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Date: | Fri, 14 Feb 2003 22:23:34 -0500 |
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Ming wrote on Saturday, February 15, 2003 8:34 AM
>
>My personal experience eating paleo and Atkins type diets
>was one of misery .... The NHE made me feel lousy too.
>... It's only when I allowed rice and some other carbs back
>into the diet that I feel good again.
>
>My question to the people here is, how much variation
>can we expect ... between people? And how much
>does genetic imprinting based on one's early
>diet affect one's metabolism later in life?
>
>Just because some Inuits lived off whale
>meat and caribou doesn't mean everyone else can.
Good question. It is, in my mind one of the *really* big questions for
us. And it is one I have been pondering a lot of late. If I knew the
answer, I'd feel more confident in *promoting* evolutionary fitness rather
than merely *noting that it works for me* and a number of others. I have
recently taken a job in a newly developed suburb on the outskirts of town
and I have noticed in the office and in the shopping centre a higher
proportion of obese people [it is a lower income, lower average age area]
than in the CBD [where income levels and average ages are higher]. But
even in my new location, there are people with a healthy, confident poise,
no sign of obesity or other pathology and no sign of looking older than
their years. It is especially interesting when I see them with spouses
who do display indications of obesity and fitness deficiencies.
I have a book in my Amazon.com wishlist that may point to possible
answers: Biochemical Individuality: The Basis for the Genetotrophic
Concept by Roger J. Williams. Has anyone read it?
Keith
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