Addictions aren’t real, or at least not like how we thought of them in the 90s.
It is an imbalance of carbohydrates and “bad” fats (no such things but in excess they become “bad”) that your body needs other vitamins to deal with. It’s not an “addiction,” the word is meant to demonize and scare people, and it’s fat phobia to call it that imo.
It’s a word used to demonize people doing normal human things like consuming things in excess.
Carbohydrates are a regular source of energy in food that nearly every unicellular and multicellular form of life utilizes, and are evolutionarily ancient. Everything you eat, must be processed and dealt with, and that takes vitamins. Carbohydrates need to be balanced with other nutrients like all nutrients.
All cells use adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) as their source of metabolic energy to drive the synthesis of cell constituents and carry out other energy-requiring activities, such as movement (e.g., muscle contraction). The mechanisms used by cells for the generation of ATP are thought to have evolved in three stages, corresponding to the evolution of glycolysis, photosynthesis, and oxidative metabolism (Figure 1.5). The development of these metabolic pathways changed Earth’s atmosphere, thereby altering the course of further evolution.
In the initially anaerobic atmosphere of Earth, the first energy-generating reactions presumably involved the breakdown of organic molecules in the absence of oxygen. These reactions are likely to have been a form of present-day glycolysis—the anaerobic breakdown of glucose to lactic acid, with the net energy gain of two molecules of ATP.
Fats need to be balanced.
“Meat” - no, not all meat is the same meat. It’s regularly an issue with people feeding their pets a raw diet - they only use muscle meat and no organ meat and the pet becomes malnourished.
Are you eating thyroid? Thymus? Liver? Heart? Testicles? Ovaries? Brains? These all have different nutrients and hormones in them and we still make medicine today from some of these parts.
Meat does not have enough vitamin e or vitamin k unless you eat liver, but it also has vitamin a and each liver can have varying amounts of what vitamins are stored in it. Vitamin C is also lacking in an all meat diet devoid of organ meats.
I know weightlifters who are in their 60s regularly macrodosing vitamin e and vitamin c for this reason and they’ve won competitions in their younger years and had very few serious injuries compared to others. I’m gunna say these vitamins are necessary and your “meat” argument is lacking.
normal human things like consuming things in excess.
Excess and normal are contradicting each other in this sentence.
Yes cellular metabolism can use glucose, but that glucose in humans does not need to be eaten in the form of carbohydrates, the body is perfectly able to make its own glucose via gluconeogenesis
Fats need to be balanced.
What does this mean?
Vitamin C is also lacking in an all meat diet devoid of organ meats.
Vitamin C is in meat in small amounts, but if one is eating only meat then there is not glut4 competition and that vitamin c is very effective.
Addictions aren’t real, or at least not like how we thought of them in the 90s.
It is an imbalance of carbohydrates and “bad” fats (no such things but in excess they become “bad”) that your body needs other vitamins to deal with. It’s not an “addiction,” the word is meant to demonize and scare people, and it’s fat phobia to call it that imo.
No food has everything we need in it.
Addictions are real things in both my experience and reading - can you explain how they are not real?
Carbohydrates are not necessary for human nutrition, so there is no such thing as a carbohydrate imbalance.
Eating saturated fat does not become bad at any level of consumption.
Meat has everything we need in it, its the perfect food.
It’s a word used to demonize people doing normal human things like consuming things in excess.
Carbohydrates are a regular source of energy in food that nearly every unicellular and multicellular form of life utilizes, and are evolutionarily ancient. Everything you eat, must be processed and dealt with, and that takes vitamins. Carbohydrates need to be balanced with other nutrients like all nutrients.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK9841/
Fats need to be balanced.
“Meat” - no, not all meat is the same meat. It’s regularly an issue with people feeding their pets a raw diet - they only use muscle meat and no organ meat and the pet becomes malnourished.
Are you eating thyroid? Thymus? Liver? Heart? Testicles? Ovaries? Brains? These all have different nutrients and hormones in them and we still make medicine today from some of these parts.
Meat does not have enough vitamin e or vitamin k unless you eat liver, but it also has vitamin a and each liver can have varying amounts of what vitamins are stored in it. Vitamin C is also lacking in an all meat diet devoid of organ meats.
I know weightlifters who are in their 60s regularly macrodosing vitamin e and vitamin c for this reason and they’ve won competitions in their younger years and had very few serious injuries compared to others. I’m gunna say these vitamins are necessary and your “meat” argument is lacking.
Excess and normal are contradicting each other in this sentence.
Yes cellular metabolism can use glucose, but that glucose in humans does not need to be eaten in the form of carbohydrates, the body is perfectly able to make its own glucose via gluconeogenesis
What does this mean?
Vitamin C is in meat in small amounts, but if one is eating only meat then there is not glut4 competition and that vitamin c is very effective.
They are not contradictory.
Ok so no issue with glucose or carbs in isolation
I explained above and elsewhere, you’ll have to search my history or the thread re balancing fats
It is not enough vitamin C
I’m not really interested in debating your eating disorder/orthorexia