Guest guest Posted March 17, 2005 Report Share Posted March 17, 2005 Greeting to you, Ms Indiana! Thanks for answering my questions. Before I begin with the food, I would like to respond to something else you wrote: my back is hurting like anything as I have been sleeping on my back to avoid the shoulder ache that I experience when sleeping on my side and that I get when doing the weights/set class at the gym. As an athletic type, you are probably aware of the general principle that the body builds muscle and other lean tissue not during exercise, but during the rest/recovery following. This principle applies, in fact, to all forms of repair: the body will repair your shoulder if you rest it. I realize that backing off from that particularly weight set may not be your first choice, believe me, I understand. But if you continue to irritate this area, it will worsen, calcification and sclerotic protection (hardening off of an area) will increase, and eventually you risk losing even more function. So I encourage you to let this heal. Now regarding energy and food, you wrote: ...if I could be on a rawfood diet 100% and have enough energy to work out at least 3 hours at a time, then I would be all there. When I was 100% organic and raw food, I would start off the day with 1/2 glass of wheatgrass juice, then at lunchtime I would have a huge salad consisting of spring onions, dandelion greens, radishes, sprouts, tomatoes, watercress, carrots etc, etc. I would feel completely feel and of course have no energy until the salad had been digested. I would then snack later on flaxseed snacks I had made in the dehydrator. Reading this, it is easy to see at least the first level of the problem. The wheatgrass juice and salad provide only a few hundred calories (assuming it is a LARGE salad), and the flax seed snacks provide calories largely from fat. You have not said what exactly a " flax seed snack " is, but I assume for the moment that it is some sort of cracker made from flax seeds and perhaps some veggies thrown in. You have also not indicated the quantity you are eating. In any event, whatever calories you are obtaining from the flax seed food are largely fat calories. So my clear impression is that, while eating raw, you were drastically undereating directly usable fuel (sugar) as well as overall fuel (total calories). You were probably also undereating oxygen, water, and a whole host of vitamins, minerals, and other water-soluble nutrients. At the same time, you were overeating fat and nondigestible fiber. Fat takes a long time and considerable effort to digest and assimilate, and nondigestible fiber must simply be eliminated, requiring further metabolic effort. So I echo Roger's general direction: the most successful RF diet, and the ONLY RF diet on which an athlete can succeed in the long run, is one high in fruit, which means high in simple sugar (fuel), oxygen, and water. After all, when you are active, these are the 3 substances upon which you depend most. All fruits will work, but you'll find the greatest success with sweet fruits, as these are highest in calories per bite (caloric density) and lowest in acid. As an athlete, you produce a lot of acid (e.g., lactic acid). Your body needs alkaline input to offset your acid production, which is higher than that of " most people. " (Unfortunately. I wish everyone were so physically active!) Also, as active as you are, you need to consume a lot of calories. (We can discuss how many, if you like write back on this.) The sweet fruits are, generally, the highest in caloric density. In other words, more calories per bite, hence fewer bites needed. For example (calories per 100 grams): Bananas 89 Dates 280 (varies a bit by variety) Figs 74 Grapes 68 Mangos 66 (mangos are classified as a semisweet fruit) Persimmons (Hachiya) 127 Sweet cherries 63 Nectarines 44 Oranges 49 Papayas 39 Peaches 39 Pears 42 Plums 46 Strawberries 32 Tangerines 53 For training purposes, most of the athletes of whom I am aware make bananas the centerpiece of their nutritional program. However, you can obviously do well with dates, persimmons, figs, etc. Bananas are probably easiest to keep track of. A medium banana provides about 100-110 calories, large about 120-140 calories. If you build your program around these foods, then add other fruits and greens/salad to complete the picture, you'll head in the direction you want. Also, eat that salad as your LAST meal, let your system digest it overnight. Oh, and you didn't mention nuts, salad dressings, avocado. Are you eating any of these when raw? Please let me know whether you find this helpful, and if you would like to continue. Elchanan -- ---------------------[ Ciphire Signature ]---------------------- vlinfo signed email body (3811 characters) on 18 March 2005 at 01:49:28 UTC rawfood ------------------------------- : Ciphire has secured this email against identity theft. : Free download at www.ciphire.com. The garbled lines : below are the sender's verifiable digital signature. ------------------------------- 00fAAAAAEAAACoMzpC4w4AAMUCAAIAAgACACBZ36NZd8ice9rJ4ZlYrt6BrEjH8O zzmKDQLsTNDUWDmAEAhgSkE5NuzzvORJkeFIi/NVXB9GCG1XVfaMj+yPGZ0X2Wfd 0dPQBgKn5xlRi/YwMHoWvOwclizRlqciVA2TmIMw== ------------------[ End Ciphire Signed Message ]---------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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