kevpants wrote: » Absolutely. Not all of life's ills are caused by eating food that comes in a packet. The answer here is to see a doc, get a blood test etc. If you're a medically healthy person who feels like this then absolutely point the finger at the lifestyle.
kevpants wrote: » Just laughing at the people suggesting switching to a healthy lifestyle and feeding it to the kids as if it's that easy. Hate to break it to you but kids know what tastes like crap and vegetables generally taste like crap. We use stews and casseroles as vegetable cloaking systems for our kiddies meals but unfortunately you can't shield your kids from the wonders of chips and they know bloody well a fucking parsnip fry is not a chip so please don't anyone chime in with that particular chestnut.
kevpants wrote: » Don't bother with the dietician, is that serious advice? "Eat more veg", gee thanks professor.
Sensor wrote: » Balls! Some people have a higher than thou concept of themselves and a fat full of smugness!
seosamh1980 wrote: » And some people have no concept of how to take good advice when they ask for it!
Sensor wrote: » Who said i was ignoring? Your name suits you!
Sensor wrote: » I ate my go ahead yoghurt slices because it was either that or a bar of choc form the sandwich place.
thegreatiam wrote: » Chicken pm'd in 2 mins
canyoudigit wrote: » Eating a healthy diet is the cure for cancer apparently. Can cure anything in the world! My dog is a bit sleepy lately, nothing but vegetables rice and spuds from now on
thegreatiam wrote: » You did, when you kept going on and on about eating healthy food and it making you fall asleep. yet you werent eating healthy food. "duh, i am eating healthy all the time, go ahead bars are healthy, it says so on the packet" Following the advice there to the letter I see
Sensor wrote: » Ah now theres no need for that. A good discussion is fine but thats just immature
Stench Blossoms wrote: » If anyone is being immature here it's you. You are just calling the people who are trying to help you smug etc.
Sensor wrote: » Because they are being smug! Theres more than me have said that already. I came here, not being disrespectful to anyone.
ncmc wrote: » thegreatiam, can you PM me the recipe for the chilli as well? Also you mentioned the peanut cookies, are they a healthy version that you make, or just regular cookies with peanuts?
Stench Blossoms wrote: » Sorry love but calling someone smug who's trying to help you is disrespectful. If everyone one else was eating crappy food and claiming it to be healthy would you do that also....oh wait.
thegreatiam wrote: » The chilli is basically beef and pork mince, with rattlesnake pieces and chillis. loads of spices (cumin, cayanne, chilli powder, worcester sauce, fish sauce, paprika) then simmered in beer or red wine for a few hours. For rattlesnake just use chicken or turkey it taste pretty much the same. Cut it into long thin strips and tell people it is rattlesnake and they will believe you. The peanut cookies is a jar of peanut butter, mixed with protein powder and stevia (1/4 cup) and 2 eggs baked for 10 mins at 160. I got it from eliteFTS i think. I wouldnt say they are healthy, but they are low carb. depending on how big you make them they can be 100 cals each tho. I made them for the first time this week, theyve lasted about 5 days before starting to soften. They are a little dry, (like eating peanut butter) so defo serve with milk.
Sensor wrote: » Probably would tbh, i trust what people say and try to live an honest life. I think if a food company puts healthy or "one of you 5 a day" on their packets they probably are telling the truth. But thats just me.
ncmc wrote: » Thanks for both of those, I do a lot of running so the peanut butter cookies sound perfect for energy instead of gels etc. I'm going to Wyoming on hols in a few weeks, will see if I can test the 'rattlesnake tastes like chicken theory :pac:'
westies4ever wrote: » :rolleyes:http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2056764342
SunnyDub1 wrote: » Your diet is what has you tired all the time. If you are excersing you need good fats and high protein foods into you. Cut the carbs. Agree to disagree with me if you like but anything that has "low fat" or "low sugars" probably has more fat, sugars then your average bar etc.
thegreatiam wrote: » nice, good find;-) advice from that thread deja vu
Oryx wrote: » People here are trying to help you, I see nothing to cause offense, apart from your brimful of smugness remark, tbh. You are blithely ignoring the majority of whats been discussed here, and coming up with a variety of reasons and excuses why you feel unwell, without apparrently taking on board anything that has been suggested, such as getting checked out medically or making bigger attempts to improve your diet.
Sensor wrote: » How do you know? I have a doctors appointment and ive already said im gona change the low fat stuff! This is crap! I feel ok some of the time. In fact since monday ive felt really well with lots of energy and waking up ok. Before then i felt bad and i dont know why.
Discostuy wrote: » I knew someone in a similar condition which turned out to be an underactive thyroid problem. Might be worth speaking with a GP and narrowing down the possible causes. Alcohol has a huge affect on energy and tiredness. Drinking a JD every night will tire your body, but the sleep you get won't be the same as a normal sleep. Rather than recharging energy, your body will be working to break down the drink and repair the body. You'll most likely find you'll walk up groggy and equally tired.
Sensor wrote: » Your advice then, for the same symptoms as you can see was get a good nights rest. . .
Sangre wrote: » I am baffled to see that people are confidently diagnosing a health issue on the basis of simply reviewing a person's diet.
QuantumAoif wrote: » Just want to reemphasise thyroid. Get your bloods checked for hormones T3 and T4, could also be hyperactive. That might explain sore dry eyes. Very treatable. Best thing in any case is to get a full blood count done but you have to ask for the thyroid levels to be checked. Hypo (underactive) is quite common Hyper (overactive) not so much, but both can lead to side effects of extreme tiredness.
thegreatiam wrote: » and did you follow the advice? In September was when I started to seriously look at my diet and learn the things I know now. I dint recommend diet adjustments because I was learning about diet adjustments. Someone else did tho. See that's how it works, you read, you learn you adjust accordingly. And in this 10 months have you adjusted your diet?