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Okay, this might be TMI (too much information), but I thought people might be interested. Also, it reveals a lot about how well-suited a carnivore diet is for humans.
So, what happens when you switch to a carnivore diet? I have heard that some people who make a very abrupt transition have softer stools - sometimes even diarrhea.
That can be because you eat need to eat a LOT more animal fat, relatively quickly, since you're not eating any carbohydrates, and you need the energy from the fat. And it takes your body a little while to ramp up the pathways to digest a lot more fat that you were eating previously, so some fat doesn't get digested.
But the diarrhea goes away, as you get accustomed to the diet.
For me, I transitioned to carnivore more slowly, over a couple weeks, so I didn't have that problem. If you don't eat enough fat, you can have the opposite problem - your stools can become too hard. In other words - constipation. That's usually easy to avoid as well.
But here's the most interesting thing about bowel movements, after eating carnivore. I would conservatively say that the total volume of stool is about 10 percent of what it was before.
I made this estimate because, after carnivore, people usually have a bowel movement every 3 or 4 days. AND - the bowel movement is much smaller. Much more compact. There's no fiber in it, and there's not the water bound to the fiber. A carnivore diet is highly bioavailable - your body can use almost everything. Whereas much of the expensive vegetables and fruits you're eating are being flushed down the toilet.
Just an interesting tidbit for your day.
Every 3 or 4 days sounds uncomfortable. Would you say you still have the normal sensation of "not-fullness" that I would associate with not needing to take a shit?
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It seems like it would be, but it's really not. And that's because your body is absorbing almost everything. There's not that build-up of volume that you had, before carnivore.
I'd say the "not fullness" is a pretty constant. For me, anyway.
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34 sats \ 3 replies \ @k00b 26 Aug
iirc I'd still go daily or every other day on full carnivore. I only did it for a year, and I still did coffee and alcohol, so maybe that accounts for the difference.
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I do a tiny bit of coffee, no alcohol. And I will eat some occasional berries.
Maybe people do differ in this regard, but the norm, from talking to people and reading about it, is for a greatly reduced volume.
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34 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 26 Aug
Definitely lower volume. Seemed more like 25-40% than 10%.
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I figured, it's about every 3 or 4 days. Then about one third the volume. So, I estimated 10%.
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That's exactly how it's working out at my house.
I have been on a high fat diet for a long time and she is just starting (on and off).
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34 sats \ 1 reply \ @Oxy 26 Aug
The post carnivore bathroom trips sound like a major efficiency upgrade. You've convinced me to at least consider it for the sake of science
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Ha ha. Yes, it's actually an under-appreciated benefit. Think of the savings in...
  • time
  • toilet paper
  • tidiness (less cleaning of the toilet bowl)
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