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My Transition to Low Fat Raw Vegan: Part III

Peachy Keen Ezine

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* What’s New: End of E-Book Launch!

* Feature Article: My Transition to Low Fat Raw Vegan: Part III

whatsnew

End of E-book Launch!

21 Days to Conquer Your Cooked Food Cravings

As most of you know, the week-long launch sale of my new program “21 Days to Conquer Your Cooked Food Cravings” ended last Tuesday.  The turnout was terrific – way more than I imagined it would be – and I want to send out a big thank you to everyone who purchased.

Thanks so much, guys! :D

And even if you missed the sale, you can still purchase the full program – including all 4 bonuses – to help you conquer your cravings and finally maintain a healthy raw food diet.

Simple visit the link below:

www.cookedfoodcravings.com

And with the cooked food-focused Thanksgiving dinner just over ONE WEEK away, now is really the perfect time to get started! :)

Swayze

feature

My Transition to Low Fat Raw Vegan: Part III

In My Transition to Low Fat Raw Vegan: Part II, I talked about my first 30 days low fat raw, my less-than-successful attempt at staying raw during the Holidays, and my longest 100% raw stint yet.

Today, I will continue with the 7-day vacation that soured my 4 months of success.

Month 10-13: A Non-Raw Vacation and Back to Bingeing

In August 2008, my family and I took a week long road trip in which I was determined to stay raw.

Unfortunately, I was not prepared. I barely brought any fruit along and I had not scheduled any shopping trips in advance.

To make matters worse, I was in no way emotionally prepared either!

It had never occurred to me until this trip what a big role food played in vacationing. I was so used to going junk food crazy during our trips and not being able to do so really depressed me.

Everywhere we went and everything we did constantly reminded me of all the delicious fatty, salty foods I was missing out on.

By day 3 or so, I just gave in.

I don’t know if I ate anything raw for the rest of the trip.  At some point, I even abandoned my vegan status and began eating anything and everything, including fast food!

One evening, I ate 5 LARGE pieces of pizza from a little restaurant inside our hotel and followed that with candy and chips form a vending machine.  Needless to say, I felt extremely sick and was determined to stop the madness when the vacation was over.

Unfortunately, this frenzied eating continued even when I returned home.

With my foray back into burgers and fries, I really began to see changes for the worse. I gained back all the weight I had lost from going raw almost immediately.

After just a few months of weekly cooked food consumption, I was actually back up to 130lbs, a weight I had not been at in years. My digestion was horrible. I was getting regular headaches. My menstrual cramps were back in full-force and I was beginning to feel very lethargic again.

As a result, I stopped exercising for the remainder of the year. I had been a fitness buff since 2005 and had NEVER missed more than one day of physical activity in a row prior to this.

It seemed I was headed for the proverbial rock bottom.

Month 14-24: A Much-Needed Wake-Up Call

Here is a quote from my e-book “21 Days to Conquer Your Cooked Food Cravings”

It was a cold afternoon in December 2008 and I had just finished a whole basket of tortilla chips with salsa, a Caesar salad, and a bowl of vegetable soup at a local restaurant. I had class in an hour, but I didn’t anticipate any ill effects by then.

Boy, was I wrong.

By class time, I had an intense headache. I felt groggy. My throat and tongue hurt.  AND I was sweating so profusely that I could actually smell what I had just eaten.

I thought to myself, “What am I doing? I have been a low fat raw vegan for over one year now. I know how wonderful I feel when I stay raw. Why am I wreaking all that for cooked food that doesn’t appease my taste buds anymore and makes me feel like crud?

And I’m not even hungry!”

Suddenly it hit me. It wasn’t about the food at all.

This would be the last time I ever binged on cooked foods.

This quote may make it seem like I had some “ah hah” moment where learned some secret truth that suddenly made me impervious to cooked food temptation.

*Sigh*

If only life were that easy.

As you have seen, my journey to 100% raw did not happen overnight. In fact, it began YEARS earlier – before I ever knew what raw was – when I first began dieting and came face-to-face with my unhealthy eating habits.

And even in December 2008, going raw was not 100% no salt, spices, condiments, etc. at first!

There were definitely times that I added salt and maybe a little red onion or garlic to my dinner meals and there were plenty of nights when I ate more than my fair share of avocado and/or raw pistachios (my favorite nut).

I still can’t keep these little green gems in the house without risk of a gorge fest!

My goal was to take it one step at a time and eliminate the foods that I wanted (and really needed) to eliminate. In December 2008, that was any and all cooked food.

And I’ve been flyin’ high since then! Not only have I stayed raw during everyday life, but I’ve managed to stick with my fruity fare during stressful situations as well.

As you can see in this little vid I made on traveling raw, I even redeemed myself this past summer with a 100% raw family vacation!

There’s a pretty kooky picture of me from this trip eating some particularly juicy AND sticky fruits in a sit-down restaurant! I included it in my special bonus e-book “Surviving Sticky Social Situations on a Raw Food Diet.”

Benefits

So as I mentioned in Part I, I made the jump to 99% November 1, 2007 after just a few weeks in October of about 75% low fat raw (fruit for breakfast and lunch, cooked dinner meal).

I know it sounds like a bad infomercial (or maybe that’s redundant), but I really did see results immediately.

Not only did I become more alert and energetic, but the restless leg syndrome that had plagued me for years was gone in just a matter of days.

For those of you who don’t know, restless leg syndrome (recently given a name now that Big Pharma has a drug to accompany it, of course) is this awful tingly/itchy/creepy-crawly feeling in your leg(s) whenever you attempt to rest…hence the name “restless” leg syndrome!

It’s not exactly a painful feeling. It’s just extremely annoying and aggravating, especially when you are trying to sleep or sit still during a movie or lecture!

My other major problem was the fatigue from my anemia. I struggled with this for years (sleeping several hours a night, needing a nap every afternoon, and still feeling exhausted) and yet after only a few weeks on low fat raw, I felt terrific!

I was no longer sleepy, I couldn’t even fathom wanting to take a nap in the middle of the day, and I had crazy energy. My workouts were (and continue to be) amazing!

And things just kept getting better from there!

Here are some more things I noticed within just my first month on raw:

  • Weight loss – Everyone’s favorite!
  • Improved digestion – This was pretty much immediate for me and continued to improve for months afterward.
  • No more monthly headaches!
  • No more achy knees! – I really love step aerobics (I know, totally dorky) and after going raw, I could do as many ultra-intense Cathe step routines as I wanted without any knee pain!
  • No more seasonal colds! – I always, without fail, got sick in November when the weather changed. Not this time!

But my absolute favorite benefit of all, even more than the extra energy?

*NO MORE MENSTRUAL CRAMPS!!!*

I had absolutely horrible periods before going raw. They were extremely heavy, always lasted at least a full 7 days, and the cramps in my abdomen and lower back were just brutal.

I would literally take 2 ibuprofen 3x a day for the first 4 days of the cycle. That’s 24 pills EVERY MONTH, not including the pain killers consumed for headaches, joint pain, and other “normal” aches and pains throughout the month.

Of course, I can’t leave out the bloating, weight gain, food cravings, and more weight gain that accompanies each cycle.

And going cooked vegan did absolutely NOTHING to alleviate my pain!

Here was my experience after only 5 days of 99% low fat raw (taken from my blog at the time, “raw food and me”):

Today caught me off guard. Apparently, it is my time of the month. I usually expect it a few days in advance, as I feel bloated and crampy.

Not this time…I had absolutely NO SYMPTOMS this morning!!!

I am just so excited. I am used to having monster abdominal pains every single period (minus the 2 years I took birth control). I feel great even now. If I think about it, I can feel very minute cramps, but I have to focus on it. I have not changed anything this month expect for my diet.

Awesome!

Sorry about all that, fellas. No more gross girly stuff, I promise. ;)

Detox

Since I was eating a relatively healthy diet before switching to low fat raw vegan, I did not have much of a detox. Here’s a quote from Day 2 of my raw transitioning blog:

Otherwise, my day was good…except for a pretty bad headache. However, this only lasted for about 30 mins or so. I experienced the same thing when I first started the diet two weeks ago. The only difference was I had it the entire day. I’m hoping that won’t happen again…

My old blender actually broke that morning…right after I had filled it full of fruity goodness…so that just might explain the headache. :lol:

The worst detox I ever experienced actually did not occur until months later in Spring of 2008 when I gave up salt completely. It started with these tiny red bumps on my forehead and in just a couple months the bumps had migrated all the way down to my temples!

Yuck!

Luckily, they began to gradually fade away and by month 4, they were mostly gone. Pretty icky, but nothing painful and totally worth all the benefits I gained from giving up salt.

But I’ll save that story for another day…

Next Time

In Part IV, I will be discussing advice I would have given to my past self, the main factor that helped me stay raw long-term, and how this might relate to your own transition to raw.

Stay tuned! :)

Go raw and be fit,

Swayze

11 comments

1 Raw.la - Raw Food in The News and Around The Web { 11.15.09 at 8:45 pm }

[...] My Transition to Low Fat Raw Vegan: Part III [...]

2 Laurie { 11.16.09 at 9:52 am }

Shouldn’t that be Spring of 2009 when you gave up the salt, Swayze? If not, I wasn’t “with you” through that whole blog and need to go back and read it again. Maybe I missed something!

My experience has been different. I haven’t had a horrible binge on junk food this whole weight-loss journey, and lost 105 lbs. in a year eating about 75% raw. I’m still not 100% raw, either. I l eat some cooked foods at dinner, but they’re things like a bit of wild alaska salmon, or some sprouted bread, or some soup or stir-fried veggies over quinoa or teff. IMO (and I may be delusional, but I dont’ feel sick or toxic) these things are much better choices than pizza, cheeseburgers, fries, chips and Little Debbies. And I still eat the occasional piece of dark chocolate, but have been amazed that I don’t want to stuff myself with sweets anymore. Of course, that’s because I get the good kind in all the fruit I consume.

I have been experimenting with raw soups the last few nights, and have figured out a delicious one with raw veggies on top for some “crunch.”

Hopefully I will transition completely to raw eventually – I just don’t feel quite ready yet. I did make it 100% a few times over the summer when fruit was cheap and abundant, however!

[Reply]

Swayze Reply:

No, Spring 2008 is right. It was when I stayed about 4 months raw last year and then succumbed on vacation. I have had salt since then, but have never gone back to consuming it on a regular basis like before.

The blog I mentioned, “raw food and me,” was from November 1, 2007 to July 2008. It is no longer live, but I do have all the old posts. I’m still contemplating what to do with them…

I really envy you for your transition and I really hope more people, especially those struggling with ED, will go for your approach. The all or nothing method was just horrible for me and I wouldn’t wish it on anyone!

[Reply]

Laurie Reply:

Well, don’t take down Raw Food and Me until I get a chance to read it! I’m going to bookmark it now!

[Reply]

Laurie Reply:

I *thought* I was going to bookmark it, but just get an error page. What is the exact link, Swayze?

Swayze Reply:

Sorry, Laurie, I took down the site many months ago so it’s no longer live. :(

3 Annalise { 11.16.09 at 12:31 pm }

Swayze, are your periods now quite lighter? I went raw while BFing and didn’t get my period until I weaned after 2 years, and it was barely recognizeable. It was so light I didn’t use any sanitary products! And then I got pregnant again, so really I have just had that one period in the past 5 years, eating high raw.

[Reply]

Swayze Reply:

Actually, I no longer have periods. Yes, I can tell when I menstruate, but there is no blood or pain involved.

In an effort to avoid too much grossness, I will just leave it at that. Feel free to email me at swayze@fitonraw.com for more details…if you’re into that sort of thing. ;)

[Reply]

4 Laurie { 11.16.09 at 12:34 pm }

I had deadly periods for over 35 years – I wish I had known then what I know now!

[Reply]

Swayze Reply:

Oh gosh, me two! My best friend years ago had them even worse than I did. She would literally lay in her bed and cry for the first day of most cycles. Her “wonderful” mother was rather unsympathetic and would rarely ever allow her to stay home when it was a school day.

[Reply]

5 Laurie { 11.16.09 at 12:57 pm }

The poor thing – I can so relate! I figure I had over 10 years of combined misery, considering I had horrid PMS for at least a week every month – with insomnia, irritability and sugar cravings – plus at least 3 days of acute painful cramping!

[Reply]

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