EastMT
Well-known member
- Jul 21, 2022
- 931
- 601
I have heard of a lot of odd interactions that people have with goats, but that one is a new one for me.goat yoga
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I have heard of a lot of odd interactions that people have with goats, but that one is a new one for me.goat yoga
I learned that our body is always trying to find homeostasis, so whenever we put something in our body, it will make changes and either down or upregulate our body chemistry. When you take something for any length of time, you will have withdrawal symptoms when you come off it. This goes for everything.... even foods (sugars, caffeine, etc)I did. I'm dealing with a lot of the side effects, hence the topic. I NEED to get off these. I'm just not sure where to start and was looking for any advice if others have gone off meds and what did they encounter.
- If you were on meds and stopped taking them, what side effects or issues did you have?
- If you stopped taking meds, did you end up having to go back on them?
As mentioned, the only one I really worry about is my potassium blocker. High or low potassium will kill you and diet only controls it so much.
When you say no salt have you really watched it closely? I had my heart attack 3 1/2 years ago and I now stay at 2,000 max mg every day. It is extremely hard and there is very little that you can eat other than good natural foods. Good luck eating anything out anywhere and staying within the numbers. I thought I was eating decent before that but was not even close. Now I eat tons of veggies. Red meat once a week which I did before. Had 2 oz of ham on Easter which was the first time in 3 1/2 years. Wasn't really missing much. Plenty of beans and fish with some chicken. It can be done but it is one heck of a commitment. My doctor says I'm a unicorn. It is amazing how extremely poor the American diet truly is. Take a look at people on the beach in the 50s and 60s and you did not hardly see anybody overweight. Oh and yes my cholesterol was on the high side before my heart attack. Thought I was going to die on my way to the hospital. In rehab I was determined to take care of myself after that.I haven't done any research but my cholestrol tested on the higher side twice when testing mid to late winter (inside more). When I re-tested mid summer it was on the very low side, most likely to being more active or getting more sunlight.
Do some reading on T replacement. From what I read your body will stop producing and you will be taking it the rest of your life. Being active, lifting weights, getting rid of an unpleasant woman in my life, and being outside (sunlight possibly) helped increase my T levels naturally.
No pop, salt, or fast food.
and for gods sakes rethink the vegan lifestyle :rofl:
Finally a program I feel that I can maintain.............^^^^^Take (ONE) Shot of Tequila every morning before you start your day. I've heard that works. I've re-named mine (Listerine) Peace
Stopping the drinking improved this for me. Sleep improvement alone is enough to keep me from drink again, but there are other up sides to no drinking as well.Sleep kinda sucks usually but good enough I guess
Mac, I'll be 61 in 2 weeks.
No I don’t closely watch or measure the salt. I don’t put salt on my food and I don’t use seasoning that have a lot of salt. I check other food to see if they have salt in then already or take a guess that they do and avoid them. My meals are pretty bland, meat, beans, rice. I have some stress that I can’t control so I watch salt, cholesterol, and alcohol, the things I do have control over.When you say no salt have you really watched it closely? I had my heart attack 3 1/2 years ago and I now stay at 2,000 max mg every day. It is extremely hard and there is very little that you can eat other than good natural foods. Good luck eating anything out anywhere and staying within the numbers. I thought I was eating decent before that but was not even close. Now I eat tons of veggies. Red meat once a week which I did before. Had 2 oz of ham on Easter which was the first time in 3 1/2 years. Wasn't really missing much. Plenty of beans and fish with some chicken. It can be done but it is one heck of a commitment. My doctor says I'm a unicorn. It is amazing how extremely poor the American diet truly is. Take a look at people on the beach in the 50s and 60s and you did not hardly see anybody overweight. Oh and yes my cholesterol was on the high side before my heart attack. Thought I was going to die on my way to the hospital. In rehab I was determined to take care of myself after that.
I’d hit it…I'm on this same road. I'll have to write on the laptop because on my phone it will be gibberish...more then my normal...haha
I did drop from 330 lbs to 275, but creeping back to 295 at the moment.
I hate how my body felt and how crappy it feels to even gain a few back.
Find what works and keep at it.
You can get Testosterone in a topical gel too.Interesting topic, Im 56 retired a year and half ago and since then went on a low dose blood pressure medicine and a statin for cholesterol. My dad died at 50 while running (heart attack) and I truly believe it was due to stress hence my early retirement. I am an avid cyclist (8-12 hrs a week) and work out, should probably stop drinking but its my one e vice. I do stop taking statins before bicycle races because they cause me muscle fatigue but go back on them right after. Lots of guys I compete against do TRT and its benefits are apparent but I simply don't want to stick a needle in myself :blury: . I tried using Ketones (ketone-IQ) this last Saturday for an endurance gravel race and like most supplements they just spun me up a tad too much so I doubt I'll use it again. For me I have to have events on the calendar to train for, also utilizing strava and other apps to track progress (or lack of it) motivates me and helps me hold myself accountable. I'm 6'2' and 190 lbs, I can over eat or try to starve myself and my weight barley fluctuates as I get older so I don't pay much attention to it, I try to keep muscle tone and energy up instead.