The last stage of the food side of the program is the move toward balanced eating. Carbohydrate stops being the number you watch, and foods you have not touched for weeks come back: pasta, potatoes, bread, the sweeter fruits. It is a real change and a welcome one, and it is also harder to do well than it looks. This guide is about why, and how to handle it.
What balanced means here
Balanced means you are no longer steering by carbohydrate at all. There is no new carb target to stay under the way there was on keto or low carb. What does not go away is your daily calorie number. That single limit now does all the work the carb limit used to share, which is why balanced can feel looser and turn out to be tighter than people expect.
Why these foods are difficult
The foods that come back have three properties worth understanding before you lean on them. The first is that they are calorie-dense for their volume: pasta, bread and potatoes carry a lot of calories in a normal-looking serving, so an ordinary plate can use up most of a day's budget without looking like much. The second is that they tend not to satisfy you the way the simple proteins did. They leave you wanting more of the same rather than full, so the next portion is harder to refuse than the first. The third is that they are difficult to portion at all.
The portioning problem, plainly
Bread is the clear example. You rarely cut one slice and stop, and that is the whole difficulty in a single food. If stopping at one slice came easily to you, the weight would probably never have been a problem to begin with. So the task at this stage is not to avoid these foods, which is not the point of balanced eating, but to keep them inside a calorie budget while they are pulling you to have more. That is a real skill, and it is different from the skill of keto, which mostly worked by leaving the tempting foods off the list entirely.
Treat it as its own stage, not the finish
The mistake is to read balanced as the part where the rules switch off and you have arrived. It is better understood as another stage with its own challenge, which is eating the harder foods without overshooting your number. You will get it wrong sometimes, eat past the budget, notice, and adjust. That is normal and expected. Plenty of people need a few goes before balanced eating becomes steady, and needing more than one attempt is part of the process, not a sign that anything has failed.