• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

  • Fitness
  • Workouts
    • Best Shoulder Workouts
    • Best Chest Workouts
    • Best Leg Workouts
    • Best Leg Exercises
    • Best Biceps Exercises
    • Best Kettlebell Exercises
    • Best Back Workouts
    • Best HIIT Workouts
    • Best Triceps Exercises
    • Best Arm Workouts
  • Reviews
    • Supplements
      • Best Pre-Workout
      • Best BCAAs
      • Best Testosterone Boosters
      • Best Bodybuilding Supplements
      • Best Creatine
      • Best Supplements for Weight Loss
      • Best Multivitamins
      • Best Collagen Supplement
      • Best Probiotic
      • Best Non-Stim Pre-Workout
      • Best Greens Powder
      • Best Magnesium Supplements
    • Protein
      • Best Protein Powder
      • Best Whey Protein
      • Best Protein Powders for Muscle Gain
      • Best Tasting Protein Powder
      • Best Vegan Protein
      • Best Mass Gainer
      • Best Protein Shakes
      • Best Organic Protein Powder
      • Best Pea Protein Powder
      • Best Protein Bars
    • Strength Equipment
      • Best Home Gym Equipment
      • Best Squat Racks
      • Best Barbells
      • Best Weightlifting Belts
      • Best Weight Benches
      • Best Functional Trainers
      • Best Dumbbells
      • Best Adjustable Dumbbells
      • Best Kettlebells
      • Best Resistance Bands
      • Best Trap Bars
    • Cardio Equipment
      • Best Cardio Machines
      • Best Rowing Machines
      • Best Treadmills
      • Best Weighted Vests
      • Concept2 RowErg Review
      • Hydrow Wave Review
      • Best Jump Ropes
  • News
  • Exercise Guides
    • Legs
      • Back Squat
      • Bulgarian Split Squat
      • Goblet Squat
      • Zercher Squat
      • Standing Calf Raise
      • Hack Squat
    • Chest
      • Bench Press
      • Dumbbell Bench Press
      • Close-Grip Bench Press
      • Incline Bench Press
    • Shoulders
      • Overhead Dumbbell Press
      • Lateral Raise
    • Arms
      • Chin-Up
      • Weighted Pull-Up
      • Triceps Pushdown
    • Back
      • Deadlift
      • Trap Bar Deadlift
      • Lat Pulldown
      • Inverted Row
      • Bent-Over Barbell Row
      • Single-Arm Dumbbell Row
      • Pendlay Row
Healthy Eating

The Paleo Mystique: Deciphering “Paleo” Eating

A mystique surrounds the ideas of eating "paleo" that often confuses people, but in reality the concept is quite simple to understand and implement, for both optimal health and performance.

Keith Norris

Written by Keith Norris Last updated on Nov 22, 2021

As a trainer, you have to make choices. Choices about what you believe, and how you will offer what you believe to the clients who pay for your help. Your choices directly impact the people who come through your doors every single day.

As a trainer, you have to make choices. Choices about what you believe, and how you will offer what you believe to the clients who pay for your help. Your choices directly impact the people who come through your doors every single day.

And I, Keith Norris, training people down here in the melting sun of Austin, Texas, believe that wellness concepts taken from our ancestors are the key to guiding what we do to stay strong, healthy, and happy in a modern world.

Or, put it this way: the last thing anyone wants from their training – be it high-level athletes or professionals running super-busy lives – is to waste time following ineffective training protocols or eating inadequate food.

From what I’ve seen, the most effective, efficient, powerful tools to come on the fitness scene since, well, maybe since ever, are paleo nutrition paired up with modern scientific understanding of how the body works, recovers, and grows.

Paleo nutrition + smartly programmed workouts.

The most effective fitness pair ever.

By far.

So, what does that mean? Give me a minute and I’ll dive in with you to take a look around at what I like to call the “Paleo Mystique.”

Paleo Diet

By now, many breakingmuscle.com readers have at least heard of the paleo diet.

And I’d venture to guess just as many of those same readers are utterly confused as to what it actually means. I hear those confusions all the time. “Paleo, it’s basically Atkins, right?” Or, “It’s all meat and fruit.” Or, my favorite, “I’ve heard about that diet. You just eat roots and tree bark, like cavemen.”

Uh, no. The fact of the matter is that paleo may be the simplest diet you’ve ever encountered, even if it is caught in its own “mystique” and a lingering lack of broad exposure.

The basic premise is this: like all species, we evolved to thrive within a very specific ecological niche. Our bodies were built to withstand rigorous daily physical demands, fueled by the consumption of animal proteins and fat, vegetables and tubers, and scant amounts of nuts, seeds, and fruit.

These were not choices driven by any sense of morality, but simply choices of availability and survival.

paleo nutrition, paleo food, ancestral diet, ancestral movement, paleo

Okay, so what’s so “mystique-building” about that diet? We ate animals and whatever plant food we could scrounge – makes sense, right? Well, it turns out it’s not what we did eat that makes the paleo approach unique, it’s what we DIDN’T EAT.

Many of the common foods we now consume, and which make up a massive percentage of the general human diet, have only been eaten for the past 10,000 years or so, and were rarely if ever eaten during the preceding 200,000 to seven million years we’ve roamed the planet.

The big dietary bomb that paleo delivers is that our species evolved on a diet free of grains, legumes, and dairy.

So, if we are at all concerned with re-establishing our original guidelines of health, we begin with a diet that highlights good fats, animal proteins, vegetables and roots, and eliminates grains, legumes and dairy.

Big change, right? Bombshell, you might say. Grains? Legumes? Aren’t these the very foundation of the USDA food pyramid? Well, yes, indeed they are.

Which then begs the question, “Are the dietary recommendations prescribed by the food pyramid in any way legitimate?” Those of us who adhere to the paleo diet would answer in an unrepentant and resounding, “No.”

Not for enhanced athletic performance or body composition, and absolutely not for optimized health. And we have a plethora of empirical findings and evidence-based science to back this contention.

All of which is sure to bring on arguments. Which, believe me, I hear all the time. “But my grandmother ate grains, and she lived to be ninety!” Sure she did, but did she live disease and pain free?

Was she able to completely avoid “diseases of modernity” including obesity, diabetes, dementia, arthritis, sarcopenia (muscle wasting), high blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease? Remember, there is a profound difference between mere survival and thriving.

Zoo-kept animals merely survive, whereas animals left to their own devices, un-tampered with in their natural habitats, live optimal, vibrant lives. We, too, are endowed with that same possibility – if we only choose to move and eat appropriately.

Paleo Is A Baseline Template For Health And Nutrition

And let’s be clear, paleo is not Atkins, and it’s not a “woo-woo” diet, and it’s not a dogma.

It’s a strong set of theories and a baseline template for health and nutrition. How you play around with that template is your own concern, as long as you don’t get away from the foundational principles. You can tweak endlessly according to your goals.

For instance, a person concerned with control of blood glucose levels due to the complications of diabetes would be best served to follow a very low carbohydrate version of the paleo diet – a diet proportioned more in favor of good fats and animal proteins – whereas a high-performing endurance athlete would do well to take the opposite approach, downing a higher carbohydrate content version of the diet.

Note, though, that both “versions” of paleo still avoid the intake of grains, legumes, and (in some instances) dairy.

And while the health conscious individual will look to minimize insulin spikes resulting from the ingestion of higher glycemic foods (honey, for instance; bananas, too), those looking to maximize overall performance and quicker recovery might want to actually encourage an insulin spike at specific times, especially immediately following a strenuous workout.

All easily accomplished, of course, while still avoiding the health problems associated with the ingestion of grains, legumes, and dairy.

paleo nutrition, paleo food, ancestral diet, ancestral movement, paleo

Looking beyond health, for a performance edge? Yeah, paleo is for you, too.

Endurance capabilities are greatly enhanced by maintaining the body as a fat-burning V-8 engine rather than a sugar-burning sewing machine. Once this enzymatic shift is made, “bonking” – the low-blood-sugar-event scourge of all endurance athletics – is a thing of the past.

Performance nutrition is all about maximizing nutrient density per calorie ingested, and no diet exceeds in providing that all-important ratio like paleo.

As an added bonus, once the body has become super-sensitized to the hormones insulin and leptin, these hormones can then be purposely manipulated for desired performance outcomes.

For example, producing a high insulin spike in an otherwise low insulin environment has a dramatic effect on the shuttling of nutrients into hungry muscle cells (as opposed to fat cells) – exactly what’s called for in post-workout recovery and for muscle gain.

This requires no other “magic” than simply ingesting higher-glycemic-value foods as part of one’s post-workout recovery plan. Simple and cheap, yet a highly effective performance enhancement strategy.

So where does this leave someone who would like to further explore the health and performance benefits of a paleo way of eating?

Must one return to a life of the cave and spear to reap paleo’s benefits? Hardly. Simply begin by eating a diet laden with animal proteins and seafood, good fats (including olive and coconut oils, avocados, butter, and cream), vegetables, leaves, and tubers (sweet potatoes and parsnips, for example).

If one is not concerned with dropping body fat, feel free to toss in some nuts – almonds and walnuts are great choices – and a smattering of fruit. The tip of the sciencey-geeky iceberg is this: we’re looking to control the hormones insulin and leptin, and put the brakes on systemic inflammation – the root of all “diseases of modernity,” and a huge detriment to athletic performance and optimum body composition.

So whether you’re looking to simply be fit, trim and healthy, or seeking that all-important performance edge, paleo is for you. Begin with the basic grain, legume, and dairy-free template, then tweak and tinker from there as your goals and desires dictate.

Refuse to be a zoo animal, destined to a life of mere survival. Claim your birthright of optimal living, and begin that process by nourishing yourself with the foods you were designed to eat.

Keith Norris

About Keith Norris

At age fifteen, Texan Keith Norris was already involved in one of the premier fitness and weight training scenes in the country - Powerhouse Gym, a legendary bodybuilding, training, and powerlifting mecca in San Antonio that launched the careers of athletes like Ms. Olympia Rachel McLish, Lori Bowen-Rice, and many others.

A knee injury derailed Keith’s career as a linebacker at Texas State, but his experience rehabbing and working with some of the best strength coaches in the country continued to increase his interest in intelligent body development. In 2010, after navigating a successful nine-year military and fifteen-year corporate career, Keith was finally able to follow up on his lifelong dedication to training and come on board Efficient Exercise as a partner and regional manager.

Anyone who trains with Keith instantly recognizes the depth of his knowledge, experience, and the intuition he brings to the process. He seems to know exactly what it is that you need to continually progress toward your strongest, leanest self. And you can feel that he enjoys it - all of it, the teaching, the relationships, and his own training - in every fiber of who he is.

Keith is also one of the leading figures in the exploding paleo nutrition and health movement. His tireless work promoting paleo principles is what allowed him to reach out to paleo celebrities like Robb Wolf and Mark Sisson to pull together 2012’s super symposium, PaleoFX12. Anyone who attended PFX12 could quickly see from the line of athletes, peers, and wide-eyed newbies that lined up to speak to Keith, that he is truly on the pulse of new exciting developments in the fitness field.

Keith’s blog, Ancestral Momentum - Theory to Practice, is internationally popular, and he is a regular guest on many of the premier media sites for new approaches to nutrition and body development. And, if you’re lucky enough to live in Austin, you not only know Keith from the Internet, you have direct access to one of the best trainers in the world. Keith also apprentices every trainer who works for EE, so no matter who you work with, you’ll experience “The Keith Norris Method” infused throughout Efficient Exercise.

And he has four little foo-foo dogs.

View All Articles

Related Posts

Chris Bumstead poses in a hallway with a cinematic-like shot in Spring 2022
Check Out Bodybuilder Chris Bumstead’s 5,000-Calorie Day of Eating Ahead of the 2022 Mr. Olympia
scotcheggs2
Protein Powerhouse: Gluten-Free Mexican Scotch Eggs
carrotcr
Mash for GAINZ: 4 Simple Recipes for Performance
110434119521750614896973407503735308582943o
CrossFitters: The 3 Letters You Need to Know in Supplements

Primary Sidebar

Latest Articles

New Year’s Fitness Sales (2025)

XWERKS Motion BCAA Review (2025): A Registered Dietitian’s Honest Thoughts

Assault Fitness AssaultBike Pro X Review (2025): Assault’s Best Bike Yet?

13 Best Exercise Bikes for Home Gyms (2025)

Transparent Labs BCAA Glutamine Review (2025): The Key to Post-Workout Recovery?

Latest Reviews

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt Review (2025)

Omre NMN + Resveratrol, Lifeforce Peak NMN, and partiQlar NMN on a red background

Best NMN Supplement: Fountain of Youth in a Bottle? (2025)

The Titan Series Adjustable Bench on a red background

Titan Series Adjustable Bench Review (2025)

A photo of the NordicTrack Select-a-Weight Dumbbells on a red background

NordicTrack Adjustable Dumbbell Review (2025): Are These Value Dumbbells Worth It?

woman lifting barbell

Be the smartest person in your gym

The Breaking Muscle newsletter is everything you need to know about strength in a 3 minute read.

I WANT IN!

Breaking Muscle is the fitness world’s preeminent destination for timely, high-quality information on exercise, fitness, health, and nutrition. Our audience encompasses the entire spectrum of the fitness community: consumers, aficionados, fitness professionals, and business owners. We seek to inform, educate and advocate for this community.

  • Reviews
  • Healthy Eating
  • Workouts
  • Fitness
  • News

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS Feed

© 2025 · Breaking Muscle · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy · Affiliate Disclaimer · Accessibility · About