Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - TrueCarnivore

Pages: [1]
1
Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach / Re: How many carbs to un-keto-adapt?
« on: December 30, 2010, 10:34:09 pm »
If fat loss is the sole focus then I'm inclined to say yes on a theoretical basis. But like most of the processes total protein (and fat) consumption would have to factor in as well. But also an argument could be made that carbs could provide immediate fuel for high intense activity and therefore raise metabolic rates way higher so your net productive activity could result in more fat being burned. In other words you might feel more strength/power to do whatever exercise for a net burning of more fuel. I'm also still learning about these things so don't take my word as a final say."

No way glycerol would be enough to supply the body with all of the glucose needs. The glucose in this case would presumably come from amino acids (protein component of ZC diet). The fat-adapted state is muscle sparing but without adequate protein intake I would still say its still a net loss of muscle.
Once fat-adapted the process of gluconeogenesis HAS to occur still because you will be converting amino acids to glucose. I think the bottom line is if you have adequate protein intake so that your glucose lee\vels can be maintained AND the body has enough protein to maintain muscle. In fasting, there is no protein (or carb/fat) intake so during ketosis the body fat gets "converted" to oxaloacetate and thus travel up the path of gluconeogenesis to make glucose. The body muscle is spared once again as much as possible. -d

I see exactly what you're saying. I've been experimenting with using whey an hour before workout to use the free glucose for intensity. I did this twice, but won't be continuing. It did up my ability to maintain intensity, but I felt it made it easier on my body resulting in less adaptation on a cellular level. Hard to explain, but that is how it felt. In my case, I would rather have all my activity come from fat throughout the day and coming days in response to my activity. Prolonging the recovery and whatever advantages that can provide.
 

Protein intake does have to be a tad bit higher on a fat-adapted diet, doesn't it. And I do notice what hannibal mentioned earlier in this thread about using BCAAs past a certain lactic threshold. I'm wondering if this could be a beneficial factor in the long-run. Causing higher amounts of damage, and resulting in more repairs having to be made as opposed to glucose loaded. I'm not sure if it's related to this, but I feel that my muscle comes in tighter, and more dense on this diet. It could be from fasting and accumulating damage, and then repairing it in a nightly mini-bulk resulting in unstretched muscle coming in. My inclination is that muscle maturity could be reached faster on a fat-adapted diet because of the ease in which damage is caused. Muscle maturity basically being volume and quality of damage acculumated to be later repaired and made stronger over time.

I've found that making it harder on the body only results in the best adaptations. Given proper protein, fats, and calories are consumed in the end.

2
Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach / Re: How many carbs to un-keto-adapt?
« on: December 30, 2010, 10:22:22 pm »
No, it's always being used if you don't consume carbohydrates, just the better keto-adapted you are, the less generally needs to occur. The gluconeogenesis and the ketogenesis happen together.

Hmm, okay, good to know. It's getting to the point now that I don't even notice I'm without carbs, so I think my efficiency continues to rise. I'm trying to experiment with increasing mitochondria fat efficiency/number with hard anaerobic and aerobic conditioning. Also with not quenching oxidation at all with any vitamin C, E, or plant phytonutrients. My reasoning is going off the nobel deserving experiment with worms that were genetically engineered to live 5 times longer in accordance with what zero glucose would cause. In the test, once they were given glucose, all those gains were lost. Along with that, there is a related study similar in structure where they gave them vitamin C, and E and their lifespans were cut short as well. The antioxidant factor stopped the body from upping its own natural antioxidants. I also remember reading that without quenching the oxidation, muscle cells are created better, mitochondria act advantageously and so on.

I'm using hard resistance(as high as the cycles can go) and doing 30 second intervals with 1:30 minute rest with ZC. Experimenting with HGH, endurance, lactic acid thresholds... whatever I can get out of it, really. I'm also going with heavy deadlifts and what not, but those don't go as far as a sprint in intensity. The oxygen debt created, more or less.

My idea is that during our evolution, times without food, plus high levels of activity caused us to be completely fat-adapted. We have years of catching up to do mitochondria wise, so this is my attempt to delve into this area and see what kind of results I get.

Any thoughts?

3
Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach / Re: How many carbs to un-keto-adapt?
« on: December 29, 2010, 11:32:55 pm »
Gosu,

So regardless.. fat loss is greater on the lower carb/zc approach than with 30+ carbs a day. Correct?

With glycerol being available for combining G3P, is that enough to serve the processes that can solely rely on glucose? Is the fat-adapted state muscle sparring then? Is it correct to say that once fat-adapted, muscle protein for gluconeogenesis is rarely used?

4
Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach / Re: How many carbs to un-keto-adapt?
« on: December 28, 2010, 11:37:13 pm »
actually......

The first day of no carb, you will have small amount of gluconeogenesis. I remember reading it's around 1/3 of a pound.

Now if you've already spent much time exercising and existing in a fat-adapted state, I would guess it to be even less.

Once fat-adapted.... gluconeogenesis is a rarity... triglycerides get broken down into the free fatty acids and the two glyceride components in lipolysis to combine and make glycogen.

Most of our body can run on ketones alone, and the small percentage that relies solely on glycogen get it from lipolysis. Gluconeogensis doesn't continue to occur to any significant degree.

It's known for being protein sparring for that very reason!! Human growth hormone mobilizing free fatty acids that feed the muscle and also the majority of our organism!

The body does everything it can to conserve protein.

Personally, I've experienced nothing but great results when it comes to muscle preservation. I do daily 15-20 hour fasts fat-adapted, working a physical job the entire time.

5
To me, the slowing of brain waves doesn't correspond with long-term damage, or enough detrimental effects to cause any concern.

Continuous use for long periods of time would atrophy the brain in areas of function that base in awareness and being mentally sharp. I wouldn't think it's so bad or any different than not performing math for 5 or so years and getting back into it since that function of your brain atrophied, or lost strength.

I enjoy the slowing of my brain waves. It's calming and soothing.. but it doesn't make me tired, and I actually get energized to workout when high. I NEVER receive the munchies from it, and actually have blunted hunger! Go figure!!

I think of time spent under marijuana's spell can actually improve creativity if used correctly. You're thinking in directions and seeing in ways that are completely new to your brain resulting a more complex neural net of connections. Functions linking with other functions that just normally isn't possible unless through some sort of meditation.

There is a cycling that is needed with MJ though. Definitely warranted. As more time is spent in the slower brain wave state, it accumulatively dampens the sharper faculties of your brain until more time is spent in a normal state of mind. Going along with this, it's safe to say that much more time should be spent naturally aware so that when periods of MJ cycling come, the sharpness is synergistic to the lowering of waves it causes. Too much chronic lowering results in not enough 'fuel' from time spent sharp.

6
Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach / Re: Hair loss and ZC
« on: December 27, 2010, 11:09:58 pm »
At 23, with 2 years of bodybuilding type diets under my belt.. (all meats, cheeses, milk, and eggs, and gotta have those carbz) I noticed my hair started thinning faster. I'd get tingling sensations around my scalp where I'm slightly balding. I think this is from a couple of things... Inflammation from grains and sugar in general, and chronically high insulin and correspondingly chronically high testosterone.

Since I've gone ZC for three months now, the tingling sensations have completely stopped, and I feel I won't lose my hair now keeping with this diet for the long-term. I plan on eating this way till I die.

My testosterone has lowered to a healthy level, I believe. That might be a bit misleading, as I don't really feel like my muscle comes in less, or my recovery takes longer. I think the unbalanced ratio of testorone:dht has been reversed, actually.

7
Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach / Re: How many carbs to un-keto-adapt?
« on: December 27, 2010, 11:01:30 pm »
I would think completely going without carbohydrates at 14 would be just fine. Why does one really need sugar anyway? All it does is make things easier, but isn't necessary.

At 23, being ZC for 3 months now, I would go back to my childhood years and GLADLY change to a diet without carbohydrates. The benefits of optimized human growth hormone during that growing period would have been very interesting, and astounding to experience. A childhood without chronically high insulin I'm betting would have made the pubescent period much easier to stomach. Under 30g a day would do just fine, but the benefits of full fat-adaptation wouldn't be experienced.

And IMO, ZC has great advantages over 30g of sugar a day. A completely clear mind not being drunk off glucose, a stable sense of well-being, sharper intellect. A higher state of existence that I lose with any ingestion of glucose.

Also, per the mentioning of better athletic ability... I attest to this as well. I perform better zc. Sprints, handstands, agility, dexterity.. especially 15 or so hrs fasted in conjunction.

Pages: [1]
SMF spam blocked by CleanTalk