There are a few places on Reddit where you can sometimes have a decent conversation, but I'd agree that it's tough to find. I don't poke my head in there much, but have been a fan of /r/saturatedfat in the past. It was initially a place to discuss Brad Marshall's (fire in a bottle) theories which started with something dubbed the croissant diet (which was ultimately a stearic acid maximization diet, although there was a lot more nuance than just that). I think that's largely been abandoned (although the studies underpinning it and much of the thought that evolved with it was really interesting). In the last couple years, HCLPLF has been discussed quite a bit there, but the real value is that it's mostly populated by people who have dabbled in a lot of different "fringe" dietary spaces so instead of everyone being a zealot for one particular diet and turning into an echo chamber, there's a very diverse range of viewpoints that get discussed in a fairly respectful way. And there is a certain irony in a space that started out maximizing saturated fat intake, evolving towards a high-carb diet preference. Although, that becomes slightly less ironic when one digs beneath the surface and realizes that a high-carb diet is probably the most fool-proof way of minimizing PUFA fat stores (and maximizing saturated fat stores) in one's body.Amber and I are friends IRL so I might shoot her a text on that. She's tried to discuss reta and metabolic affects on Reddit but with Reddit being what it is, the responses were predictable and not at all constructive to the discussion.
Your ketosis observations are interesting. Because I've been on LCHP for several years, my ketones usually hover in the 0.3-0.5 mmol range (as opposed to being LCHF where I would get as high as 3.0, but as I was actively losing large amounts of bodyfat that tracks). When I first started reta, say, the first 3 weeks, my ketones got up to 1.2 mmol but have since gone back to baseline LCHP levels, but I'm also sitting at 15.4% BF and 19.9% BMI with 113lb lean mass, so I'm running out of fat to burn. Hence my approaching titrating schedule to microdosing for the OCD benefits I've experienced.
But yes, I agree that Amber would provide a great deal of value to the conversation, as she's the most level-headed, analytical person I know. Her brain is very intimidating at times 🙂
That's useful to see you had a similar experience in regards to ketones and reta as I did. Will be interesting to see how my body responds when I'm back down at a BMI of 27 on reta and if there will be any surprises in regards to ketosis there. I have a theory that at lower BMIs reta might actually make it harder to slip into ketosis: The thinking is that you're effectively forcing your body to cope with a higher glucagon (even if it's fake glucagon) load and the only way that it will be able to do that will be an increase in insulin, which in theory should make ketosis "harder." If that were true, that would mean reta would actually be less effective than tirz once you get below a certain BMI (a tipping point, if you will), as the glucagon agonist would work against you at that point. However, reta leading to significantly greater average weight loss than tirz (at equivalent dosing) seems to disagree with my theory.... unless it turns out that most never get to a low enough weight to reach that tipping point or other metabolic factors dominate and nullify my theory (very possible).