Falling Off the Wagon

Morning numbers:
B6.8 / K0.1 – Ketones need to be above 1.0
No glucose detected.

Not terrible. Not great either.

Yesterday was a good reminder of something easy to forget.

Made muffins.
Off-the-shelf mix.
Licked the bowl like a 8-year-old.
Picked at the crumbs after they came out.

Breakfast was baked beans.
Then a couple of stolen chips off a plate.
Kumera. Potato.

Nothing dramatic. No “falling off the wagon”.
Just… normal behaviour in a busy house.

That’s the point.

Keto advice assumes a controlled environment:

  • own meals
  • own ingredients
  • clean prep space
  • no cross-traffic

That’s not how a family kitchen works.

A family kitchen is:

  • tasting while cooking
  • finishing leftovers
  • eating what’s there
  • grabbing something quick
  • not wasting food
  • cooking for someone else first

And those little moments add up.

Not in big obvious ways.
In tiny, forgettable ones.

A lick of batter.
A spoon of beans.
A couple of chips.

Individually nothing.
Together… enough.

There’s also the cost.

Keto cooking properly:

  • almond meal
  • cheeses
  • meats
  • substitutes

It’s more expensive.
Harder to scale across a family.
Harder to justify when others don’t need it.

So the reality becomes:

  • one kitchen
  • two food systems
  • constant overlap

And that overlap is where things break down.

This isn’t about willpower.
It’s about environment.

Keto works best when the system supports it.
A family kitchen rarely does.

So the adjustment isn’t perfection.
It’s awareness.

Noticing the small slips.
Understanding where they come from.
Designing around them over time.

Because in a real home…

Keto is not just a diet problem.
It’s an environment problem.

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