DEFoW 30 day January Challenge

Who is up for a 30 day January DEFoW challenge to mule kick junk in the caramel nuts for the new year? Tag, share with friends to join in.

1. Minimum of 2 litres of filtered/bottled water each day. Pint before morning shower. Squeeze in a lemon for extra kudos.

2. 7.5 hours minimum sleep at night. Put your phone in flight mode before midnight and settle in to ensure you release recovery growth hormone during the night.

3. No junk whatsoever mon-friday, only natural whole foods wherever possible and when having a treat on the weekend go out for it and eat something natural like a homemade brownie in a cafe. Don’t bring it into your house.

4. Exercise approx 3-4 hours a week. Suggest that you do a mixture of resistance, cardio and flexibility work any way you like that is enjoyable for you. Use light cardio between days you push hard in a circuit or lifting weights. Make use of those gym memberships and socialise with people. If you keep this up consistently for the year and beyond you will highlight to the world what your DNA is capable of.

5. Do 60+ push ups a day break into as many sets as you need over the day. On knees if you are a beginner, but if you do have to work off knees hold a plank for 10 seconds for every 10 push ups. This will work your core, shoulders, triceps and chest.

6. Cut out carbs in at least one meal a day and keep portions moderate in other meals. If you work at a desk and train evenings I suggest morning time. Try scrambled eggs instead of cereal for example. When eating carbs go for whole food and eat the skin/bran for extra fibre, nutrients and to slow absorption to control blood sugars.

7. No sweetened fruit juice or sugary drinks. If you must have a light flavoured water or low cal vitamin drink but remember they contain sweeteners which can make you crave.

8. Do 60+ bodyweight squats a day, as low as you can safely go. Works lower body and flexibility squatting our bodyweight deep is something we should be able to do. If you need to put a bench under you to sit down on to for safety.

9. Avoid having fat and carbs at the same time. Even natural combos like trail mix or apples with nut butter, though nutritious bring out the squirrel in us. Sorry that means no buttery toast or creamy mash. Have that as a treat if you mus on the weekend.

10. Get out into nature. Walk for 10+ mins every day and a nice long one on weekend along a river, up a mountain, through a forest. Wear the right boots and gear. Breathe in that fresh air, revel in the sun and enjoy the crispness of the January air.

Keep us all informed of your progress, pictures outside, in gym, updates etc and questions on the facebook event page…

Here’s a shortened version for you to print off (click to enlarge)

 

 

Have yourselves a DEFoW little Christmas… 

I was asked in supermarket Delhi today, how to keep from eating a pile of junk over Christmas???

Answer = Simple

I will let go and eat my fill, that’s for sure, but damage limitation is the operative term.

First, have a good breakfast, not junk. Yes we’ll all get sweeties in our stockings and the kids will get junk from family and friends too, but get in a healthy breakfast, you owe your body some decent nutrition up front. It’s the least you can do for you. Save the junk for later…

Second, build up a nice appetite for the big dinner (maybe go for a little walk and bring the kids/grandkids/nieces/nephews out to play with toys).

Third, there will be huge portions of everything at dinner load up on the turkey and ham, load up on the brussells sprouts and carrots, and have a couple of roasties too… if you’re going back for seconds, get more meat and veg. Damage limitation, but you certainly won’t feel denied, you’ll be as full as an egg.

Fourth, get a nice cup of black coffee and a modest dessert.  Black coffee goes particularly well with dessert if you have a bite with each sup, melting chocolate, mixing with cream etc. I find with milky coffee the flavour of the coffee is lost if having with a sweet dessert.

Fifth, if you can still move, maybe go out and go for another little walk before coming back and settling in for movie and some beverages with loved ones… If you feel like it then, have a bit of junk food.

Sixth, don’t leave the junk hanging around for days, every time you eat them you trigger the gorge which will keep giving you fixes and you’ll keep wanting more. Throw it out if you have to or do some baking with it e.g. rocky road and give it away / share it…

Finally, make a nice healthy curry with the left over meat, veg, adding spices and more veg, garlic etc. you might even get a few days out of it. Waste not want not.

Merry Christmas one and all!

Have a wonderful holiday.

Cian

Don’t Eat for Winter – The BAT Fat Layer Hypothesis (Brown Fat)

In nature, carbs become hyper-available in autumn time, the harvest.  A huge spike in sugary and starchy foods becomes available from late summer into autumn – peak sugar. Carbs are a major variable in the stone age diet over the course of the year.  These foods cause us to gorge and eat more triggering hormonal and chemical responses in order to guile us into put on a bit of healthy, protective body fat to prepare us for winter for 2 major reasons:

  1. Back up energy as food sources become scarcer (body-fat is an long-term storage facility for energy).
  2. Thermal insulation (it has been shown that those with more body-fat can survive longer in colder conditions).

In the modern world, carbs are no longer a variable, they are over-eaten in every meal and snack and not only in natural form, but also in refined form.  This means that we live in what I term The Infinite Autumn (on steroids),  so we pile on weight indefinitely, preparing our bodies for a winter that never comes. This has resulted in the obesity epidemic we face.

The core message, to control body-fat, therefore is this:  Don’t Eat for Winter, at least not all of the time, to prevent invoking these ancient instincts and body processes thus keeping our instincts at bay and body-fat levels optimal.

In 2016 there was an obesity epidemic among squirrels.  The winter was mild so their autumn was extended and so they got fatter than normal. Luckily for them the cycle is natural and they use the weight gain in autumn to survive the winter and emerge in the spring ready for action.  Imagine if their autumn was extended indefinitely however? What would happen the little critters? They would eventually suffer from obesity related issues as their natural design limits are exceeded.

We don’t have to imagine this scenario though, as in our world, this is what is actually happening to people. In computing terms, when inputs exceed design limitations, the software throws what is known as an exception, in colloquial terms ‘a wobbler’.  The statistics regarding the obesity crisis and related issues are staggering and demonstrate that our design cannot handle the input of the modern western diet, an artificial infinite autumn we must endure. However, I’m hopeful that we can actually fix things by taking personal responsibility for our own dietary input and begin to simulate nature as much as is possible in order to stay within our design limitations.

Organ-ism

Our bodies are an hormonal organism, a delicate, complicated instrument that is being played by nature. As we digest food, the tiny molecules absorbed into our bloodstream include amino acids, fats, (sacharrides) sugars, minerals and vitamins, which all play different roles in our bodies.  For example arginine, an amino acid will causes the pancreas to secret glucagon, whereas glucose, a monosacharride, will cause the pancreas to secrete insulin.  Another sugar: fructose, doesn’t cause an insulin response but can cause a dip in leptin levels, a hunger hormone, which tells the brain how much body-fat we currently have. Fructose also increases ghrelin, another hunger hormone, which tells the brain that our stomachs are empty.  A study in 2004 concluded that a diet high in fructose could potentially cause increased hunger, thus increased calorie intake, resulting in weight gain (KL Teff et al, 2004, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15181085).

There are a myriad of molecules that affect our bodies in various ways and in various combinations that no single study can ever view in totality.  It is like a complex musical instrument on which beautiful chords were played, which transitioned, subtly, through the seasons by a master musician since time began.  That genius was nature and she was the composer of the music, the conductor and the musician. The levels to which we thrive are the direct results of the tune.

With our ingenuity, however, the tune is no longer subtle music it is hard-core noise and so it is no wonder we are suffering as we require more and more medication for all the side-effects we cause through our problem solving.  This is due to our lack of ability to see all repercussions of our actions because we can never account for all of the variables. All of us need to understand this and admit that we do not know everything, we are finite beings with only a snapshot of knowledge, which become personal truths.  This is evident from the confusion between experts, and the totality of the problems we face.  Straying from nature always ends badly and we find ourselves medicating for side effects in a never ending cycle, instead of addressing the root problem: we’ve strayed too far from nature. We simply cannot leave well-enough alone.

So what do we do?

a) adapt to this new artificial environment

or

b) simulate natural inputs, thus taming the environment

I opt for the latter because the former option requires a lot of pain, as the adaptation of a species requires lots of hardship and pain over many centuries, which we may never fully achieve as we medicate ourselves to keep us alive.

Don’t Eat for Winter – Extended Hypothesis

I now believe that the core reason we would have put on body-fat, during summer and autumn is as a precursor to fuel the genesis of brown adipose tissue, or BAT for short.  To develop BAT requires energy in the form of white adipose tissue, or WAT for short (standard  visceral and subcutaneous body-fat). The original reasoning does not change, this simply provides a sharper picture.

I wrote an article previously on BAT describing it as our body’s attic insulation layer. It is a very effective form of body-fat that appears on many mammals that adapted to cold climates and the health benefits developing it are many including longevity.  Human babies are born with it, but it was previously thought that it could not be activated in adult humans, however recent research has shown that it can.  BAT is an excellent thermal insulation layer, and it activates on humans around the neck and shoulder area, an optimal position for thermal insulation on an upright being in order to maintain body-heat (remember heat rises so it would be no good on the soles of our feet).  BAT increases metabolism as the main output of BAT is heat, so as well as being a thermal insulator, it also generates heat, and it’s main source of fuel is WAT.  It stands to reason that we would develop BAT for winter to protect us from cold exposure, just like wild animals that adapted to the seasons, however in order to generate BAT we must first create a store of WAT as a precursor.  I propose that this is exactly what occurs in nature during the transition from summer to winter based on dietary and other environmental inputs, resulting in specific hormonal and chemical conditions, which are outlined below.

Two recent papers discuss how BAT can be stimulated in in adults humans  through:

1. Diet, via a mix of hormonal responses

“Here we report that insulin and leptin act together on hypothalamic neurons to promote WAT browning and weight loss”  (G. Dodd et al 2015 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4453004/)

2. Cold exposure

“Cold exposure activates and recruits BAT in association with increased energy expenditure and decreased body fatness”   (M Saito et al , 2016 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27697214)

Both of these situations occur naturally as we transition from summer to autumn/winter in climates with pronounced seasons.

Consider the following graph:

BAT Fat Natural Annual Cycle - Don't Eat for Winter

This is a simplistic overview of some important inputs to our bodies over the course of the year and resulting hormonal responses. The coloured lines depict average environmental inputs including the main macro-nutrients:

  • protein (from natural sources, particularly the staples of meat, fish, poultry)
  • fats (from natural animal and plant sources, including nuts in autumn)
  • carbohydrates (specifically fructose and glucose from summer and autumn harvests)

and two other important inputs:

  • sunlight (affects vitamin D levels and sleep)
  • cold (affect activation of BAT)

The black lines depict average levels of major hormones & chemicals responses caused by the inputs including:

  • insulin (blood sugar regulation hormone, in response glucose and some aminos)
  • leptin (a hunger hormone, in response to body-fat levels, dietary fats and fructose, and other environmental conditions)
  • ghrelin (a hunger hormone, in response to food satiety from food inputs and conditions)
  • dopamine (to provide a comfort feeling in response to ingesting certain foods)

From this basic picture you can see the kinds of transitions going on and it looks almost musical to some degree, so what is going on.

Let’s take it by the season.

In Spring, our diets would consist of lots of animal based protein, there is not much vegetation at this time of year and carbohydrate sources are not easy to come by (unless you’re good at digging for roots through frozen ground). This is the high protein, carnivore zone, and would be simulated today with low carbohydrate diets.  Fats would also have come from animal sources.  At this time of year winter fat would be dissipating as the sun begins to climb in the sky and temperatures become milder.

In Summer and Early Autumn, berries and fruits appear, so in addition to the staples of spring, we now have sugar in the form of fructose and glucose becoming available in our diets.  This would lower leptin levels increasingly as the summer progresses into early autumn, so as we put on a bit of healthy body-fat, our brains do not notice it happening as our leptin gauge has been altered. Lower leptin levels mean increased hunger and thus more eating. There would also be a more pronounced ghrelin rebound so there would have been less satiety in general (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19820013)  and, again, more regular eating as a result. Also as the days become long, there would be potentially less sleeping, another factor in driving down leptin and increasing ghrelin levels, tricking us into eat more often during this period. (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC535701/)

As we transition into Autumn, something really interesting occurs.  We shift from a fructose weighting to a glucose weighting in terms of carbohydrate intake as fruits decay and starches become more prevalent. See the following diagram of naturally occurring foods with a position on the glycemic index:

The paper mentioned above by G. Dodd et al, 2015 shows that when leptin and insulin levels are high, neurons in the brain are affected which trigger the activation of BAT.  It just so happens that these conditions occur naturally at this time, and only this time, of year. We know that fructose lowers leptin levels, and glucose causes increased insulin secretion. so as the summer to autumn transition occurs, leptin levels would bounce back due to the reduction of fructose in the diet. The body-fat increase that occurred during the previous high-fructose period and the introduction of nuts would mean leptin levels elevate rapidly.  Insulin levels would also increase due to a continued ingestion of starches such as squashes, grains and late fruits etc.   Essentially, just before we move into winter, the dietary conditions exist to begin the activation cycle of BAT. At no other time of the year do these conditions occur. 

Aside: It’s worth noting that this time of year is simulated all year round with the western diet, except we’ve refined the foods, which amplify the subtle effects they would have had on stone-age people.

Finally, winter.  As the cold increased, and sun reduced we’d become more sedentary and rely more on foods like stored nuts, and prey when necessary.  The increased cold exposure would further activate and develop BAT giving us a fully activated thermal insulation assisted with our natural long hair to help us tolerate the cold of winter. This time of year may have been a ketogenic period where we burned fat as our primary fuel source for both anaerobic and aerobic energy.  It would make sense, as some studies have shown ketogenic diets increase metabolism potentially increasing the heat we produce internally, thus turning us into high temperature fat burning machines with good insulation to maintain core temperature and fight off hypothermia. Ingestion of fat from stored nuts along with the body-fat stores we would have generated in summer and winter, would therefore have been critical to our survival.

In summary, BAT activation is a natural insulation layer that protects us from the cold. Two conditions occur in nature in autumn that helped stone age humans activate BAT i.e. dietary changes and cold exposure.  The dietary conditions that cause raised leptin levels and insulin levels that are more frequent and pronounced only occur naturally during this time.  The environmental change of increasing cold also allow us to activate BAT further.  Both factors occur during this transition from autumn to winter, aiding our winter survival through the healthy creation of BAT.  The dietary conditions of winter would then support the continued fueling of the BAT layer.

In our world, BAT was not discovered until recently because we have removed the natural conditions that caused it to activate.

  1. Our daily diets have considerable amounts of fructose from table sugar, fruit, and high fructose corn syrups in drinks and snacks which lower leptin levels continually preventing hormonal conditions required to activate BAT.
  2. We are not exposed to cold anymore due to advanced clothing, bedding, insulated buildings and central heating systems thus preventing cold stimulation of BAT.

Through simulating natural seasonal inputs i.e. reducing dietary fructose and some cold exposure, perhaps we can activate BAT in the autumn time to take advantage of the health benefits brown fat yields, which are many.

 

 

Spring out your Summer Hunter and Escape the Infinite Autumn

We evolved from primates to be extremely smart upright creatures with amazing abilities agile, fast, nimble, strong, supple warriors in tune with our environment… and what did we use our intelligence for??? To create an artificial environment so that we could spend all day sitting down, wasting the precious physical gifts we are ALL born with…

I suppose we are all a bit messed up because we are encouraged as infants talk and stand up, but as soon as we learn how, adults tell us to shut up and sit down. We get really good at the shutting up and sitting down and many of us end up doing it for life sitting 9-5 in an office jobs, and then going home and, after a few chores, continue to sit for the rest of the night in silence watching TV… (I can’t say too much because I’m on my ass now, but I did get into the gym for an hour this evening LOL)… We eat autumnal foods all day long every day and so we’ve devolved into a creature that has become fairly helpless and would find it difficult to survive even a few days in nature. We are satisfied with the comforts of the infinite autumn, but yet we hear the call of our inner primal warrior too, wanting us to be in the best shape possible for ourselves, to feel attractive, to be and feel healthy, and to be less self-conscious… can we have our cake and eat it too???

You see I love our modern world, this is my home, it is amazing to be a part of it with all the technology, travel, art, fashion, music and so on, and I don’t wish to live in the jungle like Tarzan (not permanently anyway, I like visiting regularly). I like most things about this place, but I also like being primal, being strong, fit, agile, fast, supple and, you know what, the two don’t have to be mutually exclusive. We can develop these gifts through simulating what our ancestors did in terms of food and exercise and getting out into nature to enjoy our heritage, like an ancient warrior who was a master of the land. In tune with both their body and the song of the natural world.

Lets understand this environment and be smart about running the gauntlet of it, and use the intelligence to take back what is rightfully ours, our true form, to escape without having to leave…

Spring out your Summer Hunter and Escape the Infinite Autumn.

Don’t Eat for Winter.

5 Reasons Why The Sugar Tax Won’t Fix The Obesity Crisis

I presume the recent announcement of a sugary soft drink tax of 30% in Ireland’s 2018 Budget is an attempt to tackle the obesity and diabetes crisis facing our country, and that our government took the lead on this from other nations.

My thoughts on this are that it is absolutely ridiculous to single out sugary soft drinks for a number of reasons.

Firstly, every time a person runs the gauntlet of a sales checkout they have to pass about a thousand sugary treats, which all contain ridiculous amounts of sugar, just inspect the ingredients of a packet of jellies for example.

Secondly, diabetics often rely on sugary soft drinks to treat a hypo, it is their first port of call.  They now have to inspect labels to make sure there is enough sugar and pay the extra tax.

Thirdly, soft drinks companies will simply reduce the content of sugar and replace with sweeteners.  Recent studies show sweeteners are associated with obesity also and are also artificial and possibly as harmful as sugar is, if over-consumed.

Fourthly, it isn’t just sugar that is the problem. Refined starch is almost immediately converted to glucose by the human digestive system, and therefore the over-consumption of sugar needs to be looked at holistically through education over singling out one product.

Finally, I often use sugary sports drinks to fuel my kettlebell and weight training exercise. This, along with the previous whey protein tax, means I am now being further taxed for keeping fit.

In order to address the issue of over-consumption of sugar, why not implement a policy, like with tobacco, where junk is not allowed to tempt people as they walk through checkouts?  Have it in a section away from counters.  It’s a free world, free choice and all that but it seems that people’s health is less important than profit and tax in this country.  I had hoped our government would be more innovative in their approach to tackle the obesity crisis.

Why not earnestly tackle this problem through education about carbohydrates and policies for shops, so that a) consumers know the issue and b) their instincts are not tempted every single time they enter a shop, instead of a tax that can be circumvented by big industry and has other knock on effects for consumers.

The DEFoW Diet – Getting back to our Roots!

This article was published in the Autumn edition of GIY Magazine 2017

We’re now at crisis point in terms of the obesity epidemic with recent statistics showing that 2/3 of Irish adults are either overweight or obese.  Another stark statistic is that obesity is now killing more people than malnutrition globally, which means we’ve practically solved world hunger only to create an even bigger problem in the process. This is causing untold torture and suffering worldwide and imposes financial strain on our already struggling health services.  How did it come to this? Where did we go so wrong? Even without understanding the problem fully, we’ve known for a long time that serious change is required in order to reverse the situation.

Until now, attempts at change have come through personal trial and error and the propagation of flawed expert opinion has compounded and confused the problem rather than alleviate it. Low fat / high carb diets have been touted as the solution since the 60s and yet have been disastrous in terms of world health (google the sugar scandal). Governments are now implementing sugar taxes in a flip/flop attempt in order to solve this problem, however I believe it is education that is required as most people still do not understand that not all calories are NOT equal and that sugar comes in many forms, not just sweet stuff.  For example, according to the glycemicindex.com website, corn flakes have the highest gi, coming in at 132 (the glycemic index being a scale measuring how various foods affect our blood sugar levels) and baked spuds / white rice, although more nutritious, typically have a higher gi than most sugary soft drinks!

Fat alone does NOT make us fat!

Based on my research in Don’t Eat for Winter, and evidence continuing to emerge, the problems we face are primarily rooted in extremely high carbohydrate diets compounded by sedentary lifestyles.  Fat has been blamed in the past for making us fat (it sounds logical), but we now know it isn’t that simple and that fat in and of itself is pretty innocuous, in terms of weight gain, until you add carbs into the equation. For example, people all around the world are losing significant weight on very high fat / low carb diets such as ketogenic diets. If fat alone were the problem, this wouldn’t be possible. Even Diabetes.co.uk are now recommending very low carb diets to help prevent and even reverse type 2 diabetes.

It’s difficult to argue against the fact we have a major excess of carbohydrates in Ireland when you think of our typical diet, which might consist of toast or cereal for breakfast; a sandwich, wrap, baguette for lunch; and pasta, potatoes, rice etc. for dinner and sweet treats in between such as tea and biscuits.  Walk into any convenience store/petrol station and look at the array of goodies available in and around the service desks and you’ll realise how difficult it is to run the sugar gauntlet even if you are fully aware of the problem.  This type of food may be ok for the sugar energy needs of lumberjacks, block-layers and olympic athletes but for the average worker with a desk job, it is excessive.

MOST HIGH GI CARBS ARE HARVESTED IN AUTUMN!

I became aware that high gi foods were related to fat storage through my own experience and research into diet for kettlebell sport. I had a eureka moment in early 2016 when I noticed there were no carbs available in nature at that time.  That’s when I came up the phrase “There’s no Starch in March!”, which is the name of a chapter in Don’t Eat for Winter. To back up my theory I put foods harvested in Ireland/UK into a spreadsheet, organised by their optimal harvest months and it showed a huge spike in the availability and the average gi of foods harvest in autumn time.  Protein and fat sources remain fairly constant throughout the year, but the real seasonal variable is carbs, which become hyper available in autumn time.

The science is telling us excessive carbs (sugars and starches) are the problem, what Don’t Eat for Winter gives is a fundamental reason why. The science tells us these foods trigger body processes such as insulin response, which puts the body into fat storage mode; and dopamine release, which triggers a sense of reward and comfort and also addiction like gorge instincts. Essentially, beguiling us into eating more foods that promote fat storage. In the past, putting on a layer of body fat in autumn would have been advantageous in order to help us survive the food shortages and cold of winter. The problem today is that we have created an infinite autumn ‘on steroids’, with not only all of the natural carbs available all year round but also refined versions too such as sugars, syrups and white fluffy starches with all of the fibre and goodness removed.  We are now eating for winter all of the time, but unlike Game of Thrones, winter never comes and this results in us accumulating body fat year on year until it becomes chronic, which is what we’re experiencing today in our society.  A layer of fat that is stored temporarily every autumn and lost every spring was part of our design and perfectly healthy, accumulating it over years, without respite, is not.

In order to solve this problem, people simulate food shortages, like that which would have been experienced in winter time. We call these simulations diets and they can be torturous and conjure up negative thoughts from denial to starvation and often there is a dreaded bounce back afterwards. The focus is typically on creating a calorie deficit, however the type of calories are not considered and so the same instincts are continuously being invoked and we try to overcome these instincts with willpower.  Of course it is almost impossible to fight instinct without an inner struggle, which is why these diets become torturous, and when instinct inevitably wins the battle, we beat ourselves up believing that we have failed.  This can be damaging to our self-esteem.

We need to stop beating ourselves up and realise that we are not failures but perfect products of nature, survival machines built to work in harmony with the seasonal foods available within the environments in which we evolved and adapted. However, our environments have changed drastically in the very recent past and we have not yet learnt to cope with the changes. In order to fix things, we must first acknowledge this.

The ultimate solution to the problem, therefore, is to eat seasonally like our ancestors did, however this is not entirely feasible in today’s world with the wonderful array of foods available. Don’t Eat for Winter addresses this and presents a compromise in order to help our bodies both work within the parameters of our evolution and our new environment combined. It’s a sensible solution for a crazy world.

The GIY philosophy is fantastic and centres such as Grow HQ implementing it fit perfectly with the Don’t Eat for Winter ethos, however even those of us who eat seasonal produce would be guilty of having bread, potatoes, rice or other autumnal carbohydrate alongside our seasonal foods.  This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it must be understood that these are foods are autumnal and therefore should not be consumed in every meal, all year round, if we wish to work within the parameters of our design.

Dont Eat for Winter, or The DEFoW Diet for short, is a simple set of guidelines to hack nature’s rules in order to minimise fat storage process and gorge instincts whilst ensuring excellent nutrition. That’s why it’s both effective and sustainable in today’s world.  It offers the reader a solution that allows them to tend towards an energetic summer hunter’s physique as opposed to the lethargic winter hibernator’s.  You can find out more about The DEFoW Diet on www.donteatforwinter.com

DEFoW Gets Results…

I was the first guinea pig and lost the last 2 stone of my 7 stone fat loss journey in 8 weeks after spending 4 years losing the first 5.  It was so effective I felt I had to write the book to share the concept.  Next was my lovely wife Nicola who had trained circuits for years and wanted to get under 60kg for years. Once she began working within the parameters of The DEFoW Diet she lost over a stone of fat in about 6 weeks and improved muscle tone.  We’ve both kept it off now for over a year without any effort. There have been many reports of significant weight losses from readers of the book including a 19lb loss from a US soldier, a similar amount from a kettlebell athlete and personal trainer in cork, and a number of other losses from both men and women totalling about 300lbs so far and continuing to be reported.

The book is endorsed and the foreword written by Dr. Mark Rowe (doctormarkrowe.com), founder of the Waterford Health Park and thought leader in the areas of wellbeing and happiness. It is available in the Book Centre and online on www.donteatforwinter.com

Be aware of the dangers of fallible expert opinion

I wrote the following letter to the Irish Times on the 27th of September 2017 in response to the an article entitled Beware the rise of unqualified self-styled ‘nutrition experts’.  It may not get published but I put some effort into it so I may as well post it here for anyone interested in reading it.

Dear Editor,

I refer to the article above regarding self styled nutrition experts (see link above).

I would argue that “infallible” expert opinion can be far more dangerous than any fad diet. If you Google “the sugar scandal” you will see what the result of expert opinion has led to in the field of nutrition I.e. The low-fat / high-carb ethos that has plagued the world for over a half century contributing to a shocking crisis whereby now we have 700 million people globally suffering from obesity,  2/3 of Irish adults either obese or overweight and a growing obesity problem among children. Beyond obesity, we have almost a million people at risk of type 2 diabetes in this country alone, because of our extremely high-carb diets (readers, take this in: starch is sugar too). Expert opinion has been a disastrous because it is often seen as infallible and thus propagated as the truth, however history shows us that the “truth” often ends up being wrong. This is one of the key things that retards human progress.  Expert opinion should always be questioned. Experts thought the world was flat and that the sun circled the earth and were pretty vicious to the few who thought different, even though the evidence was there.  The same thing happened with Dr. Atkins’ Diet, he was ridiculed, yet ketogenic diets are now being used safely by many to help with various conditions.

It seems that governments, health institutes, diabetes organisations etc are finally recognising that high carb (remember, not just sugar but starch too) are a problem when you look at a diet holistically but there are still problems with the education e.g. The food pyramid referenced in the article, has bananas on the bottom rung along with brocolli. These are vastly different from an energy, fibre and micronutrient point of view and if part of the 5-7 a day what should the person choose? 7 bananas or other high sugar fruits and have to deal with all that fructose and starch?

Ms Feighan is correct in that there are too few dieticians in this country and that serious medical conditions require proper training to diagnose and treat with diet. However, advice to individuals that want to lose weight must be welcomed by pioneers who have demonstrated healthy weight loss themselves and inspired people to do the same for themselves. I am one of these individuals, I lost 7 stones of fat and won an amateur kettlebell world championships. I wrote a book about how I did it called Don’t Eat for Winter, which was endorsed by one of your regular contributors, Dr. Mark Rowe, and my readers have been reporting significant weigh losses to date.  I could fall under the self-styled nutritionist umbrella and my diet could be called a fad diet, but yet I’m getting regular reports of people losing weight, from an american soldier losing 19lbs, to a british athlete cutting for competition, to a local mid 50s female losing 14lbs in a few weeks, self described as despairing of ever losing weight.

My ethos is simple, look to nature, there’s no starch in March, and carbs only exist in abundance in nature in late summer and autumn for about 3 months spiking in a sugar maximum in September. They are the major macro-nutrient variable in nature (especially where we evolved). It is very obvious from this spike that carbs work with our bodies to trigger fat storage for winter to fuel our bodies and to insulate them for winter.  They make us gorge and pile on fat and that’s backed up with solid research. The problem is we now live in an infinite autumn and winter never comes and so chronic weight gain is the result. We have no hope of escape and the plethora of weight related illnesses our society endures will continue, as long as experts encourage this environment.  We need to stop eating carbs in every meal and snack.  I’m not saying no carbs at all, just bring it back to the minimum of the dietary reference intake, especially for those with sedentary lifestyles, and keep to 1 to 2 times a day and see what happens e.g. replace cereal or toast with an omelette for breakfast.

Sincerely,

Spring out Your Summer Hunter and Escape the Infinite Autumn…

Spring out Your Summer Hunter and Escape the Infinite Autumn... Don't Eat for Winter!

I’m so psyched about my new book cover designed by talented artist Lee Grace, a good friend of mine for many years.  I trusted Lee with the concept which can be summarised with the following phrase

“Spring out Your Summer Hunter and Escape the Infinite Autumn…”

Don’t Eat for Winter

So what does that mean?

Essentially we are prisoners of our modern hyper-carb environment.  A carbpocalypse. Our bodies were not designed to be eating autumnal carbs all day every day of the year as they exist primarly in nature in late summer and autumn time.  I believe that carbs work with our bodies to trigger gorge instincts, affect hunger hormones and put us in a state of fat genesis in order to protect us from the food shortages and cold of winter (fat is an insulator).

All the science in the world can explain this with affects on chemicals and hormones in the body such as dopamine, leptin, ghrelin, taste sensations, insulin spikes and so on, but at the end of the day all of these things are part of our biological systems to ensure our survival.  They are our instincts.

Unfortunately, in today’s world of the quick fix, gratification and little self-moderation, we give in to these instincts daily, mostly unknowingly, and of course commercial entities will exploit them, because things that trigger our instincts tick all of these boxes.  With modern storage, preservatives, transportation etc. we are caught in this infinite autumn, which is amplified through refining which means our instincts are on high alert at all times.  We are trapped in this world and unless we are aware of it, we will continue to be slaves to it.  With 2/3 of adults in many western countries and beyond overweight or obese, the major factor has to be our environment.  If squirrels lived in an autumn time warp, they would become obese and unhealthy as their natural function to store fat is overloaded.  This is how we are living and it has to stop if we truly wish to become a healthy planet again.

Nature created us to be perfect survival machines, but it is no longer dictating our diet, society dictates it, stores dictate it and we are tempted constantly every time we cross the threshold of a convenience store or eatery.  We don’t stand a chance unless we become aware of this.

Becoming aware is the first step towards the escape from the infinite autumn. Contemplation of what the world is and the environment we all live in.  I’ve found through that understanding and then applying it, I was able to lose a colossal amount of unnecessary body fat and yet continue to get stronger and healthier.

The next step is to get a basic understanding of nutrition and of course become more active like our ancestors.  Once you have that understanding, you can avoid and overcome the autumnal combinations that cause the biggest instinctual response, and build a fitness base that will have you tending towards your summer hunter self.

My book, Don’t Eat for Winter, available on this site and amazon, can help give you that understanding in an accessible format. I wrote it for people like me who are struggling with the environment because of the noise of conflicting expert opinion and the constant barrage of advertising from competing commercial entities that want to supply you with your next food fix.

Your body is like a church with a lunatic playing the pipe organ

There are so many hormones and chemicals at play in your body after you ingest something it takes a very interested mind to see the big picture but there is definitely a picture emerging…

Some of the hormones and chemicals include:

  • Glucagon: the nutrient usage trigger, triggered when blood sugar is low.
  • Leptin: the body-fat feedback gauge, low leptin means hunger.
  • Insulin: the nutrient storage trigger (including fat), triggered primarily by glucose
  • Dopamine: the ‘fix’ giver, triggered by high sugar
  • Ghrelin: the empty-tank guage, high ghrelin means hunger.

There are many other hormones/chemicals at play caused by exericse, stress, illness, sleep, light levels, even cold that all cause various reactions within our bodies.

If you think about it, your body is like a church with an amazing organ located within, where various chords cause different resonances in the building, a big bass note might shake the windows, a high pitched note might cause a chandelier to ring, but various chords cause various responses and reactions.

Mother nature used to be the church organist of your body, with her seasons playing a lovely song from season to season, where the song played guaranteed your survival.

Consider how the song might go…

  • In spring we had very little vegetation but plenty of young animals to hunt, so we get high protein diets, triggering both insulin and glucagon chords, which means amino acid storage but retarded sugar/fat storage.  Muscle protein synthesis also kicks in more as we become catabolic and we release testosterone and growth hormone from hunting and so we become strong and fit.
  • In summer, berries and fruits appear, causing a greater insulin response from the glucose in the fruit, we also begin to want to store more fat again as fructose causes leptin levels to dip, making us want to eat things that will make us put up some weight, the note being played here has us our internal fat gauge set to believe we have less body-fat than we actually have.  The insulin response facilitates fat storage.  There is also more light now causing us to sleep less, potentially making us eat more as leptin levels are further reduced. Ghrelin also increases with sleep deprivation causing more hunger and we become gorgers.
  • In late summer/early autumn, ghrelin is even more volatile with high carb bounce backs, causing more frequent hunger at this point and carbs+fat trigger large dopamine response so that we tend to comfort eat and gorge. We become total truffle snufflers with the chords being played now. With leptin low, ghrelin high and dopamine response, we are primed to gorge and continue to store white body fat (WAT).
  • As autumn progresses and more white fat is stored, the shift happens between fructose and glucose and starchy carbs and leptin levels rise again and at a crucial moment, reacting with insulin, the chord triggers BAT fat activation, which is critical to our winter survival.
  • As winter approaches, and insulin levels drop but cold increases BAT activation is further triggered by the winter song and becomes fueled by body-fat and nuts we stored up in autumn. Our diets now become ketogenic and our metabolisms rise so that we become insulated furnaces, burning 300 calories more per day in order to generate protective body heat.  Our BAT fat layer is activated around our neck and shoulders, covered by our long natural hair and so we have our attic insulation in place, stopping the unnecessary loss of the heat we are now generating from escaping.

All of these chords were played in sequence by nature in a complex song, which is over-simplified above, but gives an idea of some of what is going on. Now that we have heated homes and carbs and high fructose snacks available every day, total confusion/exploitation with regards to diet, artificial lights in our rooms, and less activities and more stress etc. it’s like as if the church organ is being played by a lunatic banging random keys and notes playing multiple chords at once with leptin down, ghrelin up, cortisol up, testosterone down, dopamine up, insulin up, more fat floating around in our bloodstreams and in our white fat cells and littler or no brown fat activation,  it’s no longer music anymore, it’s noise.

I believe this to be the major factor in the current crisis facing our planet, with chronic health issues such as obesity and diabetes now at epidemic levels, all because we have strayed from nature’s song.

Now that mother nature no longer plays these chords, it’s up to us to become the church organist of our own bodies, learn to play step by step from lesson 1 and play a new song so that we become what we are supposed to be… It isn’t that hard with a little bit of knowledge….

Don’t Eat for Winter, not all of the time at least…

Brown Fat – Your Body’s Attic Insulation

BAT-Activation (brown fat activation) has some amazing benefits including fighting obesity, long life, and better circulation, it can:

  • protect from atherosclerosis (plaque in arteries)
  • improves insulin sensitivity (of interest to type 2 diabetes sufferers)
  • may improve bone health
  • increases adiponectin (longevity hormone)
  • upregulates FGF21 (improves insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism)
  • increases circulating irisin (involved in the building of lean muscle mass, convert white fat to brown fat)
  • increases SIRT1 (increases BAT activity)

Many animals in nature prepare for winter through fat deposits, particularly brown fat (BAT) activation, we are vastly different to animals in many ways, but there are similarities in terms of our hormonal response to certain foods and our ability to activate brown fat through insulin raising foods (a recent discovery) and acute cold.

Animals do not choose to get fat for winter, the environment changes for them and instincts do the rest.  They evolved to work in balance with the seasons over the course of thousands of years.  For example grizzly bears eat acorns in the autumn time, which have a very interesting nutrient ratio of high carb and fat with moderate protein (similar to human baby milk and junk food).  A couple of years ago squirrels got fatter than normal in autumn because it was mild and their autumn food supply was accessible for a lot longer, they didn’t choose to get fatter, the environment changed.

Humans on the other hand are educated somewhat about nutrition (incorrectly to a large degree because of poor science), yet we succumb to instincts as we often overeat foods that taste nice.  The very reason they taste nice is because they push our primal buttons.  Our environment has changed drastically in the past 100 years and food is no longer seasonal as we have every single type of food available all year round. The foods that really taste nice to us are autumnal:  potatoes, corn, wheat, fruit and all the derivatives such as cakes, fries, chips, crisps, breads, breakfast cereals, chocolate, pasta, pastries and so on.  You can now eat these foods in march, yet in nature there would be no way for a stone age person to have such foods at that time of year.  Our instincts are driven crazy just like animals in autumn as a result, and unfortunately for us, we now live in an eternal autumn and the seasons never change, from a food point of view. The result is chronic weight gain, which is now prevalent.  Simple common sense really.

So what would happen to someone that existed 10,000 years ago in a country where there were pronounced seasons?  Vast areas of the world have more extreme seasons and the further away from the equator you went. Less sugar and starch would exist in these areas as it takes the sun’s energy to really create high gi foods.

(Interestingly type 1 diabetes is more prevalent the further you go from the equator and is on the increase, is it that people evolved and adapted to function with less sugar/starch and thus became more sensitive to it, and nowadays because the environment has changed so much, human bodies simply cannot cope with it and malfunction?  I think it’s very likely!)

Essentially our diets would have changed drastically between spring summer autumn and winter:

  • Spring would have had young animals and fish for us to hunt, and some forms of veg beginning to grow.  This is a very low GI season, and we would have had plenty of protein in proportion to fat and carbs.
  • Summer would have had plenty of berries, from raspberries in early summer, to blueberries, blackberries and strawberries etc. along with the staples mentioned in spring. Now with some sugar introduced and protein, this would have made us strong and given us more energy for the hunt and activity during the warm summer months.
  • Autumn would have had all of the rest of the harvest all sorts of fruit and grains and more root veg too, a fantastic time of year.  This is the hyper-carb season and would have sent our blood sugars crazy and along with the staples and nuts appearing it would have made us plump, like squirrels, to prepare us for winter and given us energy from sugars to allow us to collect lots of nuts for winter.
  • Finally winter, from experience we would have learned about the cold and the lack of food available as leaves fell of trees and fruit, grains etc decayed. We would have collected lots of nuts which would have given us energy over the winter.  This period may have put people into a ketogenic state as opposed to utilising glucose for brain and nervous system i.e. total fat burners, instead of just using fat aerobically.  Then we would have moved into spring having lost all of the winter weight.

Of course there were other sources of food, like low gi veg dictated by the seasons which would have had beneficial nutrients and fibre, but would have had little effect on our body-weight.

So what is happening from a hormonal point of view?

Here are a few hormones involved based on my understanding of the research…

  • Leptin: This hormone is a hunger limiter, it’s level increases as we gain body fat and is secreted from our white fat cells.  It essentially tells the brain how much bodyfat we have.
  • Ghrelin: This is the hunger hormone, secreted primarily in the stomach, and has a different response based on amount of food in the stomach and the type of food eaten.
  • Dopamine: This is released in our brains when we eat sugary foods, a comfort fix and reward sensation, which may lead to gorging and sugar addiction.
  • Insulin: This is secreted by the pancreas when our blood sugar levels rise to drive them back down to normal levels, or from eating protein.
  • Glucagon: This is secreted by the pancreas when our blood sugar levels are too low to draw sugar from the liver, or when an amino acid found in meat, for example, known as arginine is digested.

Still with me? Great!

So the really interesting thing is this, and I believe backs up the Don’t Eat for Winter hypothesis very well:

In autumn, insulin levels are high and dopamine response would have caused a a gorge season.  Carbs cause a pronouced ghrelin drop and bounce back, which meant we’d be delighted with what we ate, but hungry more quickly after eating and so we’d gorge again and get another fix.  We would have savoured our food and ate and ate, keeping insulin spiked and our bodies in a continuous fat storage mode.

When sugar/starch raises insulin, and leptin levels are high (from bodyfat), our bodies create a layer of brown fat around our neck shoulders and chest.  This situation could have happened in Autumn time for our stone age ancestors. Brown fat is an excellent insulator and only recently has it been discovered that adults can actually form new brown fat in these areas.  It is also an energy burner drawing energy from white fat cells, so for me it seems like it is like an internal scarf/hot water bottle protecting us from the cold.

One other thing that stimulates the genesis of this brown fat is acute cold. Winter anyone?  So between carbs and cold, ie. the transition from autumn foods to cold of winter, it seems we activate our brown fat scarf (BAT-scarf) to keep us warm and hardy over the winter.  With a stone age haircut the insulation is even more effective. Remember heat rises and so having this layer on the top of our upright bodies is the ultimate place to have such an insulation layer.  Brown fat is your body’s attic insulation!

You can read more about brown fat (BAT), known as the hibernating gland, on wikipedia and it’s insulation, heat generation benefits and how it’s activation has other amazing health benefits for us and longevity in animals.

A summary of health benefits for humans include:

  • protect from atherosclerosis (plaque in arteries)
  • improves insulin sensitivity (of interest to type 2 diabetes sufferers)
  • may improve bone health#
  •  increases adiponectin (longevity hormone)
  • upregulates FGF21 (improves insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism)
  • increases circulating irisin (involved in the building of lean muscle mass, convert white fat to brown fat)
  • increases SIRT1 (increases BAT activity)

All of these seem to assist with metabolism and longevity and should not be underestimated in terms of their health benefit.

In terms of benefits to animals, this is pretty amazing, animals that have BAT live longer when exposed to more cold, maybe it’s the same for us too if we can develop more BAT:

“The longest-lived small mammals: grey squirrels (24 yrs), bats (30 yrs), and naked mole rats (32 yrs), all have remarkably high levels of BAT and BAT activity. Furthermore, in animal species that span a wide range of latitudes, the within-species longevity is correlated with how far north (or south, in the southern hemisphere) an individual lives suggesting that cooler environments lead to increased BAT activation and increased lifespan across a wide range of species.”

Come winter, and we begin eating nuts, insulin drops and we become ketogenic, this means we are now in full fat burning mode, using fat reserves and the fat in nuts to keep us burning fat like a furnace.  Research shows us that in this state we burn up to 300 more calories a day.  We become hotter and we keep fueling our brown fatty scarf to keep us insulated and warm during winter (obviously furs and hides would have kept us warm along with our dignity intact during this season).

In spring then our diets would return to meat and insulin levels raised but ghrelin levels more stable and less dopamine response so our food would have been more satiating and we’d go back to having more balanced blood sugar levels and less hungry.  The glucagon response from the arginine in the meat would have prevented us storing any more fat than necessary and kept our blood sugar levels from dropping too low, keeping our minds sharp.

Summer then would have us with a little more insulin flowing about keeping us more anabolic along with the meat and giving us energy for hunting and keeping us alert to danger and building muscle.

In today’s world we live in an infinite autumn priming our gorge instincts, switching fat storage more on all of the time and our hormones have gone haywire.  Is it any wonder we are in an absolute crisis when it comes to obesity. The thing is it’s not a person’s fault for being fat, no more than those fat squirrels in autumn a few years ago.  We cannot fight instinct with will power and calorie restriction when we are pushing primal buttons, that’s pure punishment. You can use your intellect to not allow instincts to be triggered and thus control you and realise that not all calories are equal, not by a long shot.  We’re not furnaces, we’re hormonal creatures that use food for energy, construction, and body processes that support our continued survival. Amazing!

We can have dominion over our bodies but it takes a bit of awareness about the processes going on and the wisdom to implement change based on that knowledge.

That’s it in a nutshell really (pardon the pun).

For more information check out my book ‘Don’t Eat for Winter‘ to discover how to work with our modern environment and control our autumnal urges, gorges and fat storage processes and get back to healthy body fat levels.

Now, time for a cold shower and some starch to increase my BAT activation.

This winter I’m gonna be BAT-man!