Thursday, January 10. 2008The Skinny on the Meal Frequency StudiesForced feeding, fixed calories, false indicationsRecent studies on the impact of meal frequency on middle aged men and women raise serious questions to their relevant real life conditions. The studies were conducted by Dr. Mark Mattson, a pioneer researcher in the area of human feeding, is known for his ground breaking studies on intermittent fasting. Dr. Mark Mattson and myself have been corresponding regarding the benefits of the one main meal per day approach, and about a year ago he shared with me over the phone some information regarding the studies of which results were published recently. To avoid falsely driven conclusions, lets examine the facts behind these studies and clarify some key points:
Let me put it this way – if the name of the game is "fixed calories only" regardless to their source, then you rather divide your food intake to small servings to avoid shocking your body with empty calories. But if the name of the game is "eating healthy" and prioritizing accordingly your food choices then you better separate between a.m. foods and p.m. foods to nourish your body in sync with your innate circadian clock and your overall metabolic system, such as with The Warrior Diet. As I wrote previously, it will take researchers another 15 years to dissect, isolate and combine all the multiple nutritional elements of the human diet if they will ever understand what we have been experiencing in real life when following The Warrior Diet. I believe that Dr. Mattson knows the limitations of these studies and how misleading the conclusions may seem to be. In an article in the medical journal Lancet 2005, Dr. Mattson indicated that humans indeed are inherently programmed (all through the evolutionary process) to better survive on one main meal per day. With references to The Warrior Diet, Dr. Mattson presented the adverse consequences of overfeeding via frequent feeding. Other scientists worldwide have also been realizing that the human body is not programmed for frequent feeding. The facts speak for themselves – in spite of dieting more than ever, people today are getting fatter and sicker than ever. Obesity has reached an epidemic proportion of 30%, diabetes 12%, pre-diabetes 25%, blood sugar disorders, roughly 50%, Syndrome X 20%, male impotence about 15%, estrogen disorders are virtually 100%, and prostate disorders will eventually occur to virtually 100% of males. And all these maladies occur when the vast majority of people have been eating 3 – 4 meals per day. How much more do we need to suffer before realizing that something is very wrong with our diet routines and particularly with the frequency upon which we have been shoving food into our bodies? Previous studies on intermittent fasting in lab animals revealed the amazing benefits of lower meal frequency on increasing life span, improving blood glucose, enhancing neuro protective capacity and improving body composition. More studies need to be done on human feeding but with more care towards real life conditions – how, for instance, the reduction of meal frequency affects calorie intake and food choices – naturally (rather than artificially by force feeding the subjects). Finally, what you eat, when you eat and how much you eat are all important factors that are inseparably bound together to form your diet. Isolating one element over the others is a futile experiment that will always fail to indicate how things really work in real life. Things simply don't work in isolation. For instance, lowering calorie intake to merely 1000 calories per day will theoretically lead to weight loss and improve insulin sensitivity – but if the 1000 calories will come from pure sugar, the results will most likely be the opposite – weight gain and insulin resistance. Here is another example: combine some of the healthiest foods together – nuts, raisins, and whole grains – and you may gain undesirable weight just because the food combination was wrong and nuts do not combine well with raisins or grains. In conclusion, you can experience undesirable weight gain in spite of reducing calorie intake, or in spite of eating healthy foods – if you ignore other factors that influence your diet. The Warrior Diet takes into account all the factors that constitute the human diet, and the evidence to its awesome benefits on people's lives are already here and now. We're currently stuck in the dark ages of dieting. We live today in an era that may be considered in the future as a turning point in history, in which humans have become an overweight/obese species with diminished capacity to survive and multiple. A real change is needed now, a renaissance in our routines. Being "normal" today means being overweight and unhealthy. Ask yourself whether you still wish to follow the same old normal routines. Trackbacks
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I think there is no doubting the benefits and nutrition partitioning effects of 1 meal a day. What scares me sometimes however is the effect 1 large meal might have on the pancreas. I know that the pancreas gets a large rest in between meals- on 1 meal per day - but could the insulin surge be so high as to damage the pancreas irrevocably- Ori- could you provide any literature that 1 meal a day is truely easier on the pancreas? It would put my mind at ease- and observations alone as alone don't stand in my mind as enough evidence for good pancreatic health.
The one meal per day is an approach that like any other dietary plan can be abused or mastered. “The Warrior Diet” book addresses your question and here is how the one main meal per day naturally supports insulin response as well as the pancreas.
1. Long recuperation time between meals (an element missing in virtually all diets)
2. Low glycemic environments – "The Warrior Diet" clearly guides you how to keep your meals low glycemic (even on high carb days)
3.Optimized carb intake – Carb intake in “The Warrior Diet" is naturally optimized in two ways: a.Carbs are the last component of the meal naturally (even with out restriction). Its protein is relatively the smallest. b. "The Warrior Diet" provides the option of incorporating natural fat fuel foods such as nuts and seeds as a primary source of fuel instead of carb fuel foods.
4. All "The Warrior Diet" nutritional products are insulin friendly. (Low glycemic bars and shakes and insulin stabilizing herbs). As for the evidence – we have a growing number of people who managed to reverse their diabetic condition naturally and without drugs by simply following an adjusted version of "The Warrior Diet" of one main meal per day.
In my opinion, the one main meal per day, if applied properly, is the only viable way to grant improved insulin response – and even more so, if incorporated together with an adequate exercise routine.
Unknown to many, one of the major causes of pancreatic cancer are chemical toxins commonly found in the environment food and water. "The Warrior Diet" and "Defense Nutrition" are completely dedicated to guide people how to detoxify the body on a daily basis with special cleansing herbs - providing first defense against endocrine/hormonal disruptive chemicals. This detox - defensive process could not be as efficient if it wasn't incorporated together with the one main meal per day approach. Other diets overlook this problem, thus most people today have been left defenseless. The growing rates of endocrine/hormonal disorders and cancer in our society should be of great concern.
Again, use your common sense and make your choice. Do you wish to be part of the normal stats in today's world or would you rather take action? Make changes that make sense, and be different than the "normal" and take control of your life.
Nice article (especially the conclusion). We are in the "dark ages of dieting," and it is insane that people think being overweight and underactive is normal. The Warrior Diet and especially the Anti-Estrogenic Diet are such great approaches to eating and survival because they do cover all "nutritional bases." The cycling of detox and higher carb days, high fat, and reintro days is a solid system that makes it hard for someone to not get enough of the vital macronutrients + the AEDiet can be adapted to a "3-a-day" meal approach if someone is so inclined.
I recently purchased your book form Amazon.com and am convinced of the benefits of going through periods of undereating or fasting, and that the Warrior Diet is certain superior than the standard american diet. As you noted, intermittent fasting studies on mice show they experience the same benefits of caloric restriction without the drawbacks, when eating every other day.
However my only concern regarding the the Warrior Die is whether it's actually "true" intermittent fasting that provides the same benefits of caloric restriction. I don't doubt the benefits from it in any case, but if I'm correct the IF studies done on mice were done with the mice being fed every other day, and during the fasting phase they were fed no calories, while if my understanding is correct during the undereating phase of the Warrior Diet consumption of raw foods and certain protein foods is still allowed. Won't eating these foods ruin the caloric restriction-like benefits you'd get from simply drinking water during the day instead?
@Mark: I've explained the advantage of understanding over water fasting in the New Revised edition of the Warrior Diet Book.
The incorporation of fruits or vegetables during the undereating phase provides the body with antioxidant- detoxifying and immunes boosting nutrients that help counteract the body's metabolic stress (which increase due to toxins release) during fasting, undereating and exercising. Water fasting does not provide these nutritional protective benefits.
As for light protein meals and recovery meals, if incorporated properly (as guided in the book) such meals can benefit active individuals promoting muscle recuperation and growth after exercise and preventing possible overtraining side effects during extreme physical engagement. Nonetheless, protein meals must be properly incorporated -"Maximum nourishment from Minimum food"-as to not tax the digestive system and not interrupt the undereating phase. The Warrior Diet protein products were specially designed to do just that.
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