Counter-intuitive things I learned about nutrition and wellness while on intermittent fasting and keto diet, based on personal experience and all the reading up I had to do:
Fat is not always evil
Good quality fats from fresh produce like avocados, wild salmon, butter from grass-fed cows are actually good for you. Essential, in fact, for a healthy diet. Of course, in moderation. But universal rejection of fats because “fats are unhealthy” will ironically make us unhealthier.
Asians need to eat rice
Maybe it was a good fuel source back then when we were agrarian societies and worked hard physically. But with our sedentary urban lives right now, that old cultural norm deserves a serious relook. Or at least we don’t need to eat as much as we do. Besides, the white rice grain had arguably become mostly empty calories, with over-farming practices and food system deterioration.
Breakfast is NOT the most important meal of the day
There isn’t any most important meal. It’s about healthy intake of macro and micro-nutrients through the day/month/years, eating in moderation and at the right time. Barring any existing health issues (say, gastric pains), it’s perfectly okay to skip breakfast.
Eating all the time is actually not all good
There’s a food myth that instead of eating 3 big meals a day, it’s better to eat smaller meals. Making your body digest food all day everyday is actually not ALL good. It’s good to starve the body from time to time during the day, or for periods of time during the year. Fasting had been a cultural tradition found all over the world, and it’s not just for cultural but health reasons.
Eat fat to trim away fat
On a keto diet, probably the first most counterintuitive thing one encounters is having to eat fat as a main source of energy. Yes, about 75% of your calories comes from fat. The funny thing is most people do this to lose weight (and fat). How? Long story short, avoiding carbs and eating (not too much) fats forces the body to switch to fat burning metabolically.
You can have the sweet without the sugar
Yes. That realisation probably saved my diet from myself. Truth is, I have a sweet tooth. I loved my desserts, ice cream, and cakes. Even on keto now, I still do. So imagine my horror of having to wean off my sweets. I mean, what kind of quality of life is that if I can’t ever have a dessert ever again? (LOL) But the ill effects of sugar is also one of the main reasons why I’m doing this diet - I can see and feel what it’s doing to my body, and I’m getting worried. It was a huge internal conflict. Salvation came when I learned about alternative keto-friendly sweeteners that are actually natural, with no harmful side effects, and doesn’t raise insulin levels (unlike those artificial ones like aspartame). Monk fruit sweetener is actually one of those things that’s actually way sweeter than cane sugar, but without any of the ills. That was mind-blowing, because I always associated sweetness with sugar. No sweet without sugar, I thought. But yessss, now there can be sweetness without it. Even if I stop the keto diet in a possible future, I doubt I would want to or need to touch sugar again because there’s these much healthier and just as sweet alternatives.
A doughnut becomes a 10x doughnut while you’re fasting
Coming out from a fast, it’s important to be careful what you put into you, because after a 16h fast, the body is very insulin sensitive and if you start taking your usual carbs in huge amounts, it sky-rockets your insulin compared to if you didn’t fast. So a doughnut that didn’t faze you without fasting could be a lot more potent while you are. Not done correctly, people can actually gain weight while doing intermittent fasting. I like to think of fasting as an amplifier - it amplifies both the goods and the bads that you eat, with outsized downstream effects. So we have to choose ever wiser while on it. What a keystone habit, that ensures a cascading effect of healthier food choices and mindful eating.
A running log of counter-intuitive learning points - to be continued…