May 18, 2012

CALL US: 309-662-5678

Tips & Tricks for the Clean Living Challenge

Alright ya’ll, time for another Clean Living Challenge. Let’s take these 6 weeks and put as much quality eating, sleeping and exercise together to see how far it can take us. Being as this is our third one of these and not everyone has been with us from the beginning, it’s safe to say that we have a lot of people at different points in their clean living journey. We want to help you guys get the most out of your efforts, so we thought we’d give you something to think about before we start. This should help you get an idea of what you might aim to accomplish in the next few weeks. Keep in mind that these are broad generalizations and might not apply to you at all…or more than one might apply. Either way, our goal is to one day get you guys to the point where you’re confident thinking for yourself and not afraid to try something new if “Paleo” hasn’t worked for you in the past. Be honest with yourself though, and put in the work where you need it. Trying a whole bunch of advanced stuff won’t work if you’ve yet to string 3 clean weeks together.
For the ease of this article, I’ll classify the majority of you fine CFBN folk into 3 basic categories.

1: Beginner. You are new to the gym or haven’t really had much exposure to “Paleo”, and until a few weeks ago you thought that whole grain cereal with skim milk, yogurt, and orange juice was a balanced breakfast. I would suggest trying a program like the Robb Wolf Total Transformation. It lays everything out in a clear format and makes everything understandable and digestible for beginners. It tells you what to eat, what to avoid (and why), and even gives you sample meal plans that you can use for yourself. It will basically take much of the thinking out of this, freeing you up to experiment with new foods, recipes, and cooking methods. In order to be successful, you’ll need to set yourself up for success. i.e. plan your meals ahead of time and play with preparing and storing large amounts of food for easy consumption. The easier you can make this whole experiment on yourself, the more likely you’ll be successful long term. If this is your first exposure, use these next few weeks to find what you like, don’t like, and what you can make quickly and easily. If this becomes an added stress to your life rather than a part of it…you will fail.

A friendly heads up:
This will be challenging. There will be many dark times as you detoxify and transition to a new way of living. You might be a little listless and irritable. Your family and co-workers might think you’re weird or crazy, but your CFBN family will be here to support you. If you fight through and find the light again, you’ll emerge much happier, healthier, and leaner.

2: Intermediate. (This is where people spend the majority of their time. i.e. those of us who aren’t beginners) You’ve been around the block before. You’ve stuck it out for some solid streaks, but you’ve never been able to make it stick full time. Work, family, stress, a solid bender, or whatever may have knocked you off the wagon and you couldn’t put all the pieces together again. You may have taken a step back or feel like you are spinning your wheels. Whatever it is, it just ain’t workin.
a) It might be in your head. You know what to do, but you can’t seem to get out of your own way. You like the paleo foods and know how to get in a grove, but the allure of the delicious baked goods or whatever is too much to handle. I would suggest doing a program like Total Transformation for a good kick-start, but meet with Chad or I to figure out a new path. Insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results. Let’s try something new.
b) You weren’t patient enough. If you’ve ever uttered the words, “Paleo doesn’t work for me. I know cuz I tried it for 3 weeks.”…this is you. Like anything good, it takes time. Men usually will begin to see some changes after about a month. Ladies usually take a little longer. I know; life isn’t fair. You’ll usually start feeling/performing better before you see the results. If you feel better and perform better, but aren’t seeing the physique results you want be patient and sit down with a coach. Maybe we can see something you’re overlooking.
c) You weren’t honest with yourself. We’re all adults here. Please don’t make up B.S. excuses to justify you’re not eating clean. You won’t hurt our feelings if you’re not strict Paleo. The best diet is the one you can stick to. I can’t tell you how many times people will say they eat “great,” but won’t tell me what they’re actually eating. Or they could be eating clean, they just forgot about all the alcohol they drink. Try writing down everything that passes your lips. Sometimes when you see what you eat in a day’s time you’ll surprise yourself. Use this to find a middle ground where you can succeed. It doesn’t have to be 100% strict. It’s okay if you want to sacrifice a few seconds off your WoD for a night out with the ladies each week. Just don’t lie to yourself about what’s going on.
d) Maybe we just haven’t found the right recipe yet…
If you’re fairly lean and have tried lower carb paleo in the past, try adding in more starch (paleo friendly). If you’re consistently low on glycogen, the cravings for carbohydrates can be nagging. This can affect your sleep, mood, and performance, as well as making it hard to put on muscle. If this sounds like you, try adding sweet potatoes/yams, white potatoes (no skin), yucca root, or other roots and tubers (squash, carrots, etc). Play around with it cuz you’ll never know if you don’t try.
If you’re trying to lean out those last few pounds, but can’t seem to make any headway, let’s try playing around with taking some things out. Some things that might be hidden landmines sabotaging your progress: eggs, nuts, cheese/dairy, nightshades (onions, peppers, tomatoes, eggplant, white potatoes). Some of these things might be subtle allergens or big irritants that you’re not aware of. I did this with great success over the last year. I pulled em out one at a time, left em out for a few weeks, then put em back in. It turns out that they all give me problems ranging from itchy throat/eyes and bloating with nuts, to heavy bloating and full out Incredible Hulk style mood swings with eggs. These may or may not be a problem for you, but you won’t know until you try! Let’s try something new. Don’t just stick to the examples above…if you suspect something else, give it a whirl.
Just remember any changes can and will affect performance. Again, figure out what you’re goals are and go from there. When in doubt…don’t be afraid to ask questions or meet with Chad or myself.

3. Advanced. (This isn’t you…or Chad, or me) This is where we all strive to be. By now this clean living thing is old hat. While you like the occasional treat, any prolonged exposure to the Standard American Diet makes you anxious to get back on the wagon. You’ve read the articles, done the research, played with adding and subtracting different foods and you’ve since developed your own personal version of this Paleo thing. By now you’ve experimented with more advanced eating methods to help you get where you’re going. You’ve become adept at listening to your body’s subtle signals and you let it act as the ultimate judge. You’ve tried and are experienced with Carb Cycling, Ketogenic Diets, and Intermittent Fasting, for example. Basically you weren’t happy with where you were at, but you figured out where you wanted to go and put in the work to get you on your way.

Keep in mind that these are all examples and broad generalizations. For some of you more experienced folk, we want you to begin finding your own way. “Paleo” is a basic template that you can use to build off of in whatever way you see fit. Think about who you are and what you’re going for. Then, decide how clean your lifestyle needs to be to achieve your goals. If you are coming in for basic health and functionality, you probably won’t need to be as strict as people who are working to be competitors, or people who are trying to lean out. The best diet is the one you can stick to for the long run. If you’re happy sacrificing visible abs for a more relaxed approach…I’m cool with that. Just be honest and realistic with yourself.
Basically, if you’re a rookie or you need a solid jumpstart, think about trying the Total Transformation. If you’re more experienced and just need a little tweak here or there, play with some new methods, and work to make your own custom version of Paleo. Be honest with yourself, try some new things, get that sleep better, and let’s see how far we can run with this!!

CFBN Hoodies, pre-order only!

Sample sizes are in the office to try on.

  • This is a pre-pay order. All checks made out to Tom Keller.
  • Click image below to launch larger order form to print and hand in w/check or cash(staple payment to your form).
  • All money and orders due on Sunday December 11th.
  • Any questions, call Tom @ 309-287-1433.

Reminders:
• 2XL is $2 additional, and 3XL is available in grey only and $4 additional.

Click to view larger

Eat Like A Predator, Not Like Prey.

“Eat Like A Predator, Not Like Prey”:
Paleo In Six Easy Steps, A Motivational Guide
-courtesy of J. Stanton of http://www.gnolls.org/

This article exists for one simple reason: I get asked, over and over, “So how does this ‘paleo diet’ work?” And I want to give people an answer that is simple, solid, and above all, motivational. I want you to finish this article and think “Yes! I understand, and I can do this.”

Here it is: a step-by-step guide, roughly in order of importance. Make progress at whatever pace you can. Don’t stress about perfect adherence, or obsess about making it all the way down the list: any progress you make will most likely improve your health, mood, and physical fitness.

“Do not eat” items are grouped with “Eat more” items at each step, so you’ll always have something to eat. Let’s go!

First, our guiding philosophy:
Eat like a predator, not like prey.

Predators gorge and fast; prey grazes.

Rephrased for modern humans: predators eat meals, prey grazes on snacks. This means you need to eat meals which will carry you through to your next meal, but that won’t make you tired or sleepy.

Here’s how!

Step 1: Eat Meat, Not Birdseed

Eat more meat. If it’s not meat, it’s not a meal.
Favor ruminants—animals that eat grass and leaves. (That means red meat: beef, lamb, bison, elk, venison, goat.) Ruminants are far better at converting plants into essential fats, complete protein, and bioavailable nutrients than humans are.
Buy grass-fed beef whenever possible: it’s better for you, and better for the Earth. Cows didn’t evolve to eat corn and soybeans any more than humans did.
Buy fatty cuts, buy occasional organ meats. Do not avoid animal fat! If you try, you will become ravenous for fatty junk food. Fake low-fat ‘paleo’ is known as the Faileo Diet.
Pork and chicken are permissible in moderation, but are far less healthy due to excessive omega-6 fat content.

Frankly, you could stop here, as many native cultures did: as long as you eat organ meats and marrow, fatty, grass-fed ruminant meat provides 100% of your nutritional needs. But most of us enjoy more variety in our diets—and some vegetables and fruits offer tangible health benefits, even if they don’t provide meaningful calories.

Eat more fish and shellfish.
Favor oily fish like mackerel, sardines, and wild salmon, but be careful of methylmercury content: keep your intake of tuna, shark, and other high-level carnivores low. (The FDA’s table of mercury content can be found here.) In a Paleolithic world we could eat all the fish we wanted…but we humans have polluted the entire Earth so badly (mostly by burning coal for power) that one of our healthiest food sources is now universally poisonous. Good job, ‘civilization’.

Do not eat anything made with ‘flour’.
No bread, no pasta, no cereal, no crackers, no cookies, no donuts or danishes. Period. This is your most important step.
Flour is ground-up seeds. What eats seeds? Birds and rodents. If it’s poisonous to humans until we grind it into powder and cook it, and it causes mineral deficiencies and birth defects unless we add vitamins, it’s not food. (Read more about lectins, phytic acid, and the role of grains in autoimmunity and heart disease.)

Do not drink your food.
No soda (even diet soda), no sports drinks, no milk, no soy ‘milk’, no smoothies, no fruit juice, no yogurt or vegetable drinks. Tea, coffee, and mate are fine in moderation. Learn to drink water: once you get used to it, you’ll find that soda and juices no longer quench your thirst. (You can potentially add small quantities of dairy and fresh fruit/vegetable juices back in later, if you’ve met your other goals.)

Do not eat table sugar, or its equivalents.
This includes circumlocutions like “brown rice syrup”, “agave nectar”, and my favorite, “evaporated cane juice solids.” That’s what sugar is! Sheesh. Even honey is basically just sugar, though it has useful medicinal properties. Diet sweeteners are out, too, as are those goofy Atkins sugar alcohols.

Get your ‘carbohydrates’ (sugars) from plants—not their seeds.
Prefer foods that are high in glucose and low in fructose, particularly root starches like potatoes, and only eat what your body needs: 15-20% of calories is plenty. (Do you want to lose fat? Then you’d better accustom your body to burning it for energy.)

Important! If you are active and not concerned with losing weight (or trying to gain it), you’ll want to eat more carbs than the average person trying to lose a few pounds. Sports nutrition is beyond the scope of this article…but in general, I find occasional starch refeeds, when necessary to refill muscle glycogen, much better than a constant diet of pasta, “energy bars”, and other sugary junk food. Basically, if you find yourself bonking during long, intense efforts, try upping your starch intake.

Don’t forget about sweet potatoes, sago, taro, sweet cassava, and tapioca…and always peel your potatoes, as that’s where the solanine is. If you must eat birdseed, white rice is the least bad of the grains…but give yourself a couple weeks to see if it’s just withdrawal symptoms, or whether you really need it on a regular basis.

Remember, fatty meat is your primary source of calories and nutrients. Quite a few ‘mainstream’ paleo books and sources sugarcoat or dance around this. You’re a predator: eat like one.

Congratulations! You’ve just made some massive, positive changes in your life.

You may be going through bread and cereal withdrawal, with periods in which you absolutely crave them. This is absolutely normal: you’re forcing your body to learn how to burn fat again, because it’s used to burning all the sugar (‘carbohydrates’) you’ve been eating.

However, you’re probably already noticing an increase in energy, a decrease in post-meal fatigue, and a lessened desire to snack. Stay on target! The cravings will dissipate, but the benefits won’t.

The best part about a primal/’paleo’ diet is that you don’t have to measure or keep track of anything: no counting calories, no ‘points’, no worries about macronutrient ratios. Eat real food, and you won’t have to worry about parceling out your addiction to junk.

Step 2: Eat Food, Not Diesel Fuel

Buy fatty cuts of meat, cook with their included fat.
If you need to douse it in butter to make it taste good, it’s too lean. I always laugh when I see people making sandwiches with low-fat hamburger or skinless chicken breast—then covering them with cheese and mayonnaise because they’re too dry! Hint: ask your butcher for untrimmed cuts of meat. Often they’re cheaper.

Cook with butter, coconut oil, and grass-fed beef tallow.
These are healthy fats: they don’t oxidize or polymerize during cooking the way that seed oils do, they don’t contain hidden trans fats, and they have low to zero omega-6 fat content.
I discourage lard unless it’s from pastured pigs: store-bought lard is usually hydrogenated (= trans fats), and grain-fed lard is high in omega-6 fat.

Cook with eggs, and always eat the yolks.
Egg whites are just protein…the nutrition is all in the yolk. And few foods remain unimproved by the addition of a fried egg.

Do not eat “vegetable oils”. The term itself is a lie.
There’s no such thing as “lettuce oil” or “broccoli oil”. They’re made from seeds, and they’re extracted using poisonous organic solvents (hexane). Remember: if you can put it in a truck and the truck starts, it’s not food.
This means no french fries or other deep-fried food; no potato chips or corn chips (or any ‘chips’); no margarine, ‘spread’, or bogus butter substitutes; no mayonnaise (or, worse, Miracle Whip); and you can basically ignore the entire snack aisle.

This prohibition includes granola, which is just birdseed stuck together with oil and sugar. Corn ‘nuts’ and wasabi peas are soaked in oil, too: frankly, nothing in those bulk bins is food. One of the best things you can do for your health is to avoid everything you see in the ‘health food’ aisles.

Extra-virgin olive oil, cheese, avocados, and nuts are OK in moderation…think of them as condiments, not ingredients. If you need to eat a can of nuts or a brick of cheese, you didn’t eat enough meat.

Heavy cream, sour cream, full-fat yogurt (not that worthless ‘low-fat’ candy), and whipped cream make delicious sauces, condiments, and desserts, used in moderation. But remember that fatty meat is always your primary source of calories.

Well done! You’ve made another big step towards better health and greater vitality. You’re no longer shuffling through life like a wounded gazelle, expecting the jaws of death on its neck at any moment. You are becoming less tasty and more dangerous each day.

Yes, we all need some moral support when we give up potato chips and corn chips. But wouldn’t you rather have an omelet for breakfast, and then not have to snack at all? Butter, eggs, and coconut oil taste much better than seed oils and ‘spreads’…and after you’ve used them for a while, you’ll start noticing that canola oil smells terrible, and that your food is much less greasy despite a much higher fat content.

Most importantly, now that you’re no longer eating huge plates of sugar (‘carbohydrates’) and greasy seed oils, you’ll find that big, hearty meals don’t make you fall asleep. You’ll also find that it’s much easier to go without food now that your body is reaccustomed to burning fat. In short, you’ll have more useful hours in your day now that you’re not spending them stuck in food coma, or constantly grazing to keep from going hypoglycemic—which more than makes up for the extra time you’re spending on cooking and buying food.

Besides, shopping for food is quick and easy when the only places you have to go are the meat counter, the produce bins, the dairy refrigerator, and the spice rack.

Step 3: Supplements For An Imperfect World

Consider vitamin D3 supplements.
Our bodies naturally produce vitamin D3 from sun exposure…but Paleolithic humans didn’t live and work indoors. 2000-4000 IU per day is, from what I understand, a good start for most adults on days they’re not getting meaningful sun exposure. Testing for 25(OH)D levels will tell you if your dosage is correct: 45-60 ng/mL is apparently a good place to be.

Consider EPA and DHA (“omega-3″) supplements.
The seed oils and grain-fed meat we’re often forced to eat are higher in pro-inflammatory omega-6 fats, and lower in anti-inflammatory omega-3 fats, than natural grass-fed meat. 1g/day each of EPA and DHA can be helpful if you haven’t eaten any fatty fish that day; more if you’re pregnant or nursing.
Note that it’s much better to minimize omega-6 intake by eliminating seed oils and reducing nut intake, than it is to “balance your ratio” with pathological quantities of fish oil.
Flaxseed oil (ALA) is not an acceptable substitute.
Our bodies are woefully inefficient (less than 1%) at converting it to the DHA we require. Besides, its real name is linseed oil. That’s furniture polish, and furniture polish is not food.
I am not a doctor, and you are responsible for your own health. Do your own research, and if you notice adverse effects, use common sense. What your body tells you is more important than what a website tells you.

If you get to here, you’re doing great—and you’re already far healthier than you were on the SAD (Standard American Diet) even if you haven’t lost any weight. (But odds are good that you have.) You’re also probably noticing, over time, that you’re happier and less depressed, that your skin problems and allergies are less severe (or gone entirely), and that you sunburn less easily.

Step 4: Play Like A Predator

Play hard, work hard, challenge yourself, then rest.

Lift heavy objects, sprint until you’re out of breath, climb trees and jump down, kick balls, shoot baskets. Shovel snow, dig dirt, split firewood. Practice agility as well as strength and endurance. People will stare at you if you’re doing it right, because you’re enjoying yourself—not shuffling down the road in ‘running shoes’, with that vacant look of resigned suffering usually seen on wildebeest being eaten alive by hyenas. The world is your playground! (And if others won’t take advantage of it, too bad for them.)

Don’t ‘exercise’, don’t ‘do cardio’. The only way to improve is to push your limits.
You’ll lose more weight and gain more strength from periodic bursts of short, intense exercise than from hours of ‘cardio’. You’re a human, not a hamster; get off the treadmill! Seriously: drive to work, then drive to the health club so you can pedal a bicycle that goes nowhere? Imagine this: every time you get hungry, you and your six closest friends have to chase down an antelope or spear a mammoth—and if you can’t, none of you get to eat. That is the required intensity.
If you must ‘work out’, do bodyweight exercises, and get some dumbbells or kettlebells.
That way you can finish a workout before you’ve even arrived at the gym. Our objective is health and fitness: a gym body is a lot more work. (Do it if you want, and I admire those with the dedication to sculpt themselves—but it’s not necessary.) Remember, you should be doing short, intense bursts of activity throughout the day: you’re not going to drive to the gym three times.
Note: If you have the time and genuinely enjoy it, absolutely lift heavy weights and get strong. Especially women: you’re not going to suddenly become 1970′s Arnold just because you do squats, and any man who thinks you’re “too muscular” because you don’t look like a heroin addict is weak, insecure, and not worth your time.

Stop trying to ‘save energy’. Make physical effort part of your life. Don’t waste time looking for the closest parking space: just park and walk. Take the stairs. Shovel your own snow, split your own firewood. Unless you’re a cabinetmaker or construction worker, do you really need that cordless screwdriver?

Congratulations! You’ve put all the pieces together. Most likely you are sleeping better now that you’re regularly putting forth physical effort. You’re thinking of the world as your playground, and you’re seeing familiar surroundings with new eyes. And now that your symptoms of withdrawal from the SAD (Standard American Diet) are over, you’re feeling more energetic—and thinking more clearly due to the action of ghrelin, now that being hungry doesn’t just make you cranky and hypoglycemic.

In other words, your body is finally—perhaps for the first time—beginning to function as it should.

Now that you are physically stronger, you will find that you are emotionally and mentally stronger. You are less willing to be walked on and taken for granted, and more likely to take credit for what you deserve. You are beginning to understand what it feels like to be a predator, instead of the prey you’ve been for so long.

You’ve tasted power, and it’s delicious. You want more.

Step 5: Optimization

By now we’re just cleaning up loose ends. Some of you may never get here, some may find it doesn’t make much difference to you and drop back, some may find here the key to optimal health.

Remove any remaining grains from your diet.
They should be mostly gone already, but if you’re still eating corn, oats, or any bogus ‘health grains’ like kamut or amaranth, ditch them. Absolutely eliminate all gluten grains from your diet: wheat, barley, rye, spelt. (You should have done this already by eliminating flour in Step 1, but people always find a way to sneak in ‘wheat berries’ or some other bogus name for seeds. And gluten hides in all sorts of things you don’t realize.)

Remove any remaining legumes (beans) from your diet.
This is usually easy once you’re getting plenty of fat and protein from meat. Like grains, beans are seeds—and they’re for birds and rodents, not humans.

Remove all remaining junk from your diet.
There are a lot of non-foods that technically sneak through the above rules, but which we all know perfectly well are junk. I’m not going to enumerate them, because there are thousands…but if it has more than one layer of packaging, contains any ingredient you don’t understand, claims any health benefits on the label, or is a fake version of something else, it’s not food.

Experiment with removing dairy from your diet.
Milk is already out, but some people feel better without cheese, yogurt, or even heavy cream. (Butter is basically 100% butterfat, and extremely unlikely to cause problems for anyone.) In general, the more butterfat and the less casein and lactose, the less likely it is to cause problems.

Now that you’re sleek, powerful, and dangerous, you’re feeling quite satisfied with yourself. You wake up well-rested, with no aches or pains, and you know yourself capable of stalking, killing, and eating whatever problems the day might bring. Yet you must remain watchful, for an insidious parasite feeds on your pride and saps your strength:

Complacency.

Step 6: Never Stop Hunting

Push yourself harder and in new ways.
It’s easy to get stuck in an ‘exercise routine’. Explore someplace new. Learn a skill you’re bad at. Throw and catch with your off hand. Try a team sport if you’re a soloist, or a solo sport if you’re a team player. Set goals you’re not already sure you can achieve.

If you’re going to cheat, cheat with something delicious and portion-limited, or too expensive to eat often.
I’ll eat a Reese’s or drink a Coke before I’ll eat pasta or bread, because they’re individually packaged. Once you open that package of goldfish crackers, they’re all going down the hatch, and we both know it. And I’ll be damned before I’ll completely give up sushi, because I care about toro more than I care about that last 0.1% of bodyfat.

Be suspicious of all diet advice.
Anyone can write a diet book—and most of them make nutrition complicated so that you’ll keep buying books and going to meetings. Remember that observational studies don’t necessarily tell you whether something is healthy to eat: they tell you whether the healthy people in that study ate that food. Abstracts and conclusions often misrepresent the data. And the comparisons are usually between ‘absolutely terrible’ (refined grains, sugar, trans fats) and ‘less bad’ (whole grains)—which doesn’t mean ‘less bad’ is actually good for you, nor that the culprit in ‘absolutely terrible’ is what they say it is.

Listen to your body.
Once you’re functioning at a high enough level to tell the difference, you’ll understand what’s helping you and what’s hurting you—not just what’s feeding your addictions. Make individual changes and evaluate their effects before moving on: don’t change too many things at once, or you’ll never know what’s doing what. If you’re physically active, you’ll need some glucose (starch) in your diet to keep your weight stable and your energy level high during severe exertion. And if your body craves a random vegetable, eat it! You might need some micronutrients.

Your life and health are your own.
You are responsible for them in every respect. Don’t let breathless ‘news’ articles tell you that a new industrial product is your key to better health, or that what humans have eaten for millions of years will kill you. Be suspicious when your government, which spends billions of dollars each year subsidizing agribusiness to grow corn, soy, and wheat, tells you to eat more corn, soy, and wheat. And always remember that ruminants are far better at converting plants into essential fats, complete protein, and bioavailable nutrients than humans—or our factories.

Conclusion: Living Like A Predator

Fatty meats are, quite literally, what made us human. The DHA, complete protein, and sheer calorie density of fatty meat allowed little 65-pound savanna apes with tiny 350cc brains, just smart enough to make rocks sharper by banging them together, to grow into modern humans—with huge 1400cc brains that use a full 20% of the calories we ingest! And we didn’t get fatty meat just by scavenging, because the lions, tigers, wolves, giant hyenas and saber-toothed cats got to it first. We got it by being the most effective predators on Earth.

Now that you’ve been eating like a predator for some time, you are discovering that when you eat like a predator, and play like a predator, you start thinking like a predator. Stupid people aren’t annoyances: they’re profit centers. Fat people are no longer disgusting: they’re delicious. And nothing is more important than being able to trust your packmates, so it’s time to cut loose all the leeches, layabouts, whiners, and malcontents—and it’s long past time to start valuing the solid, dependable people whom you can trust.

You will stop giving your time, love, and strength to those that demand it, and start giving it to those who deserve it. You will understand that ‘love thy fellow man as thyself’ doesn’t apply to someone with his hands in your pockets or his gun in your face, no matter whose authority they claim. You will have compassion for the herd as it moos and bleats, for you were so recently one of them yourself. And you will share your knowledge, because you understand that our real enemies are the predators who hoard this knowledge for themselves, the predators who profit so handsomely from our fear and ignorance—and from our indiscriminate love, whose endgame is the crazy cat lady dead in her condemned house, corpse devoured by the creatures she fed in life.

Now clear those frozen pizzas and Weight Watchers out of your freezer and give them to your fat neighbor, because you are going to the supermarket right now. And you will take a shopping cart, not one of those demure little baskets, because you are going to fill it with heavy, fatty, delicious MEAT.

Live in freedom, live in beauty.

JS

(Your next step is to read my “Paleo Starter Kit”, so you’ll know what to do with all that meat.)
Postscript: More Information

The first objection I hear is always “But…but…you’re eating so much arterycloggingsaturatedfat!” We’ve been lied to for decades: grains and grain products are what’s making us fat, saturated fat is good for you, and cholesterol has been framed for crimes it didn’t commit. Tom Naughton’s “Big Fat Fiasco” (also on youtube) handily debunks these myths, but the science would fill an entire book. (Gary Taubes wrote two, which you can read if you’re skeptical: Good Calories, Bad Calories, which is longer and more technical, and Why We Get Fat which is shorter and easier to read.)

If you want to understand why I eat the way I do, I recommend Dr. Paul and Dr. Shou-Ching Jaminet’s Perfect Health Diet.

For longer articles and more books that explore ‘paleo’ in depth, try Hunt Gather Love’s excellent Start Here Post. If you have a specific topic you want to look up, try Primal Blueprint 101 at Mark’s Daily Apple.

Wondering what to cook? Here’s a quick and simple starter meal: The Paleo Scramble. Moving on, you can get inspired by Melicious’ tasty list of paleo recipes, Free The Animal’s stash of delicious food porn, and the endlessly mouthwatering photos and recipes at Chowstalker. For a giant list of paleo recipe sites, go here (and make sure to click the “order by popularity” or “order alphabetically” buttons).

I hate to link just a few paleo weblogs, because there are so many excellent ones—so I’ll point you to Free The Animal’s nicely-organized blogroll…though for the science behind ‘paleo’ I must give special mention to the following:

The Drs. Jaminet’s Perfect Health Diet
Dr. Emily Deans’ Evolutionary Psychiatry
Jamie Scott’s That Paleo Guy.
Chris Masterjohn’s The Daily Lipid
Anastasia’s PrimalMedEd
Peter Dobromylskyj’s Hyperlipid
Dr. Kurt Harris’ Archevore
Ned Kock’s Health Correlator

That should be enough information to keep you busy for weeks.

Important! I must note that there is not universal agreement, even among those I’ve linked, on what exactly constitutes ‘paleo’, let alone ‘healthy eating’. I find Dr. Kurt Harris’ approach, using evolutionary context as a starting point for research rather than an ending point for re-enactment, to be both educational and inspiring—and I’m glad to acknowledge his influence on this article and my thinking.

I call this approach “functional paleo”—and I define it in detail here, in “What is the Paleo Diet, Anyway?”

Laura the Intern’s Experience Here!

My experience at CrossFit

I had been interested in learning more about CrossFit since I heard about it in one of my classes 2 years ago. We had talked about how there was such a debate on whether or not it was safe and effective for all populations. At the time, I did not know which side to take because I had not heard too much about CrossFit. In doing research, I became interested about CrossFit from afar but never had the opportunity to see it firsthand. Discovering that I was placed at CrossFit Bloomington-Normal for my internship site, I was both nervous and excited because I had no idea what to expect. I imagined walking in and being completely intimidated by huge men and women recklessly throwing weights in the air. To my surprise, I found quite the opposite. I found a gym full of down to earth people who were not just throwing weights into the air but carefully executing lifts. To the people that would argue that CrossFit is a gym not concerned with safety, I would rebuttal that safety is the number one concern. The coaches I have observed are very diligent and attentive to each individual need of the athletes. No one is forced to do anything outside his or her comfort zone, and each person progresses at his or her own pace with supervision and spotting if needed.

CrossFit Bloomington-Normal is also more than just your average CrossFit gym. The coaches not only give their all to their athletes, but the athletes push themselves to the limit. I have never observed such a great cohesive network of individuals before. Even being involved in team sports, the members of CrossFit Bloomington-Normal are genuinely looking out for each other and pushing each other to reach their goals. A place of belonging is one of the most influential things to adhering to an exercise program and I think that is definitely something CrossFit BN can sell to their future consumers. It breaks the barriers of other gyms where you just say a quick hi to someone in the locker room. These athletes no matter what age, gender, or ability level all form one family unit that is looking to meet the common goal of physical fitness.

Another myth that I was interested to see shattered by the people of CrossFit Bloomington Normal was that you had to already be an athlete in order to be a member. Walking in I was amazed to not see all “meatheads”. I saw people of all ages, shapes, and sizes doing the lifts and workouts, and call me naïve but I was not expecting to see people past the age of 40 being able to kick my butt in a workout. This taught me that the CrossFit exercise programming has to be effective in its ability to train anyone to reach his or her own elite fitness level.

I was also surprise by the fact that the coaches of CrossFit BN stressed the importance of flexibility, mobility and recovery because these are often the concepts that are commonly overlooked by the typical gym. Coming from a gymnastics background I am no stranger to taking my time with flexibility and stretching, and I found it very comforting that there were other people that recognized the benefit of truly taking time to stretch and recover from high intensity workouts. This contradicts the fact that many people are led to believe that the coaches are not concerned with preventing injuries in their athletes.

I want to thank everyone at CrossFit Bloomington-Normal for letting me observe and workout with you. Although at times I felt like the “creepy, awkward intern”, it was definitely a rewarding experience that I will take with me wherever I go. I have already found myself defending CrossFit to some of my teachers and using a lot of the programming in my classes.

Good Luck and Best Wishes to Everyone!
Laura King
“The Intern”

http://www.crossfitbloomingtonnormal.com/privacy-policy/