Batfort

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Tag: digestion monster

Carnivore Update, 13 Months In

Back in May, I passed the 1-year anniversary of the day I ate my last vegetable. [yaaaaay.wav]

It has been a surprisingly easy year. My journey from paleo to SCD to SCD/low-FODMAP to SCD/Low-FODMAP/no nightshades to all-of-the-above-but-also-keto was either going to end in me going crazy and eating all the vegetables again (and probably juicing), or in no vegetables at all. I’ve never been happier with a decision.

Mid-May of this year, I could sense that my body was in a healing mode, so I decided to take the final plunge and quit all “zero carb” foods that weren’t meat or eggs. That meant no cheese and no coffee, my last two vices. Even though I had been eating supposedly zero carbs, I experienced SIBO die off about six days in. (Herxheimer reactions are real, y’all.)

Bacterial overgrowths are really difficult to eradicate. You have to be extremely consistent with your food and lifestyle choices. Otherwise, the colony kicks right back into multiply-mode and you’re overrun again.

It’s been interesting what eating just animal products has revealed about my food addictions and the factors leading to my Crohn’s disease. I function so much better without dairy, and yet I have absolutely no self-control with it. There are other carnivores with digestive problems who find it helpful to eat one ounce of cheese per day. I cannot do that.

I suspect the reason why may be lingering intestinal permeability. I still have some active eczema patches which I believe directly mirror the permeability of my gut. When those patches are healed, I may start experimenting with other types of foods again, or adding back some seasonings.

The lack of variability in my diet, however, has exposed the fact that there are other things that contribute to my autoimmune disease. Things that I knew in theory, but that my lived experience now bears out. For example: getting enough sleep and effectively managing stress.

Both of these things are essential for keeping inflammation low, but they’re easy to ignore when the food part of your diet is more on fire. Now that food is pretty much locked down, I can’t ignore the fact that there are other things that I’m doing that contribute to my state of disease.

I know that Crohn’s disease isn’t my fault, but it’s become abundantly clear to me that some of my habits contribute to the development of this disease and its symptoms. Maybe I didn’t beget this in myself, but I certainly contribute to it.

There are things that I never would have learned about myself and my body if I hadn’t gone carnivore. The diet shift has been an essential part of my growth as someone who takes charge of her own health, and has allowed me to see things that I may not have otherwise seen.

At the moment I’m eating mostly beef burgers with a side of shredded beef, some eggs, and some wild-caught salmon. I’ve cut out all pork in an attempt to lose some fat, which makes me a little sad, but I can live with it for now.

There’s some smoked chicken in my fridge, but I can’t decide if I like it or not.

One of the nicest things about carnivory is that I don’t have to make many choices about food anymore. There was a time in my life that I liked making decisions about what to eat, and cooking elaborate meals, but I was also a complete slave to my palate. Now, I keep things simple.

Life is good and the healing is real.

 

PS. And I should add that one of the greatest side-effects of this diet is that my skin is no longer hella sensitive to the sun. I used to burn in a flash, and one of the first things I noticed last year was that my skin could tolerate a lot more sun–and it sprouted a lot more freckles! This summer, it’s even better. I’ve gotten a few light burns, which have all faded in a few days to something that might even resemble a tan eventually. We shall see–but I love it.

Visualizing Perfect Digestion

If visualization can work for our behaviors and our plans for the future, why can’t it work for health?

Over the weekend I learned that it is a myth that chemical imbalances cause mental illness. (Thanks to AJA Cortes for the tipoff. Sign up for his mailing list–worth it.) A myth propagated by big pharma to sell prozac, no less.

What is more, these psychic ailments are linked directly to our willingness to take responsibility for our actions:

The chemical imbalance theory offers something else, however, and that is the opportunity for the psychiatric patient to limit responsibility for his condition. It has long been noted, particularly by psychoanalysts, that many of the problems labeled psychiatric symptoms are attempts by the person, consciously or unconsciously, to evade responsibility for his conduct. The depressed patient withdraws and removes himself from his stressful environment. The dissociative patient switches “alters” at times when it is most convenient. The psychotic patient creates his reality when he is no longer able to handle his affairs. It is no secret that human beings have a love-hate relationship with responsibility. They love the freedom that responsibility affords, but they fear the thought of being responsible for everything they do.

So.

If things as hugely life impacting as dissociative identity disorder can be explained through something as simple as refusing to take responsibility for one’s actions, what about every other disorder in the body?

Maybe cancer doesn’t split your personality, but ding dang dong can you conveniently die from it without having to clean up multi-million dollar messes that you made.

Or, in cases like mine, a chronic autoimmune digestive monster gives me some really great reasons to be lazy or to ditch out on plans. When I was younger, I operated as normally as possible through sheer force of will. I’ve lost that mindset as I’ve grown older.

But I’ve gotten to the point where I’m tired of letting my guts run my life. If simple chemical imbalances don’t exist, that means that things like attitude, mindset, and will have a lot more to do with our state of health and wellbeing than we think.

Which brings us back to visualization. It is known that positive visualization of the future (be it a state of being, winning a race, or even moving your pinky finger a bunch of times to build up strength) drastically increases the chance of that future coming true.

Starting last night, I have Decided (yes, capital D) to visualize my guts working in perfect harmony and producing the perfect poop each day.

Is that weird? I don’t care.

Today, my normal 4:00 pm bathroom run still hasn’t happened yet–and it’s five hours later.

That is enough confirmation bias for me to continue.

I WILL be healthy, even if that requires brainwashing myself.

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