Samdabisa Wrote:Hi all. Ok, so I am a stocky top and I am working to get myself to a healthier weight. I am looking to start taking some fiber supplements and possibly some other supplements to support my body as I eat healthier and try and clean out my system as well.
Furthermore, while I am a top, I do have the occasional time where I would want to bottom, which is why I want to help do a "clean out" before I would do any enema or anything.
Suggestions?
Unless you have a medical problem that leads to bowel issues, I would suggest you refrain from gaining a dependency on supplemental fibers and seek to increase fiber in your diet.
As for supplements, I advice a daily multivitamin that meets your daily recommended needs for everything since there really isn't any way that in a single day you can meet all of the needs on everything.
As for increasing fiber and losing weight at the same time.
It is relatively easy to achieve. Considering that those foods higher in fiber also tend to be lower in calories - veg and fruit is one such example.
Peas, Broccoli, turnip greens, spinach greens, pears, apples, are all fairly high in the fiber department, but low in the calorie department. Well that low calorie count turns high if you fix your greens in a cup of bacon grease. :tongue:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/high-fi...ds/NU00582 is a list of high fiber foods.
Grains are tricky, they usually tend to be higher in the caloric count, but they are also very high in the fiber count.
I think the easiest way to boost the nutrition is to divide your plate into threes. 1/3rd of your plate is a starch (grain) and a meat, the other 2/3rds are fruits and vegetable matter.
Its doesn't have to be that way with every meal - you can have the occasional deep fried fish and chips, or your fish taco or the greasy pizza - just not every day.
What appears to be the most doable when it comes to 'bad foods' for most people is to have one day a week where they allow themselves 'junk foods'. Saturday, watching TV/movies having your BigMac, super sized Fries and Super-sized regular coke for dinner and snack of candy bars, butter soaked highly salted popcorn for the evening. While it is a lot of calories and would be horrible for the body if you did it every night, if you only do that once a week (or less -depends on your mood) and stuck with good foods, decent meal planning the rest of the week its not going to do much harm to your body nor to your food plan.
The best way to eat better is to cook your own foods. From scratch. If you don't have that skill I am currently single and am a great cook - I bake pumpkin pies starting in the spring with planting a pumpkin seed - that is how 'from scratch' I bake pies:biggrin:
On a more serious note, I do do a lot of baking, but I use half whole wheat flour with white flour, I cut out the added oil and use no-sugar apple sauce or prune puree in replace of the oil, cut the sugar added to half. I end up with moist, melt in the mouth sweet tasting breads and muffins that are nearly half the calories.
My Pumpkin pie uses half the sugar and a touch more spice, my crusts use half the shortening and are a touch thinner - thus about 2/3 of the calories of store bought.
Doing your own cooking you can really cut calories (but not flavor) by reducing the added fats (shortening, oils, butter) and reducing the sugar or replacing the sugar with things like apple sauce, prune puree. Now days there is Splenda - I been using that for the diabetic I am cooking for and I am making pretty tasty pies, cookies, breads and whatnot.
Using half the whole wheat instead of all white processed flour will boost the fibre content of baked goods - so the caloric issue is offset by the 'health' of the food in other areas.