Re: too much cheese?
There's another thread nearby in which the poster noted how nice it is to have a kitchen scale in order to measure portions and get a better understanding of what one is consuming. Measuring portions this way isn't exactly "Atkins", either, but it's a far quicker and easier way of trouble-shooting what's going on in one's diet than a reccomendation to "eat until you're full, but no more".
Even Atkins said that if one eats more than one's caloric requirement (plus the bonus calories that the body needs to burn its own fat), one would gain weight. Standard caloric theory.
Again, if one's non-carb caloric intake is less than that which is required to maintain one's weight, the body's fat and protein will be "burned" to make up the difference, and that means weight will be lost. Increased consumption of cheese (naturally, with a corresponding drop in other food to maintain the same caloric intake) may appear to cause a "stall" in weight loss, but this is only an illusion because feces are not being lost at the same rate as before the increase in cheese.
As long as one realizes what's going on (that it may be necessary for the cheese-lover to wait awhile for the body's new intestine-heavy equilibrium is established), there is no need to panic when one sees weight remaining the same, or even rising a bit.
Of couse, if one starts eating more cheese but not reducing other foods, this might raise total caloric intake above that required to lose or maintain current weight, so, naturally, weight will rise.
The reason I've bothered to post is that I recently had a cheddar cheese stall and my weight fluctuated around what appeared to be a stable weight, even though my caloric intake was still stable and well below my BMR.
Luckily, since starting Atkins (74 days and 37 pounds ago), I use an Excel spreadsheet that I created to monitor my caloric intake, as well as carbs, fat and protein. I weigh all food portions with a digital scale so that I know with a great deal of precision exactly what and how much I'm eating.
My wife and I also have pretty expensive Soehnle bathroom scale that is accurate to + or - 0.2 lb and I weigh myself at the same time each morning just after I get up and "go to the bathroom". The "going to the bathrrom" part is, in the very short term, a very important part of measuring a weight trend, and, again, it is exactly this that changes in diet can affect nearly instantly. If cheese causes feces to take much longer to get through the intestines, that means that weight builds up in the intestines and that increasing weight masks weight loss in other parts of the body. This is precisely what happened to me.
Up until the point that I increased the ratio of "cheese calories" in the exact same caloric intake, my weight was dropping like clock-work. Because I had known about the possiblity of cheese stalling weight loss, and because I monitor my diet as I described above, I didn't panic. After about 9 remarkable days of no weight loss, my weight again began to drop.
I think that others who experience an apparent cheese stall shouldn't panic, either. As long one does not exceed the same total amount of non-carb calories, even eating more cheese, one will eventually start losing weight again.
Please feel free (if not obligated) to ignore everything I've said above and will say in the future.
There's another thread nearby in which the poster noted how nice it is to have a kitchen scale in order to measure portions and get a better understanding of what one is consuming. Measuring portions this way isn't exactly "Atkins", either, but it's a far quicker and easier way of trouble-shooting what's going on in one's diet than a reccomendation to "eat until you're full, but no more".
Even Atkins said that if one eats more than one's caloric requirement (plus the bonus calories that the body needs to burn its own fat), one would gain weight. Standard caloric theory.
Again, if one's non-carb caloric intake is less than that which is required to maintain one's weight, the body's fat and protein will be "burned" to make up the difference, and that means weight will be lost. Increased consumption of cheese (naturally, with a corresponding drop in other food to maintain the same caloric intake) may appear to cause a "stall" in weight loss, but this is only an illusion because feces are not being lost at the same rate as before the increase in cheese.
As long as one realizes what's going on (that it may be necessary for the cheese-lover to wait awhile for the body's new intestine-heavy equilibrium is established), there is no need to panic when one sees weight remaining the same, or even rising a bit.
Of couse, if one starts eating more cheese but not reducing other foods, this might raise total caloric intake above that required to lose or maintain current weight, so, naturally, weight will rise.
The reason I've bothered to post is that I recently had a cheddar cheese stall and my weight fluctuated around what appeared to be a stable weight, even though my caloric intake was still stable and well below my BMR.
Luckily, since starting Atkins (74 days and 37 pounds ago), I use an Excel spreadsheet that I created to monitor my caloric intake, as well as carbs, fat and protein. I weigh all food portions with a digital scale so that I know with a great deal of precision exactly what and how much I'm eating.
My wife and I also have pretty expensive Soehnle bathroom scale that is accurate to + or - 0.2 lb and I weigh myself at the same time each morning just after I get up and "go to the bathroom". The "going to the bathrrom" part is, in the very short term, a very important part of measuring a weight trend, and, again, it is exactly this that changes in diet can affect nearly instantly. If cheese causes feces to take much longer to get through the intestines, that means that weight builds up in the intestines and that increasing weight masks weight loss in other parts of the body. This is precisely what happened to me.
Up until the point that I increased the ratio of "cheese calories" in the exact same caloric intake, my weight was dropping like clock-work. Because I had known about the possiblity of cheese stalling weight loss, and because I monitor my diet as I described above, I didn't panic. After about 9 remarkable days of no weight loss, my weight again began to drop.
I think that others who experience an apparent cheese stall shouldn't panic, either. As long one does not exceed the same total amount of non-carb calories, even eating more cheese, one will eventually start losing weight again.
Please feel free (if not obligated) to ignore everything I've said above and will say in the future.



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