Speaking of Zone Bars, etc., which were formulated to match the Zone diet’s protein/carbohydrate/fat ratio suggestions for a snack, how many of you out there have tried the Zone diet? Did you have success in losing weight, and/or improving your health?
10-12 years ago, I went on the Zone diet. At the time I was tipping the scales at around 170 lbs. This was heavy for me, being that I’m 5’11” , with a small frame. I really wanted to be around 155-160lbs. So, I read “Enter the Zone”, by Dr. Sears, and started to count my protein/carb/fat intake. I liked the idea of this diet as it wasn’t an all-or-nothing type of diet that calls for virtually all protein and such. Instead, it analyzed food like it was a natural type of medicine, when taken in the proper “formulation”. For breakfast I would have oatmeal with protein powder mixed in, all in the proper ratios. Almost everyday my lunch was comprised of a Yves soy hot dog for protein, perhaps a yogurt to get the carb’s, and a small amount of unsalted cashews or some avocado, to get some good fat in the meal. Less than 30 days later, I was down to around 152 lbs. This was a bit light, and I needed to increase my intake a bit to get things in proper balance. Today, I pay only loose attention to ratios, and have a genetic weakness for munchies before dinner. Damn the salt. So today I tip the scales at around 165 lbs. and have been considering hitting the Zone again. Now, all I have to do is find my book. Bad excuse, there’s stuff all over the internet about the diet. It does work.
So, are you a dieter? Have you tried many different diets? Which did you find the most effective for you? Why do you think that was?
G&L/Music content
While I am well-reputed to have very "acute 'earing"(Think John Cleese, "Yellowbeard"/jewelry), I can’t say that I hear that much difference in tone that comes from a guitars with different fret-board woods. I like maple and ebony, over rosewood, because they are more dense, and can stand up to my fingernails contacting them when fretting open chords in particular. Admittedly, I have not A/B’d guitars that have all other things equal, except fret-board woods, in order to really say unequivocally that I cannot hear an obvious difference. Also, it seems to be consensus among most guitar players that there is a difference.
Are you a player who hears a lot of difference between maple, rosewood, and ebony fret-boards? If you prefer a particular wood, is it due entirely to difference in tone, or is durability a factor?
Now, back to the fundamentals subject.
In studying a book on modes, it seems that many notable players operate within a particular favored mode, or scale progression. I’ve been enjoying messing around with harmonic minor scales after working on a passage from Randy Rhoades that’s in this particular book by "Basix". I kind of dig the sound of harmonic minors. To me they sounds very classical. And, it’s making me learn the fret-board layout much better as I work in what is an E harmonic minor, up and down the board. So far, it’s as close as I’ve come to getting sort of lost in the music as I play it. I mean this in a good way.
Question: Do you have a particular scale that you do most of your writing and/or improvising in? If you are versed, and versatile, in playing many different scales, did you start out on one particular scale that “struck a chord” with you? If you have a favorite scale to work in or off of, what is it? Forgive me if something here doesn’t make sense to you pro's, and amateurs alike, out there, as I’m very new to this.
For a porn break, here are a couple of pictures of my early ASAT. The second one shows that it's a rather early example, and presumably shared factory shop time with a few Broadcasters. As you can see, I use the fuzzy lens technique to take away the obvious signs of age on this beauty. Is it obvious that I'm not a perfectionist when it comes to taking pictures of my guitars? It's a rhetorical question.
Enjoy and pack out your trash.