Has anyone felt worse after eating seed oils?
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@lanadelesoteric said in Has anyone felt worse after eating seed oils?:
I've always felt better after seed oils. Mcdonalds or slop always makes me feels good. But this is how you know its from the devil.
Lol, I have cheat meals every week but I never go for McDonalds. I always thought they were disgusting even back in the day. If I'm doing burgers a cheat meal for me is usually In-n-out double double protein style. Which still isn't that bad honestly, but I do eat fries with it. However most often my cheat meals is pizza, which was my favorite junk food back in the day.
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Fried foods are really the worst thing for your blood sugar and diabetes period. That combination of starch and grease is a one way ticket to looking like Nikocado Avocado
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@Mulloch94 You sound like you have a eating disorder. Having fried foods now and again will not make you look like Nikavacado. The point of Peating is not have a bizarre aversion to anything that doesn't fit within the rules, its a bout making yourself resilient to the world around you.
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@Mulloch94 said in Has anyone felt worse after eating seed oils?:
Fried foods are really the worst thing for your blood sugar and diabetes period. That combination of starch and grease is a one way ticket to looking like Nikocado Avocado
Agree. People underestimate fried pufa.
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Foods deep fried in PUFA oils are without a doubt the worst thing in the modern diet and should be avoided 100%. This really shouldn't be controversial on a Ray Peat forum. Peat always recommended getting as close to completely eliminating PUFA as possible.
I can easily notice when I eat anything with PUFA. I get chills and stomach pain immediately.
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When I was much younger I was particularly sensitive to food.
My Gran would always make lovely slow cooked lamb stews with potatoes and carrots and onions which I had no problems with and enjoyed very much, she fed me cheese and peeled apples in a bowl and always had sugary snacks for me. I would cry when I had to leave her house.
Every time without fail when we would go out to eat or get food ordered in from a fish and chips shop I would feel deathly sick afterwards and often throw up. The fish was always 'battered' which basically means deep fried in vegetable oil, and I never seemed to have a problem if I avoided the batter and ate the lean fish inside.
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I've noticed when I've eaten high PUFA food on a special occassion that I have the potential to hate myself very easily.
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@lanadelesoteric said in Has anyone felt worse after eating seed oils?:
@Mulloch94 You sound like you have a eating disorder. Having fried foods now and again will not make you look like Nikavacado. The point of Peating is not have a bizarre aversion to anything that doesn't fit within the rules, its a bout making yourself resilient to the world around you.
Did you not read in my comment where I talked about my cheat meals. Usually it's pizza, or burgers I like double double...with fries. I'll eat fried foods on occasion, but they're without a doubt one of the worst things you could ever put in your body. It's also very easy to overeat calorically dense combinations like that. The negative impact it has on your glucose regulation will make a lot of people hungry again in just a couple hours.
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@Mulloch94
Real pizza from a family owned pizzaria and non-fried burgers are the best cheat meals, watch those toppings of course. But i'm going to plant a seed in your head, those fries are cooked in old oxidized PUFA I've asked for substitutes for fries in the past btw, the last time it was mashed potatoes, butter & salt. -
I find it disheartening that anyone would not notice the difference. Well I know I'm a highly sensitive person, so there's that.
I can eat a few grams of PUFA without noticing a difference, but just about any restaurant meal is going to make me feel bad. I start feeling a bit "cold" and mentally dull. I start spelling words wrong and forgetting things. Feeling deflated, low. Headache. And just a general gross feeling in my skin. Sometimes feeling like I can't breathe.
I don't know anything about the "depletion". I would think some people are just more sensitive than others. It's not like I've avoided PUFA like the plague. I've been eating a handful of Cheez-its here and there.
I can see PUFA being similar to estrogen. I think that's the real reason it's pushed by the government, along with everything estrogenic or serotonergic that reduces meaningful thinking and makes people likely to submit to authority.
Vitamin E helps a lot, but doesn't make me feel normal. Aspirin helps a PUFA headache.
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@Atman Well for one, quarter pounders are almost entirely saturated fat, and most locations don't add any "butter oil". There's just a couple of grams of PUFA in the bun. So actually, McDonald's is a bad example, because it's pretty PUFA-free, unless you order the fries.
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@lanadelesoteric you can buy low-PUFA pork, it's just insanely expensive
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@lanadelesoteric McDonald's quarter pounders are actually quite saturated. Just don't get the fries, and you'll be fine.
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@Cicero I think its probably a good sign to be sensitive to some extent. I wish I was more properly sensitive.
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@kimbriel said in Has anyone felt worse after eating seed oils?:
There's just a couple of grams of PUFA in the bun
Everybody has their own experiences when eating out at restaurants or fast food. But I frequently find breads to be one of those most problematic foodstuffs. Probably one of the few things I actually agree with low carbers about, albeit for vastly different reasons. Seed oils, soy, some even have cancer agents in them like azodicarbonamide. Most have baking powder as well, which typically has heavy-metals and added phosphates to it. And even if you find one without all that it is still probably fortified with iron. Fortunately bread alternatives are quite prevalent. My mother loves Subway, so whenever she wants a sandwich from there I can get their breadless bowls. With burgers it's as simple as wrapping them in lettuce instead of bread, very tasty. Pizza can be difficult, finding a local pizzeria that makes their dough fresh would be the best option. I've also had cauliflower crusts that taste pretty good.
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@kimbriel Yeh familiar with some of this.
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My OCD improved by ~20% after ~2 weeks of strictly avoiding PUFAs. I haven't noticed a reduction in obsessive thoughts but my anxiety related to them decreased and therefore I'm better able to avoid doing the compulsions/rituals. If I eat more PUFAs within a day or two then my symptoms worsen again. 2 or 3 days of strictly avoiding PUFAs after eating them for 1 or 2 days is enough to reduce my symptoms back to what they were like before eating more PUFAs. By strictly avoiding PUFAs I mean avoiding anything with more than 1% of their calories coming from PUFAs with the exception of chocolate
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Bruh I pigged out on fried food this weekend, family reunion type ish.
Stomach has been inflamed and bloated. Extremities can’t warm up. Mood is mostly awful.
This is why I avoid this 99% of the time
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@BroJonas Achey nips too. This sucks.
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Yes.
Like a year ago, started experimenting with different Peat things like oj and more limiting pufa.
Went to chic-fil-a, got a small breakfast chicken biscuit, tots, coffee. Felt like absolute garbage the rest of the day. Stomach ache, brain fog, slowness, etc. Sure, this is way more than just pufa or cooking oil, but damn. I've really limited fast food after that.Butter definitely is satiating and energizing, maybe not great but way better than seed oils. I like olive oil but only in specific foods/recipes.
This is probably old news but it goes with other pufa items. I think I've even noticed it with store breads that use small amounts of pufa oil. Probably not a great product overall, and I think it has those effects at a lesser level than fried stuff.
I'm wondering if gut endotoxin-serotonin and pufa is also related to abdominal fat/water retention?