In your lifetime of Diets, Which were you most successful with?
"Now" is because I feel I've got it all together. I understand my insulin resistance, know how to counter that, have the tools and the commitment. I'm doing extended induction because a) I have over 100lbs to lose and b) my insulin resistance, but I don't do 20g like on induction (just the choices). Reason--I work out so much, I need the calories to fuel my workouts. (That was another huge lesson, learning to eat enough and no longer calorie restrict. Caloric restriction helped cause my obesity, IMO.) I average 25-40g and give myself a rare cheat, but make that cheat sorta worth it. Such as chocolate covered nuts (lower carbs but still not on plan). I have been dreaming of an everything bagel for a while now, but know it's not worth it. I figure I'll do one meal every few months. Pay for it, but that I'll be 99.7% on target which isn't bad....
Atkins IMO is healthy, even as a high fat diet. I've come to learn that for me and many others, fat moves the fat. If I eat too lean, I don't lose. I think part of it is that we've come to think fat is bad. I don't agree. Bad fats are bad, but healthy fats are necessary. In fact, Atkins is often misrepresented as a high protein diet when it's actually a high fat/moderate protein/low carb diet. Most have a 65-75% intake of fat.
When I get to goal, my insulin resistance should be gone and I should better manage to incorporate grains and fruits, but just not yet.