Why I Chose to Eat Only Whole Plants

Why I Chose to Eat Only Whole Plants

A Simple, Risk-Based Approach to Nutrition

There is a lot of noise online about diet.

Arguments about vegan, vegetarian, keto, carnivore, and everything in between dominate social media. Definitions blur. Ideology mixes with nutrition. And extremes get rewarded with attention.

So let me be clear and simple:

I eat only whole plants.

  • No meat
  • No dairy
  • No processed or packaged junk food

Not because of ideology.
Not because of trends.
And not because I think this is the only way to eat.

I chose this approach because it is simple and represents the lowest-risk strategy based on available evidence.


What I Mean by “Whole Plants”

When I say “whole plants,” I mean:

  • Vegetables
  • Fruits
  • Legumes (beans, lentils, peas)
  • Whole grains
  • Nuts
  • Seeds

That’s it.

This is not:

  • Ultra-processed vegan food
  • Packaged “plant-based” junk
  • A moral or environmental argument

This is a health decision, framed through simplicity and risk management.


Why Labels Don’t Matter

You can technically be “vegan” and still eat poorly.

  • White bread
  • Fried foods
  • Sugar
  • Refined oils
  • Processed plant-based products

That’s not what I’m doing.

I don’t focus on labels.

I focus on inputs.

Whole plants are the input.


The Two Reasons I Chose This Strategy

There are only two reasons:

  1. Simplicity
  2. Risk management

No ideology required.


Reason #1: Simplicity Wins Over Time

As life gets busier, complexity becomes the enemy.

The more rules, cycles, and hacks a diet has, the harder it is to sustain.

Eating whole plants removes decision fatigue.

I don’t think about what I can’t eat.
I only think about what I do eat.

“Consistency beats complexity. Simple systems survive busy lives.”


Reason #2: A Conservative Approach to Nutrition

My thinking is influenced by risk management.

I don’t wait for perfect data.
I make decisions based on probabilities.

This is the same way I approach investing.

And it applies directly to nutrition.


What the Evidence Suggests

Across decades of research, a consistent pattern appears:

Diets rich in whole plants are associated with:

  • Better weight management
  • Lower cardiovascular disease risk
  • Improved metabolic health
  • Healthier gut microbiome

Whole plant foods are:

  • High in fiber
  • Rich in phytonutrients
  • Dense in micronutrients

Fiber alone plays a major role in digestive and metabolic health—and most people don’t get enough.

Whole plants solve that naturally.


Why I Avoid Meat and Dairy

There are strong online opinions claiming:

  • Meat is harmless
  • Saturated fat isn’t a concern
  • Observational research is invalid

I take a different view.

Not because those arguments are impossible—but because waiting for perfect data is unrealistic.

We act on the best available evidence.

From my perspective:

  • Meat and dairy can make weight management harder
  • There is credible evidence linking them to chronic disease risk
  • The downside risk is not zero

Could I be wrong? Yes.

But if long-term data is directionally correct, I don’t want to be on the wrong side of that probability.


Nutrition as Risk Management

I treat food like a long-term investment decision.

Some areas of life allow risk.

Food is not one of them.

Whole plants represent:

  • A low-risk dietary strategy
  • High nutrient density
  • A system that works without micromanagement

Why This Works for Me

Current stats:

  • Age: 58
  • Height: 165 cm
  • Weight: 61 kg
  • Waist: 73 cm

Same body composition as high school.

Diet:

  • 3 meals per day
  • No fasting
  • No calorie tracking

Approximate intake:

  • ~2,200 calories
  • 100g protein
  • <1,000 mg sodium
  • 70g fiber

“Simple inputs. Long-term consistency. Results that compound.”


Satiety Without Overeating

Whole plant foods provide natural satiety.

They:

  • Keep me full
  • Reduce overeating
  • Stabilize appetite

No hacks.
No restriction.

The system does the work.


Supplements as a Safety Net

I supplement strategically:

  • Vitamin B12
  • Vitamin D3
  • Zinc
  • Magnesium
  • Omega-3 (algae oil)

This is not a contradiction.

It’s risk management.


Could I Be Wrong?

Yes.

But the key question is asymmetry:

  • If I’m wrong → downside is small
  • If the data is right → downside of ignoring it is large

That imbalance matters.

I don’t need certainty.

I need a strategy that works over decades.


Final Thought

This is not advice.
This is not a prescription.

It’s simply how I choose to eat.

I value:

  • Simplicity
  • Consistency
  • Risk minimization

Eating whole plants aligns with all three.

It keeps life simple.
It supports health.
And results compound over time.


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