.
“Anyone can give up, it's the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold it together when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that's true strength.”
Originally posted by Tom YumGhost, you are like rogue from x-men but with a willy.
*drools*
Actually this pretty much sums it up for you.
The CrossFit dietary prescription is as follows:
Protein should be lean and varied and account for about 30% of your total caloric load.
Carbohydrates should be predominantly low-glycemic and account for about 40% of your total caloric load.
Fat should be predominantly monounsaturated and account for about 30% of your total caloric load.
Calories should be set at between .7 and 1.0 grams of protein per pound of lean body mass depending on your activity level. The .7 figure is for moderate daily workout loads and the 1.0 figure is for the hardcore athlete.
What Should I Eat?
In plain language, base your diet on garden vegetables, especially greens, lean meats, nuts and seeds, little starch, and no sugar. That's about as simple as we can get. Many have observed that keeping your grocery cart to the perimeter of the grocery store while avoiding the aisles is a great way to protect your health. Food is perishable. The stuff with long shelf life is all circumspect. If you follow these simple guidelines you will benefit from nearly all that can be achieved through nutrition.
The Caveman or Paleolithic Model for Nutrition
Modern diets are ill suited for our genetic composition. Evolution has not kept pace with advances in agriculture and food processing resulting in a plague of health problems for modern man. Coronary heart disease, diabetes, cancer, osteoporosis, obesity and psychological dysfunction have all been scientifically linked to a diet too high in refined or processed carbohydrate. Search "Google" for Paleolithic nutrition, or diet. The return is extensive, compelling, and fascinating. The Caveman model is perfectly consistent with the CrossFit prescription.
What Foods Should I Avoid?
Excessive consumption of high-glycemic carbohydrates is the primary culprit in nutritionally caused health problems. High glycemic carbohydrates are those that raise blood sugar too rapidly. They include rice, bread, candy, potato, sweets, sodas, and most processed carbohydrates. Processing can include bleaching, baking, grinding, and refining. Processing of carbohydrates greatly increases their glycemic index, a measure of their propensity to elevate blood sugar.
What is the Problem with High-Glycemic Carbohydrates?
The problem with high-glycemic carbohydrates is that they give an inordinate insulin response. Insulin is an essential hormone for life, yet acute, chronic elevation of insulin leads to hyperinsulinism, which has been positively linked to obesity, elevated cholesterol levels, blood pressure, mood dysfunction and a Pandora's box of disease and disability. Research quot;hyperinsulinism" on the Internet. There's a gold mine of information pertinent to your health available there. The CrossFit prescription is a low-glycemic diet and consequently severely blunts the insulin response.
Caloric Restriction and Longevity
Current research strongly supports the link between caloric restriction and an increased life expectancy. The incidence of cancers and heart disease sharply decline with a diet that is carefully limited in controlling caloric intake. “Caloric Restriction” is another fruitful area for Internet search. The CrossFit prescription is consistent with this research.
The CrossFit prescription allows a reduced caloric intake and yet still provides ample nutrition for rigorous activity.
source
Comment
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Resident Groaner
- Jun 2003
- 2118
-
There are no second chances.
“Anyone can give up, it's the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold it together when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that's true strength.”
Originally posted by Tom YumGhost, you are like rogue from x-men but with a willy.
*drools*
my advice to you would be to do this in 2 stages.
Stage 1
id start by simply cutting out junk food, coke, pizza chips etc. anything where you dont know exactly what is in it.
Concentrate on eating real food, rice, eggs, pasta, bread ( not ready made sandwhiches) cook for yourself, get fresh meat and so on. every meal should be made of real, quality, natural food.
I think you should do this until about the new year so you get used to eating good food and not any junk food at all.
Menu wise its not that hard at this stage, for example..
breakfast :
oats with lowest fat milk you can get
Lunch:
brown bread sandwhich with meat and veg filling, nothing precooked or any rubbish make it all yourself.
Dinner:
Brown rice or brown pasta with some chicken and a salad
Thats the kind of thing, you can pretty much make it up yourself as long as it is healthy like that.
Stage 2
start looking towards the breakdown of fat, protein and carbs in each meal and timing your food around training.
Right now id just get you eating good fresh food.
does that make sense and can you do that?
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