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  #1   ^
Old Mon, Jun-24-02, 11:27
luckystar luckystar is offline
Registered Member
Posts: 31
 
Plan: atkins
Stats: 190/183.5/157
BF:
Progress: 20%
Location: ohio
Default Is induction 10 days or 2weeks?

I have seen this posted both ways, 10 days vs 14 days. What is the appropriate amt of time for induction?

Thanks!!
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  #2   ^
Old Mon, Jun-24-02, 11:36
DWRolfe's Avatar
DWRolfe DWRolfe is offline
Posts: 6,588
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 468/371/275 Male 5' 10"
BF:
Progress: 50%
Location: Chicago, IL
Post Induction question...

2 weeks = 14 days...


I don't recall ever reading that Induction is only 10 days. Do you remember where you read that?

Hope Induction is going well for you!

Donald
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  #3   ^
Old Mon, Jun-24-02, 15:43
luckystar luckystar is offline
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Posts: 31
 
Plan: atkins
Stats: 190/183.5/157
BF:
Progress: 20%
Location: ohio
Default

Could have been my wishful thinking (10 days). Thanks for the response.

Things are going well. My cravings are gone, and I am not hungry, but I am quickly getting tired of eggs and meat.

Any suggestions for induction? I have 7days to go.

Thanks again
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  #4   ^
Old Mon, Jun-24-02, 16:01
Voyajer's Avatar
Voyajer Voyajer is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 475
 
Plan: Protein Power LP Dilletan
Stats: 164/145/138 Female 5'7"
BF:
Progress: 73%
Default

You can have half an avocado per day. Also, cobb salad is a nice treat with blue cheese dressing. You can whip some whipping cream with non-calorie sweetener and have over sugarfree jello. If you like to cook, you should check out the Kitchen: Low Carb Recipes section. There are some nice meatloaf dishes you can have on induction as well as marinara sauce over meatballs and italian sausage. Your induction doesn't have to be plain jane meals.
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  #5   ^
Old Mon, Jun-24-02, 16:04
Voyajer's Avatar
Voyajer Voyajer is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 475
 
Plan: Protein Power LP Dilletan
Stats: 164/145/138 Female 5'7"
BF:
Progress: 73%
Default Are You Ready to Move Beyond Induction?

From the Atkins site:


Before you even think about stepping up from Induction, consider the possibility of staying with it for awhile longer.

A lot of people think of Induction as lasting only two weeks, but it can be followed for a longer time. If you have a lot of weight to lose or have difficulty losing weight, you might want to do Induction for quite a while. That way you'll see dramatic progress before moving on to the more moderate phases of the program.

Although Induction offers plenty of advantages, there are lots of valid reasons for progressing: boredom with the food choices, modest weight-loss goals (say, 20 or 30 pounds) and perhaps the chance to avoid becoming dependent on a crash-diet mentality. When people learn that they can lose weight quickly, as they do during Induction, they sometimes take their ability to lose weight for granted. They don't think in terms of a lifetime commitment to the Atkins Nutritional Approach™—just a quick fix for overindulgence. The result of this faulty thinking is yo-yo dieting and a metabolic resistance to weight loss. While the next phase—Ongoing Weight Loss (OWL)—may likely slow your rate of weight loss, this is not a bad thing. The slower the progress, the more chance you have to permanently change bad habits over the long term.

In order to decide if this is the right time for you to move on, ask yourself the following four questions:

Are you bored with Induction?
How much weight do you have to lose?
How metabolically resistant are you to weight loss?
Are you willing to slow down the pace of weight loss in exchange for more food choices?

If you are bored, and this boredom could lead to not complying with the rules of Induction, by all means move on to OWL after two weeks. However, if you are comfortable staying in this phase, and you still have a lot of weight to lose, you can do Induction safely for six months or more. If you do not have much more weight to lose, it is advisable for you to advance to OWL so you can cycle through all the phases of the program.

If you are metabolically resistant to weight loss—which you will know by how much weight you lost in the first two weeks and by comparing your results with the categories in the metabolic resistance tables (See What Is Your Degree of Metabolic Resistance?)—you will lose weight relatively slowly. People with high metabolic resistance can benefit from doing Induction longer because it gives them time to correct metabolic imbalances they may have developed over time. These include insulin resistance, blood-sugar imbalances, carbohydrate addictions and allergies. Once the metabolic imbalances are corrected, weight loss may speed up.

But after all is said and done, to a large degree, your decision to continue Induction or move to OWL will depend on your personality and lifestyle. If you are the type to just go for it and can easily make your life work around the Induction eating program, you may decide to stick with it until you drop some more weight. Another person, who perhaps is under a lot of stress and wants to relax a bit about food choices, might choose to move to the more liberal phase of OWL. This brings us to the last, and ultimately the only, answer that matters. Is a longer period of time until you get to your goal weight the trade-off you're willing to make to have more food choices? It's up to you. A young, active man who loses weight easily may chose to move to OWL after two weeks, while a menopausal woman who has high metabolic resistance may chose to stay on the strictest phase until she gets close to her goal weight. The decision is yours alone and is another example of how much individualization is possible on Atkins.
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