Re: What's Diff Between Atkins Book?
I guess it's all in how you interpret it... I don't really view it as pushing them... it's more like allowing them, if you choose to eat them. It says that bars and shakes can replace their high-carb analogues, eliminating a sense of deprivation... not that they should replace them. Personally, I could not handle the bars, even after maintaining my goal weight for a year... they awakened terrible cravings in me. I tried many times, and it never ended well. But just because I couldn't handle them (and most people couldn't, I would venture to guess), doesn't mean that they can not be used by anybody.
The new book says to use low-carb products carefully. That while they can make doing Atkins easier, you shouldn't overdo them. And you're not supposed to substitute them for any of your 12 - 15 grams of Net Carbs from foundation vegetables.
Yes - in a perfect world, we should only eat natural, unprocessed foods. That's not as easy for some, as it is for others.
I guess it's all in how you interpret it... I don't really view it as pushing them... it's more like allowing them, if you choose to eat them. It says that bars and shakes can replace their high-carb analogues, eliminating a sense of deprivation... not that they should replace them. Personally, I could not handle the bars, even after maintaining my goal weight for a year... they awakened terrible cravings in me. I tried many times, and it never ended well. But just because I couldn't handle them (and most people couldn't, I would venture to guess), doesn't mean that they can not be used by anybody.
The new book says to use low-carb products carefully. That while they can make doing Atkins easier, you shouldn't overdo them. And you're not supposed to substitute them for any of your 12 - 15 grams of Net Carbs from foundation vegetables.
Yes - in a perfect world, we should only eat natural, unprocessed foods. That's not as easy for some, as it is for others.







x5 


Comment