Ministry of Pain said:
ragincajun said:
MOP.... you are so money and you dont even know it.I agree 100%. I am close to 300#'s and after reading the AB's diet book looked into this HFCS thing. It is in friggin everything. I am trying to ween myself of off of it, but its in EVERYTHING.... Even though its twice as expensive, I am about to solely shop at Whole Foods to try and get a leg up on it.
Evereyone thinks fat is what makes you fat but there are plenty of things I buy at Whole Foods that are not lowfat but they don't have all the other crap in them. People have a misconception that WHole Foods is expensive...it isn't cheap but the 365 Brand that they sell as the alternative to the name brands in just about everything...that 365 brand I have found ot be pretty good quality and honestly pretty cheap. I have found products there in the 365 brand that cost less than the regular brands that have HFCS in them at the regular grocery store...now why would someone pay more for worse food...

But it's America!
Just to echo MOP and to answer any of the chicken little hecklers or more legitmate questioners, my own testament comes in eliminating HFCS. I was always heavy but when played college ball and always had a reason to be big, but when transitioning into real life, the apppetite stayed while the activity didn't. There was no excuse, and I would do things very differently if I had it to do again, one of my few regrets, but the long and short was me adding 100 pounds onto an already overtaxed frame. It wasn't immediate gain, but I always struggled with yo-yo dieting. In the last year to 18 months though, I did move to change, and it included eating better overall, food, portions timing and prioritizing working out again. And I can't begin to tell you how busy I am, during my busier times, 80 to 100 work weeks are not out of the norm. However, I always make time to work out. When I was fat, I always made time to eat, and working out is just as important to my overall health, so I make time to workout. You just have to do it. Anyway, dieting was always a struggle, and the more I read about the lack of saiety with HFCS, I think that was a problem as much as anything. I was obviously eating a lot ot get that fat, and I always had the appetite for more. Now there is a very destrucitve pattern at play there that would probably interest a therapist as much as a dietician, but the more I read of that junk, I don't think it was any small factor in how big I got.Anyway, I pulled the trigger on eliminating it and it's been a wonderful change. I've cut 140 pounds and I'm still what I'd call too heavy, but if I didn't drop another pound, I'm a world healhier than I was. I'm still losing and still getting healthier, but two things to be aware of. 1. If you are trying to diet, eliminating HFCS leaves you with only healthy choices. This is by and large true. I'm eating a local brand of bread here, or maybe its east coast, I don't know, but its called the Baker. It's expensive but its so stripped of junk, and believe me, you can really see the whole grain in action. It basically leaves you unprocessed, primarily healthy foods to work with. Foods that you can actually be satisifed once you break that chain of needing more HFCS2. You will feel better overall with it out of your system. I can't stress this enough, maybe its general over healthy eating, i don't know, i'm sure that getting fast food and all those preservatives were greatly benefical too, but I was feeling old and tired when eating that, and approaching my mid to late 20's, I was starting to think this is what life feels like. This is what getting old feels like. But things have changed, and I just feel GOOD. My legs have spring and I don't ache at every turn and I just feel better. It's ridiculous to ignore the mosaic of factors at play, it wasn't simply eliminating one thing but a bigger picture, a picture that was a long time in coming for me, with a lot of things tried, and lot of things failed. Eliminating HFCS has been something that's worked.