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Home / Updates
/ Oct
25 2002
/ The
Trailing-Edge Diet
The Trailing-Edge Diet
Who needs the cutting-edge?
By Phil Caravaggio
First published at www.johnberardi.com, Oct 25 2002.
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Before I begin to expound my dieting philosophy, I would like to serve
notice that this Diet (and you should be wary of all capital D Diets)
is different from all the rest. I believe that it is incumbent upon any
theorist who wishes to contribute to the cacophony of nutrition advice
to prove that his is somehow different. If you set out to justify or advocate
a theory, you had better have a damned good reason before wasting people's
precious bandwidth.
I have a great reason: My diet is not nearly as good as many other diets.
Now I know that most of you already recognize this as the most brilliant
reason ever given. However, I'm not naïve. I know that one or two
of you are saying to yourselves, at this very moment: "Yes, in some
ways that is the most brilliant reason ever given. But in many
other ways, it is the stupidest thing I have ever heard in my life."
To those people I say the following. Leave. Leave now, and don't let the
door hit you on the way out. Ladies and Gentlemen, there is no place for
logic here. Oh yes, and no "laws of thermodynamics" talk either.
It's too confusing for me.
Today, I will usher in a new era in the field of nutrition. It's called
The Trailing-Edge Diet, and it comes complete with yesterday's news and
yesterday's theories. There will be no talk of refeeding, food combining,
protein pulsing, or even calorie counting. There is no science to be found
here, folks, and no formulas or calculators are necessary. There is a
time and a place for all of those things (you will find them in many of
the better diets I referred to), but this is neither the time nor the
place.
This is a simple diet, for simple people -- an entry-level diet, if you
will. It was conceived as a plan to bridge the gap between the terrible
eating habits of average folk and the often confusing and seemingly contradictory
information handed down by the scientific community. Eventually, you will
want to make sense of that information for yourself. You will want to
experiment with the cutting-edge diets, and parse whatever truth from
them you can. At that stage, you are on your own. I certainly can't help
you there.
However, I can help those of you who need to know what to do in the meantime.
I can give you a plan that will help you learn the crucial skill of adherence.
Here is what I propose:
- I will outline five healthy meals to eat, and for three weeks, you
will eat the same five meals, over and over again. Good eating is a
habit, and habits are born from repetition.
- Over this three-week period, you will undertake to inform yourself
about the "better diets," and you will come up with a plan
to optimize your nutrition, using this site and every other resource
you can get your hands on.
- You will purchase your food at the grocery store, rather than the
local fast food joint.
- You will prepare the food in advance, so that there is no excuse to
eat crap for the sake of convenience.
Things you must not do during this period:
- You will not falter over this three-week period. You will not cheat,
or even experiment during this period.
- You will not eat food that comes in a colorful wrapper, bag, box,
or container. In fact, you will not eat food that comes in colorful
packaging of any sort, unless it is explicitly allowed below. Better
yet, eat only the food mentioned below, and all of it, unless a medical
condition prohibits you from doing so. If that's the case, I want a
doctor's note.
- The plan you begin the three-week period with is the plan you end
it with. If you must make changes, you will do so at the beginning,
and you will stick with them thereafter.
- You will not concern yourself with body composition changes, but rather
with adherence to the plan. Don't mess with the plan.
It ain't optimal, and I know that. I can't give you optimal, I'm sorry.
Even if I could, I'd jack the price so high that you couldn't afford it.
I realize that this sounds condescending to many of you. For that I am
truly sorry. Sort of. Some of you have moved past this point in your nutritional
careers, and perhaps you did so long ago. Regardless, every one of you
knows someone who could benefit from something like this. (As Tony Robbins
is fond of saying, maybe you know such a person intimately . .
.) Print out a copy of this article, and send it their way. Unless of
course they would be offended by it. In that case, print it up, fold it
into a paper airplane, and aim for their eyeballs.
Basis for the diet:
- Easy to follow
- Simple to understand
- Relatively healthy
- Largely uncontroversial
The Oatmeal Concoction - 8:00 A.M.
- Nuke 1 cup of plain, generic rolled oats in the microwave. Yeah, I
know the microwave has come under fire lately. While I worry about many
things, this isn't one of them. I spend most of my time pondering the
political strife at home and abroad, the fate of our economic institutions,
and the proliferation of Peanut M&M's among today's youth.
- Mix in 2 scoops of vanilla-flavored protein powder. I don't care which
brand, or really the type of protein. Most will do just fine.
- Mix in as many mixed berries as you can afford.
- Toss in some banana slices.
- Add a couple of spoonfuls of generic all-bran cereal.
- Add a just a small amount of honey for taste
EFA Supplementation:
- 4 capsules of a fish oil (assuming 30% EPA/DHA)
- 4 capsules of flax oil
The Omelet - 11:00 A.M.
- Yes, eggs are approved on The Trailing-Edge Diet. Before you lynch
me or accuse me of conspiring with the Egg Council, let me say this:
anything that is good enough to throw at the house of your worst enemy
is good enough for you to eat. I have yet to hear anyone refute that
statement.
- Egg contents: 3 whole eggs, 1 container of egg whites.
- Possible contents: red peppers, green peppers, onions, mushrooms,
zucchini
- Forbidden: anything approaching the amount of butter and cheese usually
associated with omelets. Honestly, I would rather you didn't add these
things at all.
- Alongside the omelet, a cup or more of mixed vegetables. If you are
feeling ambitious, cut some fresh vegetables. Otherwise, the prepackaged
mix of carrots, peas, corn, etc. is fine.
- Top veggies with a tsp. of garlic and chili flavored flax oil.
EFA Supplementation:
The Cottage Cheese Special - 2:00 P.M.
- Cottage cheese is one of the world's most versatile foods. Mixing
it with almost anything vastly improves its taste and mouthfeel, which
says something about cottage cheese in its original state. You might
object that cottage cheese makes you gag, to which I respectfully respond,
"Get over it." It will quickly become a staple of your diet,
and rightly so. So with that bit of exposition out of the way . . .
- Dump a cup of cottage cheese into a bowl
- Mix in a small serving of vanilla yogurt
- Add strawberries, blueberries and banana slices
- You may add more protein in powder form if you like. I would say that
chocolate protein powder tends to be more palatable in this scenario,
but taste is highly subjective. If you do go that route, I would get
rid of the vanilla yogurt.
EFA Supplementation:
- 4 capsules of fish oil
- 4 capsules of flax oil
The Big Salad - 5:00 P.M.
- Note: The chain of custody of The Big Salad is one of the crucial
ethical issues of our time. Be sure to give credit to the purchaser
of The Big Salad.
- Note: If you do not recognize the above pop-culture reference,
you are not fit to begin The Trailing-Edge Diet. You are probably in
great shape and spend little time watching prime-time television. Go
back and watch Seinfeld reruns until you are truly prepared.
- Note: If you did recognize the reference, but thought that
I used it in a way that was unfunny and unworthy of the source from
which it came, you may continue.
- Grill two chicken breasts, cut them into strips, and let them cool.
- Mix up an Italian-style salad (yep, I'm biased), meaning primarily
romaine lettuce. Other crisp lettuce varieties can also be added.
- Chop up plenty of tomatoes, cucumbers, red onions, green and red peppers,
and any other veggies you might think appropriate. I do mean plenty
- I want more than a pile of lettuce with a single cherry tomato on
top.
- Dressing for the ambitious: Plain flax oil. Yes, yes. I know how it
tastes. I can dream, can't I? Seriously, garlic and chili flavored flax
will be fine.
- Dressing for the average: 1 part olive oil, 1 part garlic and chili
flavored flax oil, 1 part red wine or flavored vinegar.
EFA Supplementation:
The Sad-Looking Burger - 8:00 P.M.
- This is going to be the most pathetic looking burger you have ever
eaten. I just wanted to warn you.
- Crack open your value pack of lean or extra lean ground beef.
- Make an 8 oz. patty
- Grill the above mentioned patty
- Place nothing on the burger. I repeat: place nothing on the
burger. No bun, no condiments. Why? Because it's my diet, and I can
do what I want with it. Please try to wrap your mind around that before
asking such ridiculous questions.
- Along side the burger go a generous heaping of "stir-fry mix"
vegetables and plenty of mixed beans.
EFA Supplementation:
- 4 capsules of fish oil
- 4 capsules of flax oil OR 1 tsp of liquid flax on the veggies
Additional Points
Supplements:
- There are two types of supplements allowed in The Trailing-Edge Diet:
protein powders and EFA supplements
- Protein Powders: I usually pick up one tub of chocolate and one tub
of vanilla, both being a whey/casein mix. When consumed in such small
amounts, these purchases go a long way. As far as the brand/protein
type for you, I'm completely indifferent. Some are better than others,
but anything is better than nothing.
- EFA supplements: You must pick up flaxseed oil and fish oil. Flax
oil comes in both liquid and capsule form, and the liquid form now comes
with flavor options. I usually pick up flax capsules and flavored flax
oil liquid. Generic fish oil, standardized for 30% EPA/DHA, is also
a must.
- I want to make clear that these supplements are not optional. Take
them.
- Many people spend far too much time deliberating over which brand
to buy. Pick the one you think is best for now, and spend these three
weeks researching the topic. You would be better off going to the local
GNC, blindfolding yourself, spinning around, and picking a brand at
random off the shelf in your dizzied state than if you postpone it any
further. I would never exaggerate - not in a million years.
- All other supplements: NO! That includes the one you have in mind
right now, so don't bother asking. If your diet is not in order, you
are simply pissing your money away. If you've got a whole fistful of money that you're just dying to give to someone,
send it my way so that I can buy some more groceries.
Pre/Post-Workout Nutrition:
- If I had to choose between consuming Biotest Surge or similar beverage
and eating according to a well-thought out plan, I would take the latter
every time. Lest you be confused here, so would JB. It's that simple.
It would be nice to do both, but make sure your priorities are in order.
Morning/Bedtime Nutrition & Carbohydrate Tapering
- I don't care about any of these issues at this stage. The people I'm
worried about are currently busy tapering their donut intake. Spend
the time researching the issues, and make a decision in three weeks.
Food Variety
- While the idea of eating two of every species might be appealing,
realistically your food choices will always be limited. It is important
to limit them properly. Stick to what I've given you so far, and at
the end of the trial period, make an educated decision as to how to
continue.
Macronutrient Ratios
- Finding the "perfect" macros for an individual (i.e. 40% protein,
30% carbohydrate, 30% fat) is more of an art than a science. That said,
without detailed record keeping, you could never manage this variable with
any degree of accuracy. As long as you are in the ballpark (and this plan
puts you in the ballpark, in my humble opinion), you'll be fine. If you
want to refine my crude estimate three weeks from now, go nuts.
Caloric Intake
- Caloric intake (in terms an exact figure in calories for you to meet)
is not that important to me. For the first three weeks, I would give the
same diet to a newbie looking to gain muscle as I would to one looking to
reduce body fat. Yes, you read that correctly. Mine is a one-size-fits-all
diet. Three reasons: One, numbers hurt my brain. Two, formulas can only
predict caloric intake, which is to say that their value is limited. They
can give you a starting point and nothing more. Well, guess what? I can
give you a starting point too -- my five meals! Three, I'd rather have people
focus all their attention on adherence. Adherence to your plan is what will
determine your success. In the beginning, the simpler the better. That the
plan itself will have something to do with your success is not lost on me.
You have our word that this is a good plan. Take the three weeks it affords
you to go and find a great one.
Summary
Be on the lookout for self-justification. Excuses will keep you from
the results you want. However, three weeks of consistent, sensible, and
honest eating will put you further down the correct path than you might
have imagined. Don't worry about the fine tuning. Just get the basics
under control, and chip away at the small stuff over time. Now that you
know what to do, go do what you know. Good luck, and keep us posted on
the results.
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