Q:hey, i am excited to find your blog because i am a runner also attempting the GAPS diet. I am also breastfeeding a toddler and older baby, so I have been nervous about getting off carbs. I have been grain free for awhile, but have been eating alot of potatoes. How is it going for you, and how are you feeling on runs? Do you have any tips specific to GAPS runners?
Hi there. Thanks for the questions!
What I’ve read about the GAPS diet is that if you are nursing, it is good to go for the full GAPS diet and not try to do the Intro diet. The full diet should give you all the nutrition you need, even as a runner. I was very nervous also about trying to run and do GAPS, because the running world is fanatic about carbohydrates, but actually I find that I have more athletic endurance when I increase the fats I eat and eliminate starchy carbs. I think I’m training my body to use fat as an energy source instead of carbohydrates. That said, 4 miles is the furthest I’ve ever run on the GAPS diet, but at the end of my most recent race, my fatigue was more due to my sore muscles and reduced cardio ability from not having trained enough, rather than feeling under-fueled. In fact, had my legs been stronger, I think I could have gone much further after that yogurt breakfast I described in my previous post. I am pretty strict with the diet and don’t eat anything besides what is on the full GAPS list.
The diet in general is going great for me, but it is challenging to find time to cook all the food from scratch. (I salute all the mothers who are trying to do it with kids running around!) It has cleared up my sinus allergies, which is actually a benefit on runs, as I can breathe easier. I do still have quite a bit of belly bloating from the added probiotics, but that doesn’t seem to affect my comfort when I run; I don’t get cramps or anything like that. My cravings for sweet foods and cravings for food in general have pretty much disappeared by now (after 4 months on the diet), and I feel satisfied with what I eat. The first couple months I was ravenous all the time, but it’s gotten a lot better.
Tips for GAPS runners, from my own experience:
1. Give yourself at least a month to work out the full diet routine for yourself before you start running. I found that I was spending so much time cooking, preparing, and thinking about food that I honestly didn’t have another hour of the day available to exercise. I kept up my 10 min. per day morning workout, but that was about it.
2. For the first run on GAPS, go in the afternoon at least four hours after having eaten a nice big lunch of lentils or other allowed beans with veggies and perhaps some ground beef or other fatty meat. (All meats should be grass fed or at least antibiotic free.) I find this type of meal gives me plenty of carbs and sustaining nutrition. If I go running in the morning and don’t eat enough beforehand, I get light-headed (I am low-grade anemic and I think that causes some hypoglycemia?) So for the first run, do it in the afternoon when your body hasn’t been fasting all night just to gauge your reaction.
3. If you feel you need it, eat a spoonful of raw honey or honey with butter right before running, just like you’d take an energy gel.
I can’t really even think of any more. I just eat what the diet recommends and the running works well :) As soon as I try some longer distance runs, I will post about how the diet sustains me. I think I could make it through a half marathon with just honey and maybe some salt stick capsules for fuel and electrolytes.
UPDATE: I did make it through a pretty grueling trail half marathon on just raw honey and salt stick caps. Read here: http://www.allisonsbigtoe.com/post/7042843854 The GAPS diet really does have plenty of carbs allowed for athletes. When I’m running a lot, I don’t stress over the high carb count in lentils, white beans, split peas, and fruit that I eat. However, if I’m not running a lot, I cut those food items out of the diet completely because I find they cause me to gain weight really fast, especially around the hips and thighs.
Good luck, and please let me know how it goes for you!
Comments, anyone?
New Personal Best!
Super Bowl 4-Miler 2011 / Goleta, CA
Finishing time: 37:06 / 9:17 min. per mile / 16th in 20-29 age group out of 30

I love minimalist running! I had such a great time on Sunday at the Super Bowl run. My sister came with my husband and I to race, and she ran with me. Husband took off and finished in 29:29, so we were definitely not slated to be running companions. Sister has long legs and is strong, so she helped me keep my pace up. I decided that 4 miles wasn’t long enough to have to worry about burning out, so I just went for it, about as fast as I could maintain, even up hills (of which there were many!)
The race wasn’t until 9:00am and was about 45 min. away from our house, so we woke up at 7 and had breakfast of a cup of homemade yogurt with chia seeds and honey, and a piece of homemade cashew bread with lots of butter and honey. I figured I’d have time to digest it all, and since I’m on a very low carb diet that emphasizes using good fats for energy (yes, saturated fats are good fats), I didn’t bother worrying if it would sit heavy on my stomach. We headed out the door and arrived in time to pick up our packets with 20 min. before race start. I would have liked to have gotten there a little earlier, but we didn’t run in to any problems. It was a small neighborhood race (only 253 total participants) so the atmosphere was very relaxed and enthusiastic, rather than anxious. I was able to get my ChiRunning body looseners in just barely before the guy said “Go!” into the megaphone.
We took off faster than I usually do, but since the only official races I ran last year were half marathons, what I usually do is pretty slow. It was a gorgeous day, sunny and warm, but not hot; a pleasure to be outside. I had a lot of energy and thankfully the breakfast sat perfectly on my tummy throughout the race. I didn’t need to drink any water and felt strong. The only thing that would have helped was if my calves had been in a little better shape. I should have started training more than two weeks before this race, after having not run for so long. So I could feel my calves at times, like going down hills, and I tried to use all the ChiRunning techniques I could while running up hills (arms swinging up to chin to give momentum, leaning from the ankles). I think I started passing people in the second half of the race because I knew how to navigate hills better, thanks to ChiRunning. I could use gravity to my advantage and when I swung my arms I could feel it giving my legs a break.
There were a lot of kids at the race who were FAST! In the last mile of the run, a small 9 year old boy named Jake buzzed past me. His parents were yelling “Go Jake!” and I ground my teeth, knowing I was just about sprinting and was definitely not going to breat him. My heart rate was skyrocketing and I could tell I was at my limit, and the only thing I cared about was not letting the guy who I had passed earlier wearing the same green and grey Vibram FiveFinger KSOs to pass me back. That guy never did pass me, but Jake beat me by 10 seconds at the end. C’est la vie. I wouldn’t want to trample a 9 year old anyway. Just wouldn’t be sporting…that’s my excuse.
After the race we went to a friend’s house to hang out and eat brunch before the Superbowl party. I got to ride on the Harley Davidson that said friend assembled himself. I rode still wearing my running shorts, and I could just hear my mom’s voice in my head screaming “You’re going to kill yourself!” At least I put on my husband’s running shoes. Wouldn’t have wanted the Vibram rubber to melt off.

“A Reversal On Carbs”

The article above was front page news of the Los Angeles Times Health section on Monday. LOVE that this type of message is getting more attention among the mainstream. Finally people are waking up and realizing, after over 50 years of brainwashing by the media and grain industries, that fat does not make you fat. The research presented in the article goes right along with the philosophy behind the Gut and Psychology Syndrome Diet, which I am doing right now (all the homemade food means I have MUCH less time for blogging!).
I’ll admit that the newspaper article still gives a lot of misguided advice: “Substitute sugar-free beverages for sugary soft drinks and juice” was just one of them. Apparently the data here isn’t well enough known, and people still think Diet Coke is better for them than fresh-pressed apple juice. Hmm…
But why am I writing about this on a running blog?! Well, because an excess of carbohydrates is something I’ve come to realize was affecting my health (and running ability) negatively, especially because athletes are often told to “load up” to maintain endurance. Now, I cut out refined sugar, white flour, and processed sweets many years ago. It’s the “healthy” carbs such as whole wheat pasta, oatmeal, and brown rice that I was living on and convinced was good for me and my athletics. I’ve come to understand, specifically through this book, that I’d do much better to increase my natural whole fat intake (saturated animal fats first, then some vegetable fats) and eliminate starchy veggies and grains. I would re-program my body to burn fat, not carbs. The LA times article puts it in a good way: “‘Carbohydrates are a metabolic bully,’ Phinney says. ‘They cut in front of fat as a fuel source and insist on being burned first. What isn’t burned gets stored as fat, and doesn’t come out of storage as long as carbs are available. And in the average American diet, they always are.’”
For running, I eat low starch veggies like butternut squash, dates, bananas, chia seeds (major protein here too), etc. I find these foods to be supremely energy giving. Raw honey can replace all those goo gels, and no potatoes, yams, or grains for me now. Not all carbs are the same! Find ones that are easily digested monosacchrides, and you’ll be good to go for miles :)
Now runners, what do you have to say about all this? Paleo runners, what’s your experience? What foods do you eat for endurance?


