I've noticed countless times over the years that eating a lot of nuts (especially cashews, almonds, and pecans, but less so macadamias) causes severe short term memory loss for the next few days after cessation. I made the catastrophic mistake of buying cashews on sale last week, which even Lumosity confirmed turned me into a slobbering moron for a few days. Fortunately, the episode has passed.
Yes, I do realize that this is heretical, because nuts are "good" paleo foods with healthy saturated fat and lots of selenium, which contribute nothing to blood sugar levels. But even plain unroasted unoiled unsalted nuts have this effect on me. Coconut is neutral. And remember, peanuts are beans, not nuts (and I avoid them on account of the aflatoxin issue).
I can't imagine what the mechanism could possibly be, except to say that we clearly did not evolve to eat copious amounts of nuts, considering the extreme physical difficulty of acquiring and opening them. In principle, they might be throwing me into ketosis, and my brain happens to work poorly without sugar. But I think it's deeper than that, because other fat sources (cheese, butter, olive oil, coconut oil, etc.) don't have this detrimental effect on me.
I thought I should bring this up because I doubt I'm the only person who has observed this, and most likely some of you health "nuts" are suffering the same effects without realizing it. They could be detracting in some huge way from many of you who, for otherwise good reason, are trying to follow ketogenic diets.
Suspects: manganese, magnesium, polyunsaturated fats, alpha linoleic acid, not sure what else...
Edited by resveratrol_guy, 07 February 2015 - 02:42 PM.