can i ask for those who regained it. what was the reason you regained your weight? and did you finish all the steps?
Did I finish all the steps? No... :sigh: I made the classic mistake of coming off the diet when I went on holiday without having a proper plan in place. It's depressingly common to see people do Cambridge 100% for months on end who then come off for one occasion or another and then struggle like crazy to get back aboard the Cambridge wagon.
The trouble with Cambridge is that it lulls you into a false sense of security. Because you don't feel as hungry while you're doing it, largely because of ketosis, you kid yourself that you'll
never want to eat the same quantities of food you used to be able to eat before you lost weight. You tell yourself that your stomach's shrunk, that you just couldn't cram that stuff in anymore. You tell yourself that you've worked out the head stuff and that you've learned your lesson - that abstaining from food was a drastic measure, but you'll never have to do it again because you're certain that from here on in, you won't eat as much.
Except... you'll have had all those thoughts while abstaining from those addicting little things called carbs.

And I use that word 'addicting' on purpose - I swear that many of us are addicted to the bl**dy things. Because the moment you reintroduce them, if you're not incredibly careful, you'll be straight back on the slippery slope to regaining weight. That's why it really is important to leave the diet by going up the steps, to reintroduce carbs into your diet in a controlled manner.
I don't know about other people here, but I didn't regain the weight really quickly. Well, okay, I regained about a stone pretty quickly during that holiday in Cornwall - no surprise really, because around six pounds of that is due to refilling of glycogen stores in the liver (maybe a pound and a bit's worth of carb bound to four times its own weight in water), plus another few of pounds of water retention because of the reintroduction of salt - plus maybe four pounds' worth of genuine weight gain.
But then after that, it was a slow but steady increase over the months that followed, maybe at a rate of a couple of pounds a month, which in calorie terms only equates to 7,000 extra calories a month - 230 extra calories a day - an average intake of maybe 2100 calories a day. Doesn't sound like loads, does it? A couple of extra biscuits a day. But that's enough to make you gain a couple of pounds a month. Nearly 2 stones in a year...
So... when I get there this time - and I will, no matter how long it takes me, no matter how many times I screw up

- I will work my way up the steps like you're supposed to. And then I'll settle down to living with the fact that I will never be able to eat whatever I want, whenever I want if I want to stay slim.

That a couple of hundred extra calories a day will make me gain weight. But actually, naturally slim people already know that. So I've just got to learn to think like a naturally slim person.
