Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 I don't know the answer, but why give up most vegetables? They're the easiest food to digest and provide fiber. You're probably limiting fruit due to candida so you need veggies (non-starchy). Honey feeds candida too. Barb > > Hi all- > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly)unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 I don't know the answer, but why give up most vegetables? They're the easiest food to digest and provide fiber. You're probably limiting fruit due to candida so you need veggies (non-starchy). Honey feeds candida too. Barb > > Hi all- > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly)unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Lilian, I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of your food diary for us to look at and see if we can spot anything that might give a clue. I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time than three months to clear up. Since diarrhea and constipation are opposite ends of the same spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. I can also tell you that eliminating most vegetables would do me in -- I wouldn't go at all, and it would be most uncomfortable. Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the stages, or in trying to add multiple other interventions / limitations like yeast prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. I read the Pecanbread list, and help out where I can. But one interesting theme I've been seeing is that parents are finding that while it takes longer, eliminating yeast by a balanced diet works better than using extra strict protocols. Which is to say, some parents eliminated all fruit and all honey because of the belief that it fed yeast, and found out that their kids needed these carbs. There's a reason SCD is structured as a balanced diet -- but it's balance over time, and healing does take more time than most of us want to give it. My usual line is " G-d grant me patience... and grant it now! " — Marilyn New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001 Darn Good SCD Cook No Human Children Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Lilian, I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of your food diary for us to look at and see if we can spot anything that might give a clue. I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time than three months to clear up. Since diarrhea and constipation are opposite ends of the same spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. I can also tell you that eliminating most vegetables would do me in -- I wouldn't go at all, and it would be most uncomfortable. Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the stages, or in trying to add multiple other interventions / limitations like yeast prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. I read the Pecanbread list, and help out where I can. But one interesting theme I've been seeing is that parents are finding that while it takes longer, eliminating yeast by a balanced diet works better than using extra strict protocols. Which is to say, some parents eliminated all fruit and all honey because of the belief that it fed yeast, and found out that their kids needed these carbs. There's a reason SCD is structured as a balanced diet -- but it's balance over time, and healing does take more time than most of us want to give it. My usual line is " G-d grant me patience... and grant it now! " — Marilyn New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001 Darn Good SCD Cook No Human Children Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Lilian,Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives.Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return.AmeliaTo: BTVC-SCD Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AMSubject: Time to throw in the towel? Hi all- I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. Thanks, Lilian "IBS"-C 10 years, SCD 3 months Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Lilian,Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives.Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return.AmeliaTo: BTVC-SCD Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AMSubject: Time to throw in the towel? Hi all- I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. Thanks, Lilian "IBS"-C 10 years, SCD 3 months Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Hi Amelia, I was just wondering; does your husband have Crohns or UC or something else? It seems like he's had kind of a hard time, wheras others can just get on full SCD without intro or anything and be healed. I've heard that the SCD works better/faster for Crohns than UC, and I'm beginning to believe that. I have UC, and though I started the diet only a year after my first symptoms (a few months after diagnosis), it seems like I can't figure anything out! I know life isn't fair and all, and everyone's different, but sometimes it seems like it should be easier than this. Alyssa > > Lilian, > > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). > > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives. > > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. > > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return. > > Amelia > > > > > > ________________________________ > > To: BTVC-SCD > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? > > > Hi all- > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. > > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. > > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. > > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? > > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. > > Thanks, > > Lilian > " IBS " -C 10 years, SCD 3 months > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Hi Amelia, I was just wondering; does your husband have Crohns or UC or something else? It seems like he's had kind of a hard time, wheras others can just get on full SCD without intro or anything and be healed. I've heard that the SCD works better/faster for Crohns than UC, and I'm beginning to believe that. I have UC, and though I started the diet only a year after my first symptoms (a few months after diagnosis), it seems like I can't figure anything out! I know life isn't fair and all, and everyone's different, but sometimes it seems like it should be easier than this. Alyssa > > Lilian, > > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). > > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives. > > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. > > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return. > > Amelia > > > > > > ________________________________ > > To: BTVC-SCD > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? > > > Hi all- > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. > > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. > > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. > > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? > > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. > > Thanks, > > Lilian > " IBS " -C 10 years, SCD 3 months > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Alyssa, I am always impressed with your patience and initiative with SCD. I wish it were easier... for everyone. I think the teen years are hard.. with all the changes the body goes through. I hope things settle down for you soon. PJ > > > > Lilian, > > > > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these > > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). > > > > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives. > > > > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they > > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. > > > > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return. > > > > Amelia > > > > > > > > > > > > ________________________________ > > From: liliholm <lilianhd@> > > To: BTVC-SCD > > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM > > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? > > > > > > Hi all- > > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > > > > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. > > > > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. > > > > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. > > > > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? > > > > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Lilian > > " IBS " -C 10 years, SCD 3 months > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2010 Report Share Posted January 30, 2010 Alyssa, I am always impressed with your patience and initiative with SCD. I wish it were easier... for everyone. I think the teen years are hard.. with all the changes the body goes through. I hope things settle down for you soon. PJ > > > > Lilian, > > > > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these > > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). > > > > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives. > > > > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they > > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. > > > > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return. > > > > Amelia > > > > > > > > > > > > ________________________________ > > From: liliholm <lilianhd@> > > To: BTVC-SCD > > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM > > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? > > > > > > Hi all- > > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > > > > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. > > > > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. > > > > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. > > > > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? > > > > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Lilian > > " IBS " -C 10 years, SCD 3 months > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 In the BTVC, it says at least a year for celiac (before being symptom free) then at least two or more for crohn's or uc. I don't think it's easier for crohn's ;-). Each person is different. UC and Crohn's are both inflammatory diseases. Slower is better. It just takes some people longer depending on how damaged you are when you start maybe. Debbie 40 cd dx 3.02 > Alyssa, > I am always impressed with your patience and initiative with SCD. I wish it > were easier... for everyone. > I think the teen years are hard.. with all the changes the body goes > through. I hope things settle down for you soon. > > PJ > > >> > >> > Lilian, >> > >> > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly >> > regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my >> > husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the >> > beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still >> > doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers >> > the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get >> > things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and >> > even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The >> > types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use >> > asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was >> > prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't >> > work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are >> > getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema >> > like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these >> > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except >> > for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be >> > clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short >> > periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of >> > control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling >> > this! ). >> > >> > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not >> > blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, >> > though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you >> > think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband >> > had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood >> > happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much >> > like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are >> > trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are >> > mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, >> > etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the >> > bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and >> > fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm >> > water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the >> > laxatives. >> > >> > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain >> > chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the >> > yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days >> > (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into >> > the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini >> > into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with >> > the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a >> > good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken >> > or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing >> > well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of >> > your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts >> > -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. >> > If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use >> > nut flour or nut butter so that they >> > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole >> > form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to >> > milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful >> > and go up from there. >> > >> > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do >> > it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's >> > body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift >> > in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus >> > protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, >> > the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can >> > return. >> > >> > Amelia >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > ________________________________ >> > From: liliholm <lilianhd@> >> > To: BTVC-SCD >> > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM >> > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? >> > >> > >> > Hi all- >> > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few >> > weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I >> > feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended >> > (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. >> > >> > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are >> > no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night >> > I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) >> > without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I >> > repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially >> > tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem >> > to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. >> > Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a >> > day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is >> > harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most >> > veggies. >> > >> > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. >> > >> > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where >> > SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria >> > (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only >> > factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. >> > Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, >> > especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new >> > relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat >> > fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all >> > seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they >> > work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. >> > >> > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but >> > shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or >> > is there something I'm missing? >> > >> > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm >> > experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be >> > grateful to hear. >> > >> > Thanks, >> > >> > Lilian >> > " IBS " -C 10 years, SCD 3 months >> > >> > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 In the BTVC, it says at least a year for celiac (before being symptom free) then at least two or more for crohn's or uc. I don't think it's easier for crohn's ;-). Each person is different. UC and Crohn's are both inflammatory diseases. Slower is better. It just takes some people longer depending on how damaged you are when you start maybe. Debbie 40 cd dx 3.02 > Alyssa, > I am always impressed with your patience and initiative with SCD. I wish it > were easier... for everyone. > I think the teen years are hard.. with all the changes the body goes > through. I hope things settle down for you soon. > > PJ > > >> > >> > Lilian, >> > >> > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly >> > regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my >> > husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the >> > beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still >> > doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers >> > the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get >> > things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and >> > even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The >> > types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use >> > asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was >> > prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't >> > work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are >> > getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema >> > like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these >> > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except >> > for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be >> > clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short >> > periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of >> > control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling >> > this! ). >> > >> > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not >> > blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, >> > though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you >> > think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband >> > had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood >> > happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much >> > like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are >> > trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are >> > mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, >> > etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the >> > bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and >> > fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm >> > water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the >> > laxatives. >> > >> > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain >> > chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the >> > yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days >> > (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into >> > the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini >> > into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with >> > the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a >> > good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken >> > or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing >> > well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of >> > your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts >> > -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. >> > If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use >> > nut flour or nut butter so that they >> > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole >> > form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to >> > milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful >> > and go up from there. >> > >> > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do >> > it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's >> > body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift >> > in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus >> > protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, >> > the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can >> > return. >> > >> > Amelia >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > ________________________________ >> > From: liliholm <lilianhd@> >> > To: BTVC-SCD >> > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM >> > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? >> > >> > >> > Hi all- >> > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few >> > weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I >> > feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended >> > (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. >> > >> > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are >> > no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night >> > I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) >> > without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I >> > repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially >> > tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem >> > to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. >> > Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a >> > day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is >> > harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most >> > veggies. >> > >> > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. >> > >> > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where >> > SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria >> > (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only >> > factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. >> > Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, >> > especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new >> > relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat >> > fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all >> > seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they >> > work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. >> > >> > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but >> > shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or >> > is there something I'm missing? >> > >> > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm >> > experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be >> > grateful to hear. >> > >> > Thanks, >> > >> > Lilian >> > " IBS " -C 10 years, SCD 3 months >> > >> > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 Alyssa,My husband has UC. It was officially diagnosed about 9 years ago, but he was having problems long before that and didn't know it was UC. He smoked for a number of years and that kept the symptoms at bay for the most part until we got married, unexpectedly got pregnant within the first two months and then he started an 2 year MBA program a year after the baby was born. I think it was the stress and quitting smoking that really upset the apple cart, but still it was another 5 years before the official diagnosis.You are fifteen and you said it was only a year from diagnosis until you started SCD, but it could have been building for 13 years and you have not known it. My 23 year old nephew, I am convinced, has a big gut problem that has been going on for 22 years. I am sure if I sat him down to explain it, he would not believe me. He thinks he is 'normal.' But does it really matter how long it has been going on? Damage has occurred and it will take time to heal, and we both know healing is very individual. Sometimes it is necessary to carry on even though no progress is apparent. Sometimes our only clue to healing is that as we carry on there are no worsening of symptoms. For example, are your stools getting more formed and less frequent while still bleeding? Even if the bleeding stayed the same, this would constitute progress. My husband didn't recognize this. He was getting hung up on the fact that he was still bleeding 18 months later. He very nearly had stopped bleeding when he began using the asacol suppositories again. I once read a book regarding learning to like oneself. It required viewing oneself in a full length mirror completely naked. It allowed one to view, think, and describe mentally only the things one found appealing no matter how small, and completely ignore those things we didn't like no matter how glaring we thought them. So, I learned to like the shape of my ears, the angle of my jaw, the curve of my neck, the twinkle in my eye when I was happy, and to ignore the slightly plumper than I wanted thighs and stomach, and the not so large breasts. I ended up with a better understanding of my assets and detractions and over all felt balanced and happy with myself. The same holds true in healing your health. Focus on the areas in which you see improvement, and temporarily ignore the areas that are stagnant. You will have a more positive mental outlook on your state of health; that will in turn have a calming affect on the rest of your body, which will promote continued healing. I know that you have faith in the logic of the diet and that gives you hope, just go a little further and have a little faith in your body's recuperative process. The body is an amazing 'machine' made by an incredible creator. I don't pretend to understand more than a little bit, but I stand in awe of it's design and function. You will get there*, even if it doesn't look like it yet. AmeliaPS. 'There*' means a place where you feel healthy and can enjoy life. Note it not the same as perfection or "normal." And be careful with the definition of "normal" because it changes depending on who is defining it! ; )To: BTVC-SCD Sent: Sun, January 31, 2010 4:27:03 AMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? Hi Amelia, I was just wondering; does your husband have Crohns or UC or something else? It seems like he's had kind of a hard time, wheras others can just get on full SCD without intro or anything and be healed. I've heard that the SCD works better/faster for Crohns than UC, and I'm beginning to believe that. I have UC, and though I started the diet only a year after my first symptoms (a few months after diagnosis), it seems like I can't figure anything out! I know life isn't fair and all, and everyone's different, but sometimes it seems like it should be easier than this. Alyssa > > Lilian, > > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). > > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives. > > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. > > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return. > > Amelia > > > > > > ____________ _________ _________ __ > From: liliholm <lilianhd@.. .> > To: BTVC-SCD@yahoogroup s.com > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? > > > Hi all- > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. > > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. > > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. > > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? > > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. > > Thanks, > > Lilian > "IBS"-C 10 years, SCD 3 months > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 Alyssa,My husband has UC. It was officially diagnosed about 9 years ago, but he was having problems long before that and didn't know it was UC. He smoked for a number of years and that kept the symptoms at bay for the most part until we got married, unexpectedly got pregnant within the first two months and then he started an 2 year MBA program a year after the baby was born. I think it was the stress and quitting smoking that really upset the apple cart, but still it was another 5 years before the official diagnosis.You are fifteen and you said it was only a year from diagnosis until you started SCD, but it could have been building for 13 years and you have not known it. My 23 year old nephew, I am convinced, has a big gut problem that has been going on for 22 years. I am sure if I sat him down to explain it, he would not believe me. He thinks he is 'normal.' But does it really matter how long it has been going on? Damage has occurred and it will take time to heal, and we both know healing is very individual. Sometimes it is necessary to carry on even though no progress is apparent. Sometimes our only clue to healing is that as we carry on there are no worsening of symptoms. For example, are your stools getting more formed and less frequent while still bleeding? Even if the bleeding stayed the same, this would constitute progress. My husband didn't recognize this. He was getting hung up on the fact that he was still bleeding 18 months later. He very nearly had stopped bleeding when he began using the asacol suppositories again. I once read a book regarding learning to like oneself. It required viewing oneself in a full length mirror completely naked. It allowed one to view, think, and describe mentally only the things one found appealing no matter how small, and completely ignore those things we didn't like no matter how glaring we thought them. So, I learned to like the shape of my ears, the angle of my jaw, the curve of my neck, the twinkle in my eye when I was happy, and to ignore the slightly plumper than I wanted thighs and stomach, and the not so large breasts. I ended up with a better understanding of my assets and detractions and over all felt balanced and happy with myself. The same holds true in healing your health. Focus on the areas in which you see improvement, and temporarily ignore the areas that are stagnant. You will have a more positive mental outlook on your state of health; that will in turn have a calming affect on the rest of your body, which will promote continued healing. I know that you have faith in the logic of the diet and that gives you hope, just go a little further and have a little faith in your body's recuperative process. The body is an amazing 'machine' made by an incredible creator. I don't pretend to understand more than a little bit, but I stand in awe of it's design and function. You will get there*, even if it doesn't look like it yet. AmeliaPS. 'There*' means a place where you feel healthy and can enjoy life. Note it not the same as perfection or "normal." And be careful with the definition of "normal" because it changes depending on who is defining it! ; )To: BTVC-SCD Sent: Sun, January 31, 2010 4:27:03 AMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? Hi Amelia, I was just wondering; does your husband have Crohns or UC or something else? It seems like he's had kind of a hard time, wheras others can just get on full SCD without intro or anything and be healed. I've heard that the SCD works better/faster for Crohns than UC, and I'm beginning to believe that. I have UC, and though I started the diet only a year after my first symptoms (a few months after diagnosis), it seems like I can't figure anything out! I know life isn't fair and all, and everyone's different, but sometimes it seems like it should be easier than this. Alyssa > > Lilian, > > Please forgive me for not keeping track. I know you post fairly regularly, but I am not sure what all you have tried. I do know that my husband's symptoms were getting worse over a 3 month period in the beginning and not better. He did not have any faith in the diet, still doesn't have much but does know it does hold truths that he discovers the hard way! It took a round of steroids to help along with SCD to get things under control. He has battled getting sorted on SCD only and even after a year and 1/2, he is still needing some help, but less. The types of medications that help him is reversing its order. Used to use asacol suppositories, then it was asacol tablets, then it was prednisone, then it was 6MP, then back to prednisone, then it didn't work, the 6MP didn't work, and now with LDN the asacol suppositories are getting rid of the last bit of bleeding. His skin is showing eczema like it did in the beginning of his illness. I take all these > as signs that he is healing because he is almost symptomless (except for the skin), and on only 1 asacol suppository a day. But let me be clear that he has had some form of bleeding, except for very few short periods, the entire last 18 months--enough to bring about near lack of control and frequent urgency (he would croak if he knew I was telling this! ). > > Some people have immediate improvement, others not. I totally do not blame you for questioning the diet, nor do I doubt your efforts. Maybe, though, you are stressing yourself because you don't see the help you think you should. That would be very like the reaction my husband had/is having. If the slightest increase in wind, frequency, blood happens, he is ready to give up and try a new drug. It sounds very much like you are doing your best, but maybe too much. Your bowels are trying to get accustomed to it's new flora balance. The foods you are mentioning are very high in fat -- nuts, fried eggs, cheese, avocado, etc. and that without veggies will lead to constipation, the bloated/distended feeling -- I HATE that feeling! I get so grumpy and fixated on a BM until it happens. : ) Don't forget about the warm water and lemon juice trick to see if that will help instead of the laxatives. > > Have you tried backing off and sort of starting over? Trying some plain chicken broth for two days then adding back in from there? Skip the yogurt, skip the eggs, and skip the nuts for now. After the two days (along with some epsom salt baths), try pureeing the cooked chicken into the broth for a couple of days. Then try adding peeled cooked zucchini into the chicken/broth puree for a couple of days, etc. Keep going with the broth, chicken and veggie soups -- all pureed -- until you have a good repetoire you know you can tolerate. Then, try taking one (chicken or one veggie) and eating it unpureed along with the soup/broth, chewing well, and seeing what happens. Once you know you can tolerate all of your repetoire of foods unpureed, then see about the eggs, yogurt, nuts -- in a slow manner. I suggest the eggs in only boiled form at first. If you can tolerate them, then try them in nut muffins -- but only use nut flour or nut butter so that they > are as gentle as possible on the gut, not nuts as a snack in whole form. I would add the yogurt last only because a lot of people react to milk products. Again, I would drip it and start with like a teaspoonful and go up from there. > > Sorry if I suggest what you have already tried. My husband wouldn't do it slowly and I think he suffered a bit for it. Also, at first one's body is usually screaming for food because of the bacteria and the shift in the kind of primary energy it is getting (high starch carbs versus protein and veggie/fruit carbs). Once the body makes that conversion, the desparate hunger goes away and a little bit of perspective can return. > > Amelia > > > > > > ____________ _________ _________ __ > From: liliholm <lilianhd@.. .> > To: BTVC-SCD@yahoogroup s.com > Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 3:06:36 AM > Subject: Time to throw in the towel? > > > Hi all- > I've been following SCD religiously for 3 months now, over the past few weeks adding candida-elimination guidelines to the mix. Judging how I feel now, I can't see any difference, really. I'm very distended (prego-belly) unless I forego food entirely for a few days. > > Distention is always there but varies in intensity, and there really are no clear patterns as to what seems to bring it on full force. Last night I was able to have dinner (fried egg, cooked tomato, some avocado) without the immeadiate upper abdominal distention. This morning I repeated the exact same meal, with bad effects. Food that I initially tolerated well (nut muffins, jello, honey, cheese etc) later didn't seem to agree with me. A food diary hasn't helped shed any light on this. Constipation has actually worsened, before SCD I was able to go once a day with laxatives, no it's every few days with laxatives, and stool is harder. This may be related to cutting out brown rice tortillas and most veggies. > > At three months my repertoire of foods eaten has shrunk, not evolved. > > So at this point my question is, does this seems like a situation where SCD isn't going to help? What could possibly be going on if bacteria (and possibly yeast) and the management of them isn't the key? The only factor that has been fairly predictable seems to be serotonin. Relaxation in a warm, sunny climate (read: trip to the Caribbean, especially the one without the kids :^), the high of starting a new relationship (and symptoms coming right back, worsened, after vthat fizzled, sex, artificial bright light (like a sun bed) - what these all seem to have in common is a good boost in serotonin levels, and they work like a wonder-drug on my symptoms. > > It's been made abundantly clear that SCD is a slow cure etc, but shouldn't there be some sign of improvement at the three-month mark? Or is there something I'm missing? > > This is not meant to be a complaint, but rather a report of what I'm experiencing. If anyone sees anything here that I'm missing, I'd be grateful to hear. > > Thanks, > > Lilian > "IBS"-C 10 years, SCD 3 months > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 I can only say that my personal experience supports this. In my twenties I tried a strict yeast protocol but my brain needs carbs to function. I have tried to elimanate fruits many times for yeast but it never worked. However, as I had gradually improved my diet over time before SCD my yeast problems greatly improved. Now on SCD it is probably I still have yeast but I am not eliminating fruit, honey, yogurt or any legal veggies. I am fortunate that I know my body pretty well and have been slowly healing over past twenty years and not getting worse. But I have to agree, sometimes I think we are too harsh in trying to fix everything at once. I suspect my bodies inability to absorb nutriets because of gut problems is a primary problem, I have faith that over time with yogurt and elimination of disacharrides and polysacharrides my yeast will continued to diminish as it has over the years ... ie less fatigue, depression, brain fog, etc. To: BTVC-SCD Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 6:45:05 AMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? Lilian,I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of your food diary for us to look at and see if we can spot anything that might give a clue.I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time than three months to clear up. Since diarrhea and constipation are opposite ends of the same spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it.I can also tell you that eliminating most vegetables would do me in -- I wouldn't go at all, and it would be most uncomfortable.Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the stages, or in trying to add multiple other interventions / limitations like yeast prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts.I read the Pecanbread list, and help out where I can. But one interesting theme I've been seeing is that parents are finding that while it takes longer, eliminating yeast by a balanced diet works better than using extra strict protocols. Which is to say, some parents eliminated all fruit and all honey because of the belief that it fed yeast, and found out that their kids needed these carbs. There's a reason SCD is structured as a balanced diet -- but it's balance over time, and healing does take more time than most of us want to give it. My usual line is "G-d grant me patience... and grant it now!" — Marilyn New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001 Darn Good SCD Cook No Human Children Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 I can only say that my personal experience supports this. In my twenties I tried a strict yeast protocol but my brain needs carbs to function. I have tried to elimanate fruits many times for yeast but it never worked. However, as I had gradually improved my diet over time before SCD my yeast problems greatly improved. Now on SCD it is probably I still have yeast but I am not eliminating fruit, honey, yogurt or any legal veggies. I am fortunate that I know my body pretty well and have been slowly healing over past twenty years and not getting worse. But I have to agree, sometimes I think we are too harsh in trying to fix everything at once. I suspect my bodies inability to absorb nutriets because of gut problems is a primary problem, I have faith that over time with yogurt and elimination of disacharrides and polysacharrides my yeast will continued to diminish as it has over the years ... ie less fatigue, depression, brain fog, etc. To: BTVC-SCD Sent: Sat, January 30, 2010 6:45:05 AMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? Lilian,I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of your food diary for us to look at and see if we can spot anything that might give a clue.I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time than three months to clear up. Since diarrhea and constipation are opposite ends of the same spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it.I can also tell you that eliminating most vegetables would do me in -- I wouldn't go at all, and it would be most uncomfortable.Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the stages, or in trying to add multiple other interventions / limitations like yeast prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts.I read the Pecanbread list, and help out where I can. But one interesting theme I've been seeing is that parents are finding that while it takes longer, eliminating yeast by a balanced diet works better than using extra strict protocols. Which is to say, some parents eliminated all fruit and all honey because of the belief that it fed yeast, and found out that their kids needed these carbs. There's a reason SCD is structured as a balanced diet -- but it's balance over time, and healing does take more time than most of us want to give it. My usual line is "G-d grant me patience... and grant it now!" — Marilyn New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001 Darn Good SCD Cook No Human Children Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2010 Report Share Posted February 1, 2010 > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > can spot anything that might give a clue. Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > than three months to clear up. My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. Since diarrhea and > constipation are opposite ends of the same > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > interventions / limitations like yeast > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of " going to war " against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionally/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). So here are my past 3 days: Saturday: B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) Sunday: B: coffee, banana " pancake " (egg), applesauce, DCCC L: chicken soup D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste Monday B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato snack: small piece of Lara-bar D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! Lilian " IBS " -C Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2010 Report Share Posted February 1, 2010 > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > can spot anything that might give a clue. Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > than three months to clear up. My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. Since diarrhea and > constipation are opposite ends of the same > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > interventions / limitations like yeast > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of " going to war " against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionally/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). So here are my past 3 days: Saturday: B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) Sunday: B: coffee, banana " pancake " (egg), applesauce, DCCC L: chicken soup D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste Monday B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato snack: small piece of Lara-bar D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! Lilian " IBS " -C Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2010 Report Share Posted February 2, 2010 Lilian,Just a thought, but have you tried using enzyme supplements? It might be that you aren't producing the enzymes needed to digest the veggies, but are the ones to digest fats and protein.AmeliaTo: BTVC-SCD Sent: Tue, February 2, 2010 2:14:39 AMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > can spot anything that might give a clue. Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > than three months to clear up. My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. Since diarrhea and > constipation are opposite ends of the same > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > interventions / limitations like yeast > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of "going to war" against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionall y/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). So here are my past 3 days: Saturday: B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) Sunday: B: coffee, banana "pancake" (egg), applesauce, DCCC L: chicken soup D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste Monday B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato snack: small piece of Lara-bar D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! Lilian "IBS"-C Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2010 Report Share Posted February 2, 2010 Lilian,Just a thought, but have you tried using enzyme supplements? It might be that you aren't producing the enzymes needed to digest the veggies, but are the ones to digest fats and protein.AmeliaTo: BTVC-SCD Sent: Tue, February 2, 2010 2:14:39 AMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > can spot anything that might give a clue. Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > than three months to clear up. My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. Since diarrhea and > constipation are opposite ends of the same > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > interventions / limitations like yeast > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of "going to war" against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionall y/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). So here are my past 3 days: Saturday: B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) Sunday: B: coffee, banana "pancake" (egg), applesauce, DCCC L: chicken soup D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste Monday B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato snack: small piece of Lara-bar D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! Lilian "IBS"-C Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2010 Report Share Posted February 2, 2010 Amelia, you may well be right. I have used enzymes without much success, but perhaps there's one you or someone else migth suggest that would specifically help w/carbs? Thanks! Lilian " IBS " -C, SCD 3 1/2 months > > > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > > can spot anything that might give a clue. > > Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > > > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > > than three months to clear up. > > My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. > > Since diarrhea and > > constipation are opposite ends of the same > > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. > > Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > > > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > > interventions / limitations like yeast > > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. > > This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of " going to war " against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. > > It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. > > And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionall y/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). > > So here are my past 3 days: > > Saturday: > B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC > L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) > D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado > then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) > > Sunday: > B: coffee, banana " pancake " (egg), applesauce, DCCC > L: chicken soup > D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste > > Monday > B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado > L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato > snack: small piece of Lara-bar > D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) > > The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. > > For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. > > Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! > > Lilian > " IBS " -C > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2010 Report Share Posted February 2, 2010 Amelia, you may well be right. I have used enzymes without much success, but perhaps there's one you or someone else migth suggest that would specifically help w/carbs? Thanks! Lilian " IBS " -C, SCD 3 1/2 months > > > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > > can spot anything that might give a clue. > > Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > > > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > > than three months to clear up. > > My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. > > Since diarrhea and > > constipation are opposite ends of the same > > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. > > Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > > > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > > interventions / limitations like yeast > > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. > > This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of " going to war " against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. > > It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. > > And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionall y/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). > > So here are my past 3 days: > > Saturday: > B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC > L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) > D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado > then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) > > Sunday: > B: coffee, banana " pancake " (egg), applesauce, DCCC > L: chicken soup > D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste > > Monday > B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado > L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato > snack: small piece of Lara-bar > D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) > > The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. > > For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. > > Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! > > Lilian > " IBS " -C > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2010 Report Share Posted February 2, 2010 Some things that I noticed work for me with gas and bloating. I not only eat yogurt but also have a refridgerated probiotic that is cultured on peas and carrots and is only acidophilus. I have been taking 2 of these probiotics 2 times a day in addition to the yogurt. If sugar slips into my diet somehow, like if I miss reading the ingredients on something and it turns out there is sugar in it, I get extremely gasey and if I take the probiotics before I go to bed it seems to help rectify the situation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2010 Report Share Posted February 2, 2010 Some things that I noticed work for me with gas and bloating. I not only eat yogurt but also have a refridgerated probiotic that is cultured on peas and carrots and is only acidophilus. I have been taking 2 of these probiotics 2 times a day in addition to the yogurt. If sugar slips into my diet somehow, like if I miss reading the ingredients on something and it turns out there is sugar in it, I get extremely gasey and if I take the probiotics before I go to bed it seems to help rectify the situation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 3, 2010 Report Share Posted February 3, 2010 Lilian,I can't personally recommend any, but I hear this is a good brand http://www.houston-enzymes.com/ and it will at least give you information regarding the type of enzyme you would need for carbs.AmeliaHusband UC 9 years, SCD 19 monthsLDN 3mgTo: BTVC-SCD Sent: Tue, February 2, 2010 9:40:41 PMSubject: Re: Time to throw in the towel? Amelia, you may well be right. I have used enzymes without much success, but perhaps there's one you or someone else migth suggest that would specifically help w/carbs? Thanks! Lilian "IBS"-C, SCD 3 1/2 months > > > I'm going to suggest that you post a few days of > > your food diary for us to look at and see if we > > can spot anything that might give a clue. > > Thank you so much for offering to do this, I'll pots 3 day at the end of my post. > > > I can tell you that while I felt better on SCD, > > my soft, mushy stool took quite a bit more time > > than three months to clear up. > > My concern is, I haven't really felt better. To be clear, the C isn't my biggest concern, since at least I can use some form of laxative to help with that. What bothers me the most is the abdominal distention I get after eating. I'm happy to report that the stomach discomfort and out-of-control burping has been all but eliminated since I've been taking HCl before eating (yeah!), but basically eating makes me look (and feel, to the point of incontinence while running (sorry abt the TMI, but somehow I suspect on this list details are ok :^) ) very pregnant. And the fluid retention that goes hand in hand with this. All in all adding about 6 or more pounds of fluid, gas and C. > > Since diarrhea and > > constipation are opposite ends of the same > > spectrum, one might expect the same to be true of it. > > Absolutely. Pimentel's theory of course is that some bacteria cause D, some cause C. > > > Sometimes I think that in trying to follow the > > stages, or in trying to add multiple other > > interventions / limitations like yeast > > prevention, we actually continue the imbalance in our guts. > > This makes so much sense to me, thank you so much for pointing it out. Instead of "going to war" against symptoms of imbalance one would perhaps be better off helping elevate the level of health in the body so that it can restore its homeostasis, including its microbial balance. > > It feels like a relief not to think in terms of limiting one's diet more and more and more, but rather gently lead it towards greater tolerance of the healthful foods it needs in order to thrive. > > And I know that for me, meditation and the other ways of mentally/emotionall y/spiritually feeling better I mentioned previously are important for gut health. I'm looking forward to a trip to the Caribbean during spring break; my gut are always so happy when I spend time in the sun :^). > > So here are my past 3 days: > > Saturday: > B; coffee with home-made coconut milk, 2 fried eggs, DCCC > L: leftover coffee (1/4 cup), yoghurt, apple sauce (felt worse after, suspect the youghurt) > D: pork rib tips, squash, well cooked tomato, avocado > then- in a moment of despair and seized by cravings: one almond flour nut muffin and cashew butter, scotch on the rocks (haven't had nut muffins in a loong time) > > Sunday: > B: coffee, banana "pancake" (egg), applesauce, DCCC > L: chicken soup > D: ground beef patty, 1/2 avocado, 1/2 tomato, DCCC for taste > > Monday > B: coffe, fried eggs, tomato, avocado > L: ground beef patty w/ legal mustard, squash, tomato > snack: small piece of Lara-bar > D: oven-baked chicken, eggplant, tomato, a few stalks of asparagus, 1/2 teaspoon of cashew-butter (craving something good, some kind of dessert) > > The above represents my departure from the candida-precautions I've been observing lately, as well as my attempt to add a small amount of veggies throughout the day. Other than that, it's fairly representative of what I've been eating; meat, eggs, squash forming the bulk of the diet. > > For some reason I didn't react well to most of the foods on the original intro diet (cheesecake, even without honey), chicken soup, carrots, even yoghurt. Ground beef patties and eggs are the safest bets for me. > > Thank you so much for offering to take a look at this, thank so much to all who replied, I value your help more than you know! > > Lilian > "IBS"-C > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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