Usually steak, eggs, a mess of fried potatoes and OJ. 

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Pretty much ANY fooditem is unhealthy if you eat excessive ammounts..Sorry, buddy, I'm inherently skeptical to all those arguments about one single foodstuff suddenly becoming the great scourge, guilty of all health problems.
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And most people does and it seems to work. The average BMI in the US is 28.8 and the average in Norway is 25.3 (as per 2010 WHO numbers).I'm relying on proven conventional nutritional science and living according to conventional Scandinavian health advice: Minimize sugar, white flour and saturated fats. Eat balanced amounts of protein, marine fats, veggies and slow carbs - including whole grain bread. That diet has kept me healthy for almost 50 years, and I expect it to keep me healthy for a couple more decades![]()
1: IME, US "whole wheat" bread and Scandinavian whole grain bread are two totally different creatures. I had a hard time finding decent whole grain bread when I lived in your country. Don't use your processed industrial breads as examples of North European breads.
2: Biochemically, we still burn carbohydrates as our primary source of energy, regardless of all those low-carb fads. Just as we did when we crawled up from the ocean several millions of years before Mr. Atkins and his like started appearing in media. Biochemical fact: If you don't get enough carbs to burn for energy to your brain, your body needs to convert the protein to carbs before it burns it. Fat is metabolized through another pathway, though, but you need to be very, very careful with your high-fat diet to avoid too much saturated fats which clog up your arteries. And fat metabolism can't feed your brain, that's another biochemical fact.
3: I know that raisins are high in sugar. I use that deliberately to kick-start my metabolism, but I complement that with slow carbs that keep me going for a long time, avoiding the sudden drop in blood sugar that follows a too sugar-rich meal. And from extensive experience with day-long hikes and 100k bike rides, I also know that oat keeps me going longer than most other foodstuffs before my blood sugar gets too low, while a high-protein/high-fat breakfast is the absolute worst I can eat before that kind of activity.
Sorry, buddy, I'm inherently skeptical to all those arguments about one single foodstuff suddenly becoming the great scourge, guilty of all health problems. I'm relying on proven conventional nutritional science and living according to conventional Scandinavian health advice: Minimize sugar, white flour and saturated fats. Eat balanced amounts of protein, marine fats, veggies and slow carbs - including whole grain bread. That diet has kept me healthy for almost 50 years, and I expect it to keep me healthy for a couple more decades![]()
The big problem I have is staying warm. My SAC has dropped over the years to a very low level for the simple reason that my movements are minimal, economical and efficient. The flip side of this is that by not exercising my muscles I feel the cold much more. When I do a dive where I have to exercise and swim constantly I don't get cold but when just hanging around a reef or a wreck then I find I really need a high sugar/carb intake beforehand to avoid feeling the cold...snip..
You do need carbs, but not nearly the levels of carbs that is found in the modern diet - including your beloved European diets. Diving isn't a road race, it's a low energy activity for most divers (at least those with low air consumption).
..snip..
Not so much of a problem when you live in abu dhabi as when you live in Norway, is it?The big problem I have is staying warm. My SAC has dropped over the years to a very low level for the simple reason that my movements are minimal, economical and efficient. The flip side of this is that by not exercising my muscles I feel the cold much more. When I do a dive where I have to exercise and swim constantly I don't get cold but when just hanging around a reef or a wreck then I find I really need a high sugar/carb intake beforehand to avoid feeling the cold.
1: IME, US "whole wheat" bread and Scandinavian whole grain bread are two totally different creatures. I had a hard time finding decent whole grain bread when I lived in your country. Don't use your processed industrial breads as examples of North European breads.
2: Biochemically, we still burn carbohydrates as our primary source of energy, regardless of all those low-carb fads. Just as we did when we crawled up from the ocean several millions of years before Mr. Atkins and his like started appearing in media. Biochemical fact: If you don't get enough carbs to burn for energy to your brain, your body needs to convert the protein to carbs before it burns it. Fat is metabolized through another pathway, though, but you need to be very, very careful with your high-fat diet to avoid too much saturated fats which clog up your arteries. And fat metabolism can't feed your brain, that's another biochemical fact.
3: I know that raisins are high in sugar. I use that deliberately to kick-start my metabolism, but I complement that with slow carbs that keep me going for a long time, avoiding the sudden drop in blood sugar that follows a too sugar-rich meal. And from extensive experience with day-long hikes and 100k bike rides, I also know that oat keeps me going longer than most other foodstuffs before my blood sugar gets too low, while a high-protein/high-fat breakfast is the absolute worst I can eat before that kind of activity.
Sorry, buddy, I'm inherently skeptical to all those arguments about one single foodstuff suddenly becoming the great scourge, guilty of all health problems. I'm relying on proven conventional nutritional science and living according to conventional Scandinavian health advice: Minimize sugar, white flour and saturated fats. Eat balanced amounts of protein, marine fats, veggies and slow carbs - including whole grain bread. That diet has kept me healthy for almost 50 years, and I expect it to keep me healthy for a couple more decades![]()
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I agree that the breads in Europe are much healthier than the processed breads in America, and that Europeans are less likely to SUPERSIZE a meal of Bread the way an America might with bagels or sub sandwiches. The issue is more about at what point YOUR body can't use any more sugar, and at what point the issues of A.G.E. or diabetes begins to develop from the food you eat.
And if I'd lived during that "golden age", I'd be dead by now. Life expectancy during the early stone age was lower than my current age.Your body wasn't built to eat carbs all the time: Plant based nutrients were very seasonal before the invention agriculture when the your primordial ancestors were evolving. They were eating a lot more meat than carbs because meat isn't nearly as seasonal, especially if you follow the herds.
Yeah, I've read "Merchants of doubt" as well. And the picture that Oreskes and Conway draws of the lobbying by big money isn't pretty.Just remember, in the US, we had proven and conventional Medical science stating Clearly in the 40's and 50's, that tobacco and cigarettes had no connection to cancer. The money of the tobacco lobby made a sham of the truth.
...but this is too close to CT for me.Today in the US, the Food and Drug administration is essentially a shill and protector for the Pharmaceutical giants, and for Big Sugar, and for the Factory approach to feeding the masses.