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enlarge | Author: Ori Hofmekler Publisher: Blue Snake Books Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy New: $11.30 You Save: $7.65 (40%)
New (37) Used (12) from $10.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 22599
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Rev Exp Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 312 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.8
ISBN: 1583942009 Dewey Decimal Number: 613.25 EAN: 9781583942000 ASIN: 1583942009
Publication Date: December 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Eat, Drink, and Behave Like Your Warrior Ancestors February 24, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Dieting is a very popular activity nowadays. With obesity at record levels and body mass indices climbing higher and higher for most Americans each day, the physical condition of the public at large continues to deteriorate with each passing moment. And because of this fact, the diet and fitness business is booming like never before. The Warrior Diet attempts to assert itself into this growing market with a diet plan that is different from most others and that offers a workable plan that most can follow, often with very positive results.
After reading a couple of chapters, it is easy to see that The Warrior Diet is, indeed, different from most other diet plans. First, the Warrior concept is one that the author describes as getting back to mankind's original lifestyle when it comes to eating and fitness. Foods in the past were purer and more wholesome than the processed garbage that humans eat today. People in the past also used to be far more physically fit, mainly because their very survival depended on it. These natural instincts have been lost over the years due to modern technology and as a result, humans eat far worse food than in the past and are far less physically active than at any point in history. The Warrior Diet is about reclaiming that past by re- introducing the human body to a diet of raw, unprocessed food and organic meats. It is also about becoming more physically active than before in order to maintain the Warrior body once a satisfactory nutritional balance has been achieved.
Advice like eating organic foods and exercising is pretty commonplace in most diet books so I wasn't very surprised when I read these parts of The Warrior Diet. However, I was surprised by the specific eating advice and how the Warrior Plan is put into action. It starts with an undereating phase. This takes place each morning and afternoon and the idea is to avoid eating completely, with the exception being vegetable juice, fruit juice, coffee, yogurt, and a few other things. After that comes the overeating phase; a catch- up phase that takes place during the evening hours. At this time, the Warrior is permitted to eat pretty much anything he/she wants. This is very different from most diet plans and it is bound to be controversial among nutritionists.
I have been on very few diets but I decided while I was reading this book that I would give this plan a try and see what happened. What I discovered is that this undereating phase is very difficult at first, and I could feel my stomach growling for hours during the morning and afternoon hours. But then, it gradually became easier and easier to do this and I didn't feel as hungry as I did on the first day. I also noticed that my nighttime meal was far more satisfying than my meals usually are. Like other people, I lead a busy life and have little time to enjoy my meals. Eating has become a chore and I try to get it over with as quickly as possible so that I can get on with the rest of my day. But with the Warrior Diet plan, I find that my evening meal tastes better and is met with greater anticipation. I look forward to eating it, and I enjoy myself more than before.
Physical fitness is an important part of any diet plan and The Warrior Diet includes many pages of exercises that are intended to complement the diet itself. Some of these exercises require using weights, but others do not. I don't engage in physical fitness as often as I should and what I like about this section of the book is that, like the rest of the book, it includes exercises that are a little out of the ordinary. Things like towel swiping, frog jumps, and the bow and arrow shoulder stretch are among the many unique exercise ideas promoted by The Warrior Diet.
Most of The Warrior Diet is easy to read, but author Ori Hofmekler does include quite a bit of nutritional and physiological tech talk. It was important to include this type of information because it helps to back up what is stated in the book. But for people like me who know little about this type of topic, I found that I often did not quite understand what Hofmekler was talking about at certain points. Comments about things like omega- 3 oils; the health benefits of Cruciferous indoles; etc., were over my head. During these moments, I just had to take his word for it. I don't even know if the things stated are completely true, but I am pretty sure they are.
Overall, I found The Warrior Diet an effective book about diet and nutrition and the plan seems to work, based on my brief experience. The Warrior Diet and the advice contained in this book is generally very thorough and very helpful and it presents a workable plan that is less restrictive overall when compared to other diets. Some of the advice is commonplace; other advice is more unique. But the bottom line goal of the Warrior Diet is one most people can certainly agree: To eliminate toxins from the body, eat better foods through improved eating habits, and develop the physical body into a lean, mean, Warrior- like machine. It's a good book for anyone who has an interest in improving ones' physical condition and maintaining the improvements for a long period of time.
If You've Tried Everything Else, This Could Work February 10, 2008 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
In the past, I haven't had much luck with diets. I'm usually looking to drop that extra ten pounds or so, but I've tried Atkins, South Beach and The Zone diets with little success. The Warrior Diet is different. By changing the times that I eat (along with dropping highly refined foods), I've made steady progress towards my desired weight while maintaining high energy. It took me a week or so to transition into the system of fasting during the day and feasting at night, but once I got used to it, I found it to be almost a matter of instinct. After just a few weeks, I'm starting to lose that stubborn belly fat and I don't feel like I'm starving all the time. I am also following the exercise guidelines. This isn't a "Lose Weight While you Sleep," plan and it isn't a magic pill. It's just another approach to eating that seems to make a lot of sense.
A natural way to eat February 8, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
After reading over 60 books on diet and healthy eating I was delighted to find a new way to eat that not only fit into what I previously had learned but added a way to balance fasting and eating my fill. The author covers all the needed dynamics of eating, covering insulin response and how the body works to store fat and burn calories. He shows the importance of eating whole foods and limiting your consumption of damaging foods like trans fats and refined carbs. The diet is patterned after the eating habits of ancient warriors of Rome and Greece. He recommends eating very light during the day focusing on only fruits, vegatables, and light protein (eggs, whey protein, maybe a few raw nuts in the late afternoon). Then for dinner eat what you need to fill you up, and then stop eating for the night. It is recommended to eat mainly whole foods during this meal but it is very flexible. The beauty of this way of eating is that with an early dinner and a late light breakfast you give your body time to detoxify with out the endless flow of food into your digestive system. Also you will notice more energy during the day with no heavy breakfast or lunch weighing you down. The end of the book gives a great exercise regimen if you are interested in building a lean, strong body through short workouts that train you to resist fatigue but does not take you to complete muscle failure. Ironically years ago after losing 50 pounds on the zone diet I naturally reverted to eating very similiar to this type of diet as maintenance and kept off my weight. I really enjoyed eating this way, it can be used for life.
A Different Take On Eating February 6, 2008 7 out of 12 found this review helpful
'The Warrior Diet: Switch on Your Biological Powerhouse For High Energy, Explosive Strength, and a Leaner, Harder Body' is a different king of "dieting" book (I find it hard to even use the word diet here), instead it's a book that teaches you a different way to eat and live your life. The weight-loss industry makes billions a year and is one of the biggest money-makers in the world. There's all sorts of promises of how to lose weight, but the simple way to lost weight is to eat less, eat smarter, and exercise (it really IS that simple folks). What this book does it focus on how past cultures (warrior) used to eat in the past and see why they were lean and mean for the most part. What you learn from this book is that people in the past (men & women) were so busy during the day that they didn't have TIME (they REALLY didn't have time) to eat and eat and eat. The women hunted for the food while the women did the household chores and raised the young children. At the end of the day the families ate a large meal together, and POOF! look they didn't gain much weight and were leaner all together.
It's an interesting point of view but to be honest I think it's unrealistic for most people. Yes these are all truths but this isn't how society is any more in industrial countries. We don't have to hunt for food all day long and we are surrounded by food all day long that it's hard to resist (unrealistic?). Eating a large meal right before dinner might give you energy to have a better sex life but then it sits in your gut all night while you sleep. For the true warrior of the past this was fine because you weren't going to eat much for another 24 hours and had to live live like a python getting large meals when possible, providing plenty of nutrients for all the physical labor the following day.
I think this book is positive and is great from a historical perspective, but for everyday people I don't think it's very realistic or feasible. Times have changed and the "Warrior Diet" simply isn't the ways things are in the world for educated people. Having said all that, I don't think the book is bad, I just think it's another angle to help some people (key word: SOME) lose the pounds but for most it probably won't be that effective.
Try if you must but I feel that other books will provide better long term results than the ones listed here.
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One step away from the hunter-gatherer diet January 22, 2008 17 out of 19 found this review helpful
Many years ago when I was a young man I followed a diet similar to the one recommended here by Ori Hofmekler. It wasn't something that I planned or followed with any kind of rigor. I just more or less fell into it. I would get up in the morning and have coffee and toast with peanut butter and preserves or honey. (Of course Hofmekler's "warrior diet" does not recommend bread during the "undereating" phase.) I would then go most of the rest of the day without eating anything. In the evening I would reward myself with a huge meal. Sometimes I didn't eat that meal until sometime after midnight.
I was never hungry during the undereating phase. As anyone who has ever fasted can tell you, when you have eaten nothing for a while and are burning fat, you experience no hunger. You are serene. I also maintained the same weight for many years following this habit of only eating one large meal a day.
If looked at closely it can be seen that the essence of the warrior diet is mini-fasts and the avoidance of carbohydrates, especially the processed kind. Hofmekler is not entirely rigorous in that recommendation however, allowing one to eat fresh fruits and vegetables or even some protein during the undereating or fasting phase. Notice that this diet is similar to some of the low-carbs diets currently fashionable. Note also that mini-fasting results in a period of time in which the digestive system is given a rest. With no food in the system, the body is forced to burn fat. Fat burns clean, relatively speaking, as Hofmekler explains. This is quite a change from the days when we were taught that fat was the culprit. Today we know that concentrated, processed carbohydrates and such things as corn syrup are what is making America fat and frankly sick.
In essence the warrior diet is a return to the natural diet of humans as it was (per force) practiced in the Pleistocene prior to the rise of agriculture. When one looks at such a diet, which included, small animals, insects, roots, tubers, fruits, vegetables, and the occasional large animal, it is easy to see that it was almost impossible to get fat or at any rate stay fat for any length of time. The two main foods that are making Westerners fat are readily available carbohydrates and an abundance of fats and oils. In the prehistory there were oats and wheat and barley and such, but the seeds were relatively small and to make a meal required a lot of hand processing. I have experimented with some of the natural foods found here in California, acorns, black walnuts, pine nuts, wild oats, wild grapes; and the striking thing I have discovered is just how much time and energy it requires to process these foods. Using hand tools and existing on these foods along with fish and whatever meat I could get, I could never get fat.
So what Hofmekler is recommending is a return to such a way of living. Since the foods for us are readily available with little processing, the time that would have been spent in hand processing should now be spent in fasting (which was the case in the prehistory).
There is an incredible amount of detail in this book as Hofmekler compares his diet to other diets, as he incorporates workouts, food preparation and recipes, and gets specific about all kinds of foods; but the hard kernel of truth here, in my opinion, is simply this: eat less, eat less often, exercise, and avoid denatured foods. Note that "eat less often" implies mini-fasts. Perhaps the biggest mistake we make is to eat from habit, to eat when we are not really hungry. If we always waited until we were ravenous before eating we would both enjoy the food more and be healthier.
I also like the idea of seeing oneself as something other than a couch potato, indoctrinated by corporate interests to a life of relative passivity and constant consumption. So the metaphor of "The Warrior Diet" is welcome in a marketing sense and more appealing (and sexier!) than what I think is more accurate, which is "A Hunter-Gatherer Diet." One of the reasons that Hofmekler uses the term "warrior" is to suggest in a somewhat subliminal way one of his prescriptions, that is to avoid what he considers estrogen-promoting foods such as "processed soy products...conventional produce, meats, poultry, and pork" and other foods. (See e.g., page 154, or better yet his previous book "The Anti-Estrogenic Diet" for the full story.)
By the way, I still practice a one square meal a day diet, although I must confess that I snack a little too much in-between! Hofmekler's book (incidentally in its second edition, which suggests its value) has come along just in time to inspire me to return to a more rigorous practice. This morning as I write this, 15 hours have passed since I ate anything. I am not the slightest bit hungry and this is after walking an hour in the rain and doing some chores. However I will enjoy my coffee and homemade bread soon.
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