EPISODE · Dec 20, 2024 · 7 MIN
23. ENCORE: Refusing Holiday Food and Staying Low-Carb
Refusing Holiday Food and Staying Low-CarbCarbSmart Podcast Episode 23Dealing with the holiday food pushersWelcome to the Encore Edition of Refusing Holiday Food and Staying Low-Carb!We’re revisiting some of our earliest and most popular episodes to celebrate our journey and your incredible support. These fan favorites are packed with timeless insights, expert advice, and practical tips to help you thrive on your low-carb lifestyle. Whether you’re tuning in for the first time or reliving the classics, these encore episodes are here to inspire, educate, and entertain all over again. Enjoy!The holidays are straight ahead, with piles and piles of carby junk and, worse, people nagging you to eat the stuff. Why do so many people think that saying things like, “But you have to eat it; it’s a tradition,” and “I worked all afternoon making it just for you” constitutes an expression of holiday goodwill? I have no idea.But sadly, this behavior is all too common. You need to think ahead about how to respond to this sort of thing. You have absolutely no obligation to eat anything you do not want to eat.You have absolutely no obligation to eat anything you do not want to eat.If you had a terrible allergy, the sort that would throw you into anaphylaxis at the merest taste, you would not hesitate to refuse that food, nor would you apologize for doing so.Similarly, If you were a recovering alcoholic, you would feel free to say no thanks to a drink and would consider rude anyone who pressed you. Carbohydrate addiction and hyperinsulinemia don’t kill as quickly as allergic reactions, but they kill vastly more people. And a case can be made that dying quickly of anaphylaxis is preferable to the long, drawn-out years of deteriorating health and increasing debility that carb addiction can wreak on your body.So, no feeling apologetic when offered food or drink one does not care to consume. No thank you is always the polite thing to say. Conversely, nagging people to eat foods they have politely refused is rude-rude-rude. You are in the right here, no matter how people try to browbeat you into thinking that you’re the unmannerly one.Links and Show NotesVisit our website with over 3,000 Free Articles and Low-Carb Recipeshttps://CarbSmart.comOur Featured RecipeDana’s Best & Easiest Sugar-Free Ketchup Recipe – New for 2024!Check out our CarbSmart Low-Carb Cookbookshttps://www.carbsmart.com/storeShow Noteshttps://www.carbsmart.com/podcast-23-encore-refusing-holiday-food-and-staying-low-carb.html Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
Refusing Holiday Food and Staying Low-CarbCarbSmart Podcast Episode 23Dealing with the holiday food pushersWelcome to the Encore Edition of Refusing Holiday Food and Staying Low-Carb!We’re revisiting some of our earliest and most popular episodes to celebrate our journey and your incredible support. These fan favorites are packed with timeless insights, expert advice, and practical tips to help you thrive on your low-carb lifestyle. Whether you’re tuning in for the first time or reliving the classics, these encore episodes are here to inspire, educate, and entertain all over again. Enjoy!The holidays are straight ahead, with piles and piles of carby junk and, worse, people nagging you to eat the stuff. Why do so many people think that saying things like, “But you have to eat it; it’s a tradition,” and “I worked all afternoon making it just for you” constitutes an expression of holiday goodwill? I have no idea.But sadly, this behavior is all too common. You need to think ahead about how to respond to this sort of thing. You have absolutely no obligation to eat anything you do not want to eat.You have absolutely no obligation to eat anything you do not want to eat.If you had a terrible allergy, the sort that would throw you into anaphylaxis at the merest taste, you would not hesitate to refuse that food, nor would you apologize for doing so.Similarly, If you were a recovering alcoholic, you would feel free to say no thanks to a drink and would consider rude anyone who pressed you. Carbohydrate addiction and hyperinsulinemia don’t kill as quickly as allergic reactions, but they kill vastly more people. And a case can be made that dying quickly of anaphylaxis is preferable to the long, drawn-out years of deteriorating health and increasing debility that carb addiction can wreak on your body.So, no feeling apologetic when offered food or drink one does not care to consume. No thank you is always the polite thing to say. Conversely, nagging people to eat foods they have politely refused is rude-rude-rude. You are in the right here, no matter how people try to browbeat you into thinking that you’re the unmannerly one.Links and Show NotesVisit our website with over 3,000 Free Articles and Low-Carb Recipeshttps://CarbSmart.comOur Featured RecipeDana’s Best & Easiest Sugar-Free Ketchup Recipe – New for 2024!Check out our CarbSmart Low-Carb Cookbookshttps://www.carbsmart.com/storeShow Noteshttps://www.carbsmart.com/podcast-23-encore-refusing-holiday-food-and-staying-low-carb.html Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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23. ENCORE: Refusing Holiday Food and Staying Low-Carb
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