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During my brief sickness after one month of total immersion in BJJ, I thought
about diet.
Since mid-2016, I have been practicing "the Warrior's Diet" (by Ori Hofmekler),
a form of intermittent fasting. I skip breakfast and lunch and only have a big
dinner at the end of the day. Hunger often strikes in the afternoon and I'd have
one snack of nuts or fish. It has worked for me in that I have kept making
progress in weight-lifting without getting significantly bigger. Recently, my
weight has gone up to 157 lbs but my waist does not expand and therefore I have
still attributed the gain to muscle growth.
I started to observe, however and especially in the past month, that the over-
eating phase, i.e., the big dinner, often resulted in too much food to digest
which affected my sleep. I sometimes felt like a python after swallowing a deer.
This seemed to lead to poor energy levels the next day. Meanwhile, I couldn't help
noticing that some of my training partners, including the 50-year-old head coach,
were lighter and smaller but were very strong and full of energy on the mat.
As my neck and shoulders have adjusted to being squeezed and smashed, I feel my
eating needs to acclimate too. After all, a major part of my physical exercise
comes in the evening nowadays. One meal during the day, say around 1:00pm, would
prepare me for the 6:30pm grappling class and a small supper would improve my
sleep.
After long thoughts, I decided to give the Gracie diet another try. Developed by
one of the creators of BJJ, the diet has fueled the Gracies' phenomenal success
in the art over the past 100 years. The family patriarchs were noted for their
longevity and health. Till this day, the third generation of the Gracies, now
Americans, are still practicing it.
I first heard about it from Mr. Steve Maxwell, a close friend with the Gracies
and an advocate for the diet. The main ideas include food groups, combination and
4-5 hours fast between meals. He had his first bite after 11:00am and his meals
were fruit-based, starch-based, or protein-based. He could breakfast on a bowl of
berries, have a sweet potato for lunch, and eat a chicken salad as supper. An
older person could not eat like when he was young, Mr. Maxwell often pointed out,
and systematic under-eating was the key to health.
A few years back, everyone who met him, myself included, marvelled at the great
shape the sixty-something was in and he claimed that he hadn't seen a doctor in
35 years. Recently, at 68, he invited his followers to a one-week Jiu-Jitsu For
A Lifetime camp. The guy is worth keeping an eye on.
I would like to ease into the new habit but eventually, I might have to forsake
some of my beloved foods, including pork (It was never explained why pork is
banned in the diet, though.) and kimchi, for example. But I am hopeful either it
will still work with small portions or I can mold myself so that I would stop
craving for them.
On the other hand, the Gracies were from South America and might have known
little about foodstuffs elsewhere, especially those in Asia. So I would need to
experiment for myself. This will be a fun project.
One meal a day sure makes it easy to over-eat at supper, which sometimes leads to a poor sleep.
I did it for five years, however, with no problems. It was only the recent change to evening Jiu-Jitsu that really made it hard for me to stick to the "Warrior's Diet." My solution is to add a light lunch and some fruits during the day. This gives me the energy and lessens the hunger at supper. So far, so good.
We all need to pay attention to diet as we get older. Take care.
Eating a big meal evenings only leads to indigestion, a heavy working load on heart, and liver, and a bad sleep, based on my own experience.
> you should not prohibit yourself too much on food when you are still young.:))
I think I'm at a threshold and need to scale down. I have spent enough of my
life pleasing the palate and that almost killed me. I have no problem molding
my tastebuds to desire only what a diet prescribes.
> My husband, slim and watching his weight, has been found to have high
> cholesterol for years. Only recently, he stops eating any meat except fish.
> But we don't know if this really helps the cholesterol, or if it does, how
> much difference the food intake makes.
When I turned 40, I started to count and limit the daily calory intake, which
got my cholesterol (triglycerides, to be specific) and blood sugar along with
bodyweight down very quickly. And later I gave up white flour and started to
run. That seemed to fix everything. I haven't been to the doctor (except for
checkup) for almost seven years.
I think everyone, except for endurance athletes, should give up on refined wheat
flour and white rice. Many experts (e.g., Michael Pollan, Chris Kresser, etc.)
don't think meat (or dietary fat) is to blame for high blood cholesterol.
> I cannot live without meat for too long:))
No stress. If not pork, we still have beef, lamb, chicken, seafood, etc.
+1. That could be one of the reasons that you should not prohibit yourself too much on food when you are still young.:))
My husband, slim and watching his weight, has been found to have high cholesterol for years. Only recently, he stops eating any meat except fish. But we don't know if this really helps the cholesterol, or if it does, how much difference the food intake makes.
One meal a day, especially a heavy dinner, is not ideal. To me, whatever the theory, it is a balanced diet that one should be after. I cannot live without meat for too long:))