The Insulin-Resistance Diet–Revised and Updated: How to Turn Off Your Body’s Fat-Making Machine
The Insulin-Resistance Diet–Revised and Updated: How to Turn Off Your Body’s Stout-Making Machine Books
- ISBN13: 9780071499842
- Shape up: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
Conquer insulin resistance. Reduce cravings. Eat your favorite foods. And lose consequence!
If you have tried every diet and are still struggling with your consequence, the real culprit may be insulin resistance. When you have more glucose than your body needs, your body responds by producing more insulin to stabilize your blood sugar level and store the excess glucose as stout. In The Insulin-Resistance Diet, Cheryle R. Hart and Mary Kay Grossman show you how to control insulin resistance and lose consequence without sacrificing all of your favorite foods.
Overcome insulin resistance and lose consequence with:
- The exclusive Link-and-Balance Eating Method, which balances carbs with the aptly quantity of protein at the aptly time for maximum consequence loss
- Self-tests to determine your insulin resistance and check your progress with linking and balancing
- Real-world strategies for eating at home and out on the town
- Simple-to-make, tasty recipes and livable meal plans
Buy Cheap The Insulin-Resistance Diet–Revised and Updated: How to Turn Off Your Body’s Stout-Making Machine Online
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Ever notice how many “Wow, this really works!” reviews you read when looking at diet books on Amazon? The weird thing is very few of them ever give statistics or meaninful testimony. My favorite is the review that reads something like this “5 stars! I tried this diet for 1 week and already I feel much better!” How is that objective or helpful?
Or how about this one: “I lost 8# in 2 weeks…down from 365 to 357!” Come on people you have to realize that small consequence losses like this are due to water consequence loss and not much else after only a few weeks.
This is the problem with stout people – they want something that is “EASY” rather than sucking it up and doing the work – as in reviews that read “Its so EASY to use!” as if we are all stout, bone idle people with no discipline to place a healthy eating plot into do if it is the least bit trying – no sir, it must be “EASY”! – gosh maybe that is our problem in America where 60% of the populace is obese.
I also like diet book reviews that read “I never really got hungry on this diet – thank goodness!”, as if being hungry is just about the most terrible disaster that may possibly ever happen in the civilized world. Got news for you folks, being hungry is a natural shape up for human beings. We eat, we digest and we then we wait until we are HUNGRY before we eat again – er, oh, no? No, the mainstream will say “Never let youself go hungry because terrible things will happen…” What utter nonsense! Gosh do you suppose that is why we have a diabetes epidemic and the world over you look all you see is stout people wearing tank tops proudly showing their flabby bulges?
If you are going to review a book and wish to be helpful to others who will read your review – try to give some meaningful in rank – oh, and at least TRY the diet for several months to a year before you start to preach to everyone how fantastic it is.
Rating: 1 / 5
I was amazed and the nonsense in this book! The thought you may possibly lose consequence by eating protein with everything, and I mean anything, just does not fit. There does not seem to be excellent nutritional advice. The links and balances was cute, but seemed a bit too complicated for everyday use. This book would be excellent for those who do not really want to lose consequence, but like to read about it.
Rating: 1 / 5
This is a excellent theory but in real use, doesn’t work. I read the book twice and went out and bought all the protein items and the lower carb items; I wrote everything down. Ate 6 times a day (small meals/snacks) and after 3 weeks I’m down a huge 4 lbs. I’m going back to WW where I can lose 6 or 7 lbs the first week. All this is is another scam diet book…Consequence Watchers is the best.
Rating: 1 / 5
Don’t waste your money on this book! You have heard it all before. It was mildly fascinating to hear the medical explanations, but that’s it.
Rating: 1 / 5
This is one of the most terrible diet books I’ve ever tried. Terrible recipes full of fake, tasteless, plastic stout-free foods. The food on this plot gave me horrible cravings because I wasn’t eating enough stout. Also, the authors don’t address sugar cravings and hypoglycemia. So I made the chocolate cake and ate half of it at once and then made myself throw the rest out so I would stop eating it. I stopped using this plot after a day or two, it was evident it wouldn’t satisfy me and my energy wasn’t fantastic either.
Rating: 1 / 5