24 Mistakes People Make on a Paleo Diet

 

Are you making any of these Paleo Diet Mistakes?

 

1. Increase Fruit Intake

When starting any “healthy eating” regime, so many people seem to make mistakes, like replace the junk food with endless fruit salads, fruit smoothies and snacks of whole fruit. Just because it’s natural, it doesn’t mean it’s a good choice. Fruit is very high in fructose, something that should be minimised to prevent inflammation, insulin response and ultimately conversion into fat storage.

2. Failing to Make Time to Get Organised

If you’re organised, eating healthily doesn’t have to take much time, but prior planning is essential. Being organised and having the ingredients you need at hand, meals planned and contingency plans in place for tricky situations (such as social events) is essential for success. If you find yourself hungry at a party you knew you were going to, you haven’t set yourself up to make the right food choices. I’ve just finished my first book, the Paleo Breakfast Recipe Book – the aim of this book is to make delicious Paleo Breakfast’s possible and easy with a bit of organisation. I’d love to hear what you think of it!

The Paleo Diet 24 Mistakes People Make Common Fail

3. Expect to Lose 20kg/ Gain an Athletic Body Composition in 7 Days

I read about a lot of people who are disappointed that they’ve been following a Paleo eating plan for a week and have not lost any weight/ changed their body composition yet. This isn’t “a diet” for short term cosmetic benefits – it’s a lifestyle you can follow for the rest of your life, leading to long-term health benefits. If you’re looking for a diet to get into your bikini in 4-days time (before returning to your previous way of eating and exercising), you’ve come to the wrong place!

4. Try to do Junk Food Paleo

It’s not realistic to expect to replace a junk food diet with paleo equivalents. Whilst you might be able to find packages food that are broadly Paleo these are no substitute for properly prepared foods – with good quality ingredients. There is a place for packaged “Paleo” foods, such as when on the road – but these times should make the exception, rather than the rule.

5. Keep Old SAD Foods in the Pantry

There might be hundreds of dollars worth of pasta, packet meals and bread-making ingredients in the pantry. It might seem wasteful to throw it away – but to really commit to a better way of eating, there is no place for this in your kitchen. Donate it or throw it away, but don’t “use it up” first, or hang on to it “just in case”. Commit. Get rid. Restock.

6. Overdoing Nuts

Nuts are Paleo, but they are calories too, lots of them. It’s all too easy to snack on a few too many nuts. Some nuts also don’t have favourable Omega 3/ Omega 6 ratios – another reason to go easy and limit the nuts to no more than a very small handful each day.

7. Being Scared of Fat

It’s probably not surprising, but after years of being told about the evils of fat, many people are scared of it. Despite reading and understanding the Paleo concepts, when it comes to eating, some people are still wary – and may cut the fat off meat, or cook in as little coconut oil as possible. I think it just takes time and reinforcement – make sure your diet contains adequate fat.

8. Ignoring Portion Control

Calories do matter. I read so many comments where people have been strictly Paleo, but are not losing (or are even putting on) weight. It’s not a correct assumption that you can eat whatever you like – certainly not when you are overweight.

The Paleo Diet Mistakes Portion Sizes DO Matter

9. Become Fixated with a Certain “Brand” of Paleo

There are lots of different ways of eating, within the Paleo spectrum. Some people may do very low carb for instance, and others may follow an auto-immune protocol. If it isn’t working, move on and try something new. To stick to a set prescription, which clearly isn’t working for you, makes no sense. Experiment. Find what works.

10. Let one Slip Ruin the Day/ Week/ Month

Sometimes things do go wrong. You ate something that wasn’t Paleo, by any stretch of the imagination. Instead of using this as an excuse to eat more SAD food, it is the perfect opportunity to start fresh and move on. There is nothing wrong with occasionally having non-Paleo food, providing it isn’t allowed to ruin the rest of your efforts.

11. It’s a Science not a Renactment

You hear people who start to question everything through Paleo lenses. Computers and modern medicine weren’t around in the Paleolithic era – so we shouldn’t use them? This may be true, but we have the benefit of modern science and research to combine with Paleo, to get the best possible results – it would be foolish not to take advantage.

12. Don’t Sleep Properly

Sleep is such an important part of a healthy lifestyle. I’d argue it’s actually the most important factor. Without sleep, you might be eating a perfect Paleo diet and have a great fitness regime, but you won’t be in the best possible health. Without adequate sleep your body mechanisms won’t function efficiently, you won’t recover properly from exercise – and you won’t deal with stress as well. Working out why you aren’t sleeping properly and taking steps to resolve it will work with your Paleo lifestyle to bring your health forward in leaps and bounds.

13. Trying to Make Things Fit

You know your morning skinny latte or daily glass of wine isn’t in the spirit of Paleo, but you try to make it fit (all those antioxidants must be Paleo, right?). If you have to justify it, you probably shouldn’t have it – at least not so often.

14. Avoid the Sun

There seem to be more studies every week showing us just how crucial Vitamin D is – yet so many people still avoid the sun and cover themselves in sunscreen at the mere mention of the word “sun”. Even in Australia, at the right time of day, for the right duration sun exposure is a good thing.

The Paleo Diet Primal Blueprint Mistakes Get Outdoors and Get Some Sunshine!

15. Refuse to Cook

Not cooking seriously limits eating choices and will makes it so much harder to eat well. Cooking doesn’t have to be hard or time consuming – it can actually be relaxing, fast and very rewarding.

16. Turn a Blind Eye to Social Occasions and Restaurants

It’s all too easy to let a few poor choices slip in when eating out socially – but these can really add up. With steps such as finding out the food options in advance and not going out hungry, you can make good choices and minimise the damage. If it’s too hard to eat differently to everyone else, perhaps arrangingsocial events that aren’t food based – or offering to cook for friends will be a better alternative.

17. Obsessing on a Weekly Cheat

Paleo should not be boring or restrictive – if it is, you need to introduce more variety and try new recipes. When a planned weekly cheat becomes the focus of your week, it’s time to address what isn’t working and fix it. With a varied Paleo diet thoughts of SAD food should be very few and far between.

18. Don’t Move

Fitness is an important part of a Paleo lifestyle. Whilst nutrition is a huge part, the importance of being active and lifting heavy things once in a while should not be ignored. Paleo doesn’t begin & end with food tweet this quote

19. Don’t Take Measurements

When you feel well, it’s hard to remember how you felt before. If you have blood tests and take a note of your measurements and how you feel every few months, it will be obvious how well Paleo is working for you and what you can improve on.

20. Listen to Conventional Wisdom

Following Conventional Wisdom often isn’t very compatible with a Paleo diet and could get very confusing. Once you decide to stick to Paleo, it’s helpful to filter out many of the health stories in mainstream media, or just read them for entertainment value.

21. Fail to Read and Research

Those who stick to a healthy lifestyle seem to be those who understand the impact it has on their health. The more you read and research, the more you can tweek your lifestyle and improve your health. Following a lifestyle based on someone else’s example, without an understanding of the principles, will be very hard to stick to and follow properly.

22. Don’t Tell Others

In any change, it’s really important to have support. Family and friends will (hopefully) accommodate your nutritional wishes and may even follow your example. If you’re finding it difficult, having a support network is invaluable. Finding others following Paleo is great way of building a support network of people going through the same as you.

23. Not Persevering

Changing diet can be hard. Carb flu is a distinct possibility when moving from a SAD diet, to a Paleo diet. It might feel all too easy to give up at this point – when in reality a bit of perseverance will see this stage end and everything will get easier. Sticking with it, however hard it feels, however many mistakes you make, will be so worthwhile.

24. Hanging onto an Old Favourite

Diet Coke immediately springs to mind as something people often struggle to give up. Products like this seem extremely addictive, but certainly aren’t working with your Paleo nutrition towards your health goals. Whether it’s changing routine, finding an alternative – or going cold turkey, it’s time to let go.

I found this great little list at: http://paleo.com.au/2012/03/paleo-mistakes/

Change of Plan.

So, things have been going fairly well. My will power and general motivation have been good, but a couple of times they have lost out to tiredness and “don’t give a *#@^!” tendencies (which tend to be a result of bad planning and lack of sleep).

The initial plan was to get to 65kg by Christmas, before going home to family. However there has been a change of plans and I will not be going home. So, with that in mind, I want to step things up a notch and make some other goals to focus on.

Important Events:

25 August (21 days/3 weeks): Friends Birthday

8th Sept (35 days/5 weeks) : Seeing old friend

22nd March (ages away!): Friends Wedding

The first two dates are helpful as they are both times I would like to look/feel good. The time span of 3 and 5 weeks is great, enough time to achieve results but close enough that I know I will need to be disciplined if I want to achieve them.

Goal wise I think reaching 70kg by the 25th of August would be awesome! It’s borderline achievable (given my current tracking), but I think if I commit its possible. Then by September 8th anything under 70 would be great – I will define a number closer to the time perhaps. For now 65kg by 20th Dec will remain the default long term goal until I reassess after the 8th Sept.

New Short term goal:

70kg by 25th August.

-3.3kg in 21 days = 1.1kg per week to reach my goal. I’m going to have to work hard to make this happen! Wish me luck!

 

 

 

 

Day 18: Food and Exercise Dairy

Breaky: Shake- 40g WPC (weigh protein concentrate) half a banana, 1/4C berries, water. Long Black
Lunch: Juice- celery, beetroot, purple carrot, apple, pear. Small bowl of “morrocan chicken soup”
Dinner: Roast Chicken and broccoli and peas
Snacks: 4x cocoa rolled prunes, pomegranate green tea

Exercise:

30min Rowing machine

Dumbbell chest press 12kg 3×12

glute extension 55kg 3×10

Abs

Stretches.

 

Good day. Very sleepy this afternoon. I have been coming down with some type of throat infection so trying to take it easy. Next weekend theres a big shin-dig I am expected at so I want to try and have a really good week to be feeling good and fit for it.

Day 16 food diary

Breaky: protein shake, banana, 1/2orange, kiwi fruit, 1/4C berries.
Lunch: burrito wrap, 1/2 cup vegan soup

Dinner: blanched broccoli and green peas with chilli and soy.

Snacks: a boiled egg, TREAT: 1 piece of soughdough with goats cheese and a Portuguese tart with greek yoghurt, decaf green tea

Even though I had some treats today, I feel great about it. I’ve done really well over the last few days. I am really enjoying exercise and I’m feeling good. I usually feel guilty eating treats but not this time, I think being able to occasionally eat the foods I enjoy without feeling guilty is important.

Day 15: Food and Exercise Dairy

Breaky: one pear, one boiled egg, Long Black
Lunch: Vietnamese coleslaw with a grilled chicken thigh
Dinner: Beef stirfry and sesame seeds and a boiled egg.
Snacks: Banana, Vegan peanut cookie, rooibos tea

Exercise:

30min X-train (highest intensity level yet)

10min bike

Stretches.

Winter tiredness

Winter tiredness – Live Well – NHS Choices.

What is winter tiredness?

If you find yourself longing for your warm, cozy bed more than usual during winter, blame the lack of sunlight.

As the days become shorter, your sleep and waking cycles become disrupted, leading to fatigue. Less sunlight means that your brain produces more of a hormone called melatonin, which makes you sleepy.

Because the release of this sleep hormone is linked to light and dark, when the sun sets earlier your body also wants to go to bed earlier – hence you may feel sleepy in the early evening.

While it’s normal for all of us to slow down generally over winter, sometimes lethargy can be a sign of more serious winter depression. This health condition, known medically as seasonal affective disorder, affects around one in 15 of us but can be treated. Read more about how to recognise winter depression. If your tiredness is severe and year-round, you could have chronic fatigue syndrome.

Try these tactics to boost your vitality during the winter months.

Sunlight is good for winter tiredness

Open your blinds or curtains as soon as you get up to let more sunlight into your home. And get outdoors in natural daylight as much as possible, even a brief lunchtime walk can be beneficial. Make your work and home environment as light and airy as possible.

Fight fatigue with vitamin D

The wane in sunshine over the winter months can mean you don’t get enough vitamin D, and that can make you feel tired.

The main source of vitamin D is sunlight, but here in the UK we can’t make any vitamin D from winter daylight between November and March so it’s especially important to get vitamin D from your diet.

Good food sources of vitamin D are oily fish (for example salmon, mackerel and sardines), eggs and meat. Vitamin D is also added to all margarine, and to some breakfast cereals, soya products, dairy products and low-fat spreads.

Even with a healthy, balanced diet it’s possible to become vitamin D deficient. The government recommends that people at risk of vitamin D deficiency – including everyone 65 or over – should take a daily supplement.

Read more about how to get enough vitamin D and whether you may need a supplement.

Get a good night’s sleep

When winter hits it’s tempting to go into hibernation mode, but that sleepy feeling you get in winter doesn’t mean you should snooze for longer. In fact if you do, chances are you’ll feel even more sluggish during the day.

We don’t technically need any more sleep in winter than in summer. Aim for about eight hours of shuteye a night and try to stick to a reliable sleep schedule. Go to bed and get up at the same time every day. And make sure your bedroom is conducive to sleep – clear the clutter, have comfortable and warm bedlinen and turn off the TV.

Read about how to get a good night’s sleep.

Fight winter tiredness with regular exercise

Exercise may be the last thing you feel like doing on dark winter evenings, but you’ll feel more energetic if you get involved in some kind of physical activity every day, ideally so you reach the recommended goal of 150 minutes of exercise a week. Exercise in the late afternoon may help to reduce early evening fatigue, and also improve your sleep.

Winter is a great time to experiment with new and different kinds of activity. For instance, if you’re not used to doing exercise, book a session at one of the many open-air skating rinks that open during the winter. Skating is a good all-round exercise for beginners and aficionados alike. There are also many dry ski slopes and indoor snow centres in the UK, which will offer courses for beginners.

If you’re more active, go for a game of badminton at your local sports centre, or a game of 5-a-side football or tennis under the floodlights.

If you find it hard to get motivated to exercise in the chillier, darker months, focus on the positives – you’ll not only feel more energetic but stave off winter weight gain.

Read lots more tips for exercising in winter.

Learn to relax

Feeling time-squeezed to get everything done in the shorter daylight hours? It may be contributing to your tiredness. Stress has been shown to make you feel fatigued.

There’s no quick-fire cure for stress but there are some simple things you can do to alleviate it. So, if you feel under pressure for any reason, calm down with meditation, yoga, exercise and breathing exercises.

Find out more by checking out these 10 stress-busters.

Eat the right foods

Once the summer ends, there’s a temptation to ditch the salads and fill up on starchy foods such as pasta, potatoes and bread. You’ll have more energy, though, if you include plenty of fruit and vegetables in your comfort meals.

Winter vegetables such as carrots, parsnips, swede and turnips can be roasted, mashed or made into soup for a warming winter meal for the whole family. And classic stews and casseroles are great options if they’re made with lean meat and plenty of veg.

You may find your sweet tooth going into overdrive in the winter months, but try to avoid foods containing lots of sugar – it gives you a rush of energy but one that wears off quickly. Here are some quick and easy ways to cut down on sugar.

Day 13: Food Dairy

Breaky: Lemon hot water, Long Black, banana
Lunch: Long Black, Half an avocado, 2x boiled egg, 1x fresh tomato a cup of vegan vege soup
Dinner: Mushroom, onion, turkey and kale mix with green beans. 2x wholegrain mini wrap with butter
Snacks: BERRY MUFFIN, apple, rooibos tea, espresso.

I felt exhausted all day today. I AGAIN skipped a meal (a proper breakfast) then felt the affect later and caved, hence the berry muffin. I need to find a way to stay strong willed even when I’m tired and to avoid skipping meals. Planning seems key.

Day 12: Food and Exercise Dairy

Breaky: Long Black
Lunch: Sautéed Kale with roasted chicken and veges
Dinner: Eggplant stuffed with mushroom, onion, turkey and kale. With chilli.
Snacks: 100g smoked salmon.

Exercise: Big workout today!

30min X-train

3×12 squats/shoulder press

3×12 deadlift/bent over row

3×12 bench press/triceps dips

sit ups, plank and stretches.

then 30min power walk.

Day 8: Food Diary

Pre-breaky:

lemon juice and hot water

Breaky:

Shake – (Protein powder, 1/4C frozen berries, 1/2 Orange, Water)

Long Black

Snack:

Green Tea 

1x boiled egg

Lunch: 

Chicken, baby spinach and grated carrot wrap

a cup of vegan quinoa and chilli soup

Snack: 

6x almonds

a pear

Dinner:

beef stew, cauliflower puree and cos lettuce leaves

1/2 chicken wrap

Post-dinner: 

Rooibos Tea

5x prunes

2x cracker with peanut puree

I just felt like eating more after dinner, gave in and had prunes and crackers… no good. I didn’t drink much water during the day which I think was a factor. I was also craving sweet things all day. Bigger breakfasts/smaller dinners might be a good option to incorporate into my plan to stop afternoon cravings?

Happiness with the days effort:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

…now just 157 more days!

Day 7: Food and Exercise Diary

Pre-breaky:

lemon juice and hot water

Breaky:

Treat Meal – Lightly toasted muesli, yoghurt, stewed rhubarb and pear.

photo-5

Long Black

Snack:

1/2 punnet of strawberries

Lunch: 

Larb Gai – made with turkey mince, lemongrass, chilli, lime, fish sauce and sesame. Wrapped in cos lettuce leaves.

Snack: 

1x boiled egg

2x stick of celery with 100% peanut puree

Dinner:

Beef Stew with carrots, leeks, celery, onion and garlic in a tomato and red wine based sauce.

Cauliflower puree

Post-dinner: 

Rooibos Tea

Exercise:

GYM

20min X-trainer (lvl 15)

3×10 Glute bridges 20kg

3×10 tricep chest press 20kg

Sit ups

Pilates

Stretches

 

End of week one! Weigh in tomorrow morning.

Happiness with the days effort:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10

…now just 157 more days!