Why are so many people suddenly walking away from the carnivore diet? Sarah Franklin and I break down the truth behind the trend.
If you’ve ever felt confused or frustrated about “doing carnivore the right way,” this episode will give you some clarity.
TLDW: This is the insulin stimulation issue we have discussed before. Eating enough protein at one time to stimulate enough insulin periodically is the key.
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Title: "Why is everyone QUITTING CARNIVORE?!"
Participants:
- Host Courtney Luna
- Sarah Franklin — nutritionist, 7 years carnivore; prior work in pharmaceutical industry with training in diabetes/cardiology at the International Diabetes Center.
Core Question:
- Are people quitting because “carnivore is the problem,” or because of unresolved root causes and common implementation mistakes?
Key Points From Sarah Franklin:
- Many who “feel better adding carbs back” may be masking unresolved issues rather than fixing root causes.
- Frequent pattern observed: undereating protein despite being on a meat-based diet; ramping up protein capacity often takes time.
- Early keto messaging overemphasized fat; chronically low insulin (from very low glucose exposure) can paradoxically keep blood sugar higher since insulin’s job is to lower blood glucose.
- The body can derive glucose from meat via gluconeogenesis; therefore, “needing carbs” is not a given.
- Fasting is often misapplied: some who struggle on carnivore are actually over-fasting (or still fasting) and then blaming carnivore.
- Meal timing matters: eating earlier aligns with higher insulin sensitivity and circadian rhythms; long late-day fasting windows may work against hormones.
- Hydration & electrolytes: carbs retain water; adding carbs can make people feel better quickly due to hydration and electrolytes rather than carbohydrate necessity. More protein intake requires more water; inadequate electrolytes/water can drive symptoms.
- Fat leanness: staying “super-lean” or consistently choosing very lean cuts can cause issues; appropriate dietary fat is part of making carnivore sustainable.
- Fructose consideration: even without a blood glucose spike, fructose can drive visceral fat (liver-directed metabolism); lack of a glucose spike ≠ lack of harm.
- Biomarkers can mislead:
- Blood work (glucose/ketones) is variable across the day.
- HbA1c may appear higher in some carnivores potentially due to red blood cell longevity (mentioned as a possibility; not presented as certain).
- Emphasis on assessing visceral fat/internal health rather than only labs.
- Symptom-led troubleshooting over diet-label changes:
- Examine what and when you’re eating, total protein, fat level, hydration/electrolytes.
- Consider stress, sleep, and broader endocrine context (adrenals, thyroid, sex hormones) — blood sugar regulation is upstream in the cascade.
- Digestive support/gut issues and individualized adjustments may be needed.
- “Feeling better” after carb reintroduction does not necessarily mean carbs are the solution; could reflect hydration/electrolyte changes or temporary relief rather than addressing the root problem.
Named Individuals/References (as discussed in-video):
- Mentions of community figures and perspectives, including:
- Nutrition with Judy (Judy Cho)
- Dr. Paul Saladino (noted early views)
- Dr. Sean O’Mara (visceral fat focus)
- No specific scientific papers or DOIs are cited in the discussion.
Actionable Themes (as stated by the guest):
- Prioritize adequate protein and appropriate fat.
- Avoid misapplied or excessive fasting while blaming the diet.
- Align meal timing with circadian insulin sensitivity (earlier eating).
- Ensure hydration/electrolytes scale with protein intake.
- Focus on visceral fat and internal health, not just fluctuating lab numbers.
- Address root causes (stress, sleep, hormones, digestion) rather than switching diets at the first sign of discomfort.