Thanks Iguana for all this awesome feedback!
I'm curious what other body feelings you're referring to. In the mouth or elsewhere in the body?
Two meals does sound ideal. I get the best digestion when I only eat a single species of food at one sitting; mangoes for example, and no other fruit. As a result, if the meal is too small I'm finding I need another meal after an hour or two. This might improve when I have a better sense for what my body is craving, and can eat it in volume.
80 dates is a staggering amount! I think I have gotten that "too sweet" taste change, which feels like a burning sensation to me, the same as with too much honey. But afterwards I get loud scentless gas, which makes me think something is wrong. Any idea what this is about? The dates I'm eating are fresh, California-grown, certified organic dates; not dried or pitted. They're delicious, if expensive.
My experience is not aligning with what Severen L. Schaeffer says in this quote from
Instinctive Nutrition:
Fresh dates become sour when no longer needed. Commercially dried dates are generally dried at high temperature and should be avoided since they can easily be eaten to excess, producing "allergic" reactions and malaise. Buy dried dates only if the seller can certify that they were air-dried, and only if they produce a sweet-to-sour taste change.
I will definitely keep eating vegetables on occasion and only the most attractive, like you describe. We have a big vegetable garden in the warmer months.
I wonder were you find suitable eggs because it's normally not available unless you have your own poultry. When not available, I eat wild seafood instead, as Tyler suggests.
I'm sure I'm not buying "suitable" eggs, by your definition. They're pasture raised, organic eggs, from a Whole Foods here in north-eastern USA. They taste delicious; sweet and creamy. I eat them at room temperature, and the taste change has been very clear recently. I'd certainly consider better eggs if I could source them, but right now I value the variety they give to my diet.
Thanks for the book link; I would like to read it.
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Thanks Van!
Those are some interesting and useful ideas you mention. I'm not educated on insulin and blood sugar. I do understand what you mean about lusting after the next sweet treat though! As with my first instinctive experience, this time around I'm finding I have the same coping strategy of using food to calm my emotions and a structured meal schedule, like the two meals you and Iguana mention, really helps!
Are you suggesting a primarily meat-based diet as a general method to maintain better blood sugar levels? I'm not interested in doing regular blood work, at this point.