Boule’tard wrote on 03/18/12 at 09:21:53:mpescatori wrote on 03/18/12 at 02:28:46:Bouletard, it's not incredible, it's quite normal.
First of all, you didn't tell us what you had for dinner the night before;
Secondly, you didn't tell us what you did the day before, what you had for lunch, etc.;
In other words, we do not know the levels of natural glycemia in your system for the entire 24-hour cycle before you had that oatmeal.
Last, your glycemic cycle is quite normal! Source, my wife, who is a medical doctor, and her books.
(Unless, of course, you have an ailment we do not know about...)
Maybe you are confusing my health/diet/blood sugars with Gyrobobs.. I don't have a glucometer and those are not my readings. What I found incredible is that he got them from oatmeal, a supposedly slow-to-digest grain pitched as easy on your system:
http://www.whole-body-detox-diet.com/healthy-oatmeal.html Quote:The soluble fiber and complex carbohydrates are easy, but slow, to digest which stabilizes blood sugar.
So when Gyrobob tries a typical, 1-cup serving and it raises his blood sugar more than Mr. Davis got from one 2-slice serving of bread made of faster-digesting wheat flour, that seems to indicate that Gyro ought to stay off oatmeal. Wheat was probably making his blood sugars go excessively high for many years. For him, there might be more difference between einkorn and dwarf wheat than there is between dwarf wheat and oatmeal. I realize their age, pancreases, health etc. are not exactly the same, which is why I'd be very curious to see Gyrobob try it with the wheat bread. But of course don't expect him to endure headaches and other symptoms just to generate some data for us yay-hoos on the internet.
My apologies, I simply read the post where you inserted the six pictures of a glycometer and assumed they were your own readings. But the considerations are still valid.
Anyway, the sugar spike is not due to the oatmeal, but to the sugar used to sweeten the cereal.
May I suggest an experiment:
2 people, one who has fully embraced the "Wheatbelly theorem" and one who rejects it. Possibly same sex, age, build, same state of health. May I suggest you start on Friday evening and finish on Sunday morning.
Take your sugar reading in the evening just before dinner, then have exactly the same dinner.
Then take your sugar readings 1, 2, 3 hours after finishing dinner, along with heart rate and blood pressure. (Too bad we can't check our cholesterol in the same way...)
Do NOT have anything else to eat, other than water, until breakfast. This is to ensure you are at the starting point for the experiment the next day.
Then have a one-day cycle (WB, non-WB) cycle, taking care the two individuals should also carry out exactly the same daily routines, i.e. burn the same calories doing the same chores at the very same hours of the day.
Every 60' take a sugar reading.
Have your WB Vs. "normal" meals, drink your traditional drinks, and not down your readings from [Friday evening] to [Sunday morning].
Then compare them. Then consider this:
Having low sugar levels means nothing if you can't relate them to your activities and your protein and cholesterol levels in the bloodstream.
Ask any trainer, any professional baseball or football coach [better still, any soccer or basketball or wrestling coach!] if he would ever recommend a carb-free diet. They would smile and shrug and walk away.
The blood, the system need sugars. They are what the body relies on for any anaerobic effort, which goes from getting up in the morning to standing up from a sitting position to sprinting to catch the subway.
(Or kickstarting a stalled bike...
)
Protein are fuel for aerobic effort, such as a mid-long distance run. Then the fats kick in. You already burned your sugars in the initial 1/4 mile.
One last comment: "Paleo"... to claim stone age man only ate protein is a false myth, go to any museum and see the stone hand mills used to grind grains to make flour.
Find me ANY modern day "paleo" tribe and I will easily point out that, whle they may not have ovens or wheat flour, they still bake/roast yams over an open fire or under the coals.
I know, I've seen them do it (and done it myself).
Even hunters will send off their women to comb for vegetables.