The Rebuild
Keto is one of the most polarizing nutrition approaches in the fitness and health world. Some people treat it like a miracle. Others dismiss it completely. And like most nutrition debates, both sides usually become ideological instead of practical. In this episode, I break down where keto genuinely works, where it often fails, and why individual physiology matters far more than online nutrition tribes. For some people, ketogenic dieting dramatically reduces food noise, improves appetite control, stabilizes blood sugar, and creates adherence that they never had with higher carbohydrate diets. That matters. A diet that someone can consistently follow will outperform a “perfect” diet they constantly abandon. At the same time, keto is not magic. A lot of people use ketosis to mask poor calorie awareness, avoid behavioral work, or justify excessive restriction. Others force themselves into a low-carb approach that leaves them flat, exhausted, socially isolated, or unable to train at a high level. This episode also breaks down the reality that training demands, stress load, digestion, hormonal status, and lifestyle all influence how well someone tolerates lower carbohydrate intake. Some people feel mentally sharp and stable on keto. Others feel anxious, depleted, and constantly under-recovered. Neither experience is universally right or wrong. The bigger issue is that most people are trying to force ideology onto physiology instead of paying attention to feedback. Nutrition should be adaptive, not religious. Your body composition, energy, recovery, digestion, relationship with food, and long-term sustainability matter more than belonging to a dietary camp. What We Cover • Why keto works extremely well for some people • How appetite suppression changes adherence • Common mistakes people make on ketogenic diets • Why training performance recovery matter • The psychological side of restrictive dieting • Why physiology should drive food decisions, not internet identity Key Takeaways • Adherence matters more than ideology • Appetite control is powerful, but it is not behavior change • A diet only “works” if your body and lifestyle can sustain it • Dogma creates blind spots. Awareness creates results If you’ve ever felt confused by the extreme opinions around keto, this episode will help you think about it in a more practical, grounded way.
65 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Rebuild!