Welcome!
I've been on 811 low-fat-high-carb raw vegan for a month and dropped the ball today because the craving to eat meat (or whatever the underlying reason for the craving was...perhaps fat or higher levels of protein) was too strong.
Yes, and it could also be other nutrients like B12 and folate (and iron for women) that tend to have low bioavailability in raw vegan diets.
Anyway, I want these dark circles to go away, to regain some strength (I've become really skinny this past month), and get to health.
Dark circles under the eyes and abnormal thinness or obesity (in the wild there is far less variation in body weight within species) are fairly common symptoms in people with gluten intolerance and vegetarians. Some people end up with a bad combination of thin limbs and fat "beer belly"/love handles/front of the neck, as I did. Incidentally, from what I can tell, the buttocks and thighs appear to be healthy adipose depot sites in both humans and some other animals (the neck/back fat pad or hump is another healthy site for other animals) [see
http://www.nowpublic.com/health/butt-fat-can-be-good-your-health].
Here's the story of one vegetarian who had dark circles under her eyes (she went cooked Paleo, but raw Paleo appears to help at least some people like me even better):
Vegetarian Isn’t Better: Ann’s Story
From The Paleo Diet, by Loren Cordain, PhD, p. 72
Ann Woods adopted “a near-vegetarian diet that emphasized grains, potatoes, lots of starch, and very little fat or meat” and took up jogging. She lost weight and her blood pressure and cholesterol levels were low, but after seven years “she noticed that her energy began to wane. She was continuously tired and wanted nothing more than to sleep after long runs. Ann recovered from one running-related injury only to find herself injured again within weeks. Dark circles formed underneath her eyes, and she caught colds more frequently than ever. She finally discovered that she had iron-deficiency anemia caused by her ‘healthful’ staples of oatmeal, brown rice, beans, pasta, and low-fat yogurt.”
“Ann discovered the Paleo dietary principles in The Complete Book of Alternative Nutrition, which featured [Dr. Cordain’s] research. It made a lot of sense to her, and she gave it a try. She replaced her former vegetarian staples with lean [Note: I find I do better on a fat-rich diet after trying a fairly lean Paleo diet] meat, chicken, and seafood at almost every meal. Fruits and veggies were no problem—she had eaten a lot of these before her switch. Within a week, Ann noticed that her energy level was stable throughout the day. She no longer had late afternoon slumps. Her stamina increased, and she was less tired after her runs. After three months on the diet she dropped 5 additional pounds to her present weight of 106, her stomach was now totally flat and her muscle tone and strength were better than ever. On top of this, her iron-deficiency anemia disappeared, and the dark circles underneath her eyes vanished.”
(An aside: for anyone who read my post on giant pandas, notice any similarities in symptoms between bamboo-eating carnivorous giant pandas and Ann the vegetarian Homo sapiens sapiens?)
One question I have is on eating raw meat. Is the idea for the most part that 'raw' paleo is the best way to go? And, also, I just got out of the hospital a few days ago from the worst case of food poisoning I have ever experienced (I idiotically ate some unrefigerated spinach) and I'm worried about eating raw meat. The internet is covered with warnings about not eating raw meat. If I do eat it, what's the way to go to not get food poisoned? From a butcher or can I still get it from a decent supermarket?
Some here eat lots of raw meat, others eat more raw plants.
Having gotten a bad case of food poisoning from raw spinach (raw greens are the most common source of it, BTW, in part because they are so commonly eaten), are you afraid to eat raw plants? If not, then why would you be afraid to eat raw meat?
P.S. is soymilk and soy protein powder okay?
After having tried a soy-heavy diet at a certified nutritionist's recommendation, I think William may be right about it being invented by Satan.