Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Why does your kid get sick?

















Why does your child get sick?


Here are some possible answers:
-germs
-allergies
-doesn’t clean his/her hands enough, etc.

Now here’s a totally different kind of list:
-poor eating habits
-doesn’t sleep enough
-depressed immune system
-too much stress
-decreased nervous system function

What’s the difference between the two lists? One is
-‘outside in’ thinking (Western medicine: treat the symptom approach)
-the other one is ‘inside-out’ thinking.(Eastern medicine or look for the cause approach)

When your child gets a headache, is it because she doesn’t have enough aspirin, Tylenol, or ibuprofen in her body? If that’s not the reason, then why do you give her a ‘pain inhibitor’?

When your child gets a fever, is that a good thing or a bad thing? If it’s a good thing, then 95% of the time you don’t over react or do anything right? Or do you react like it’s a bad thing and give your child an ‘anti-pyretic’ (once again, Tylenol, ibuprofen or aspirin…which and anti-fever…and reduce it).

WATCH AND WAIT=INSIDE-OUT THINKING
FREAK OUT AND REACT IMMEDIATELY WITH A PILL =OUTSIDE-IN THINKING
Inside-outers honor the body’s healing abilities
Outside-inners like to get rid of symptoms immediately

Want to try something different? Find ways to help your child be ‘healthier’…
-eat better
-sleep more
-get their nervous system checked by a pediatric chiropractor
-(like you did with a pediatric dentist for their teeth)
-find ways to de-stress
-get them out in nature more and around the TV and video games less

Symptoms are actually good. Their like the warning lights in your car telling you to pay attention and find out how you can help treat the body better.

Get the picture?

Our bodies were made to be healthy. We just need to help them out from time to time and not make it worse with all kinds of medicines and over the counter crap from the drugstore.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Bread is good for you, right?



"We actually ruin every meal of the day with one of the most antigenic foods on the planet, bread."

The Bread Trap
Pathways Magazine

Bread is a vehicle. In a sandwich, it drives other food neatly and with little spillage into a bag or wrapper, into a lunchbox, and then into the mouth. A popular meal while driving, the sandwich can be sort of neatly eaten with one hand while the other hand sort of competently manages the steering wheel. Bread envelops. It absorbs excess liquids, and shapes the contents within for optimal handling. And that’s just for lunch.

Later, at dinner, when eating tends to be somewhat more formal, often with some sauce or other potential messiness sitting on a plate, there is sometimes a desire to wipe up the last drop of liquid with an edible sponge. Again, bread serves a purpose. Lightweight, dry and fresh enough at room temperature (at least for a while), bread travels well and sits neatly on a shelf. No wonder that bread and similar wheat products, sweetened or plain, are ubiquitous throughout much of the world and the darling of the processed food industry. Bread takes on many forms: loaf, bagel, doughnut, muffin, pasta, croissant, fry bread, roll and even birthday cake. Bread and other wheat-flour products are among the most common breakfast foods.

The History of Bread

By 4000 B.C., wheat cultivation had spread from the Fertile Crescent of the Middle East through much of the world. Until modern food distribution and storage was developed, it played an essential role in sustaining populations through long periods between harvests, when there was no other food. This, in turn, enabled nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle into permanent communities, and to even trade away excess wheat with outsiders. Wheat’s utility in the problem of seasonal famines ensured its continual increase in acreage until the present day, when it has reached a peak of cultivated acreage.

However, the wheat our ancestors ate was different in form, quantity and antigenicity from what people eat today. Until the 19th century, a very recent time in human history, wheat was generally mixed with other grains, beans and nuts. Only in the last 200 years has pure wheat flour with high gluten content been milled to the point of refined white flour. Generally, the wheat people eat today is no longer stone-ground from whole meal flour, as even our recent ancestors ate. Almost all of us alive today have been given white wheat-flour products on a daily basis from a few months of age—before our intestinal lining can properly filter anything other than mother’s milk to our bloodstream.

For many years, the USDA’s food pyramid was dead-weighted with the absurdly large 11 servings of grains and grain products. The average person took this satire of a diet seriously, and actually ate up all that bread, bringing it into every meal—and snacks, as well.


An Inescapable Trap

Even if an individual attempts to eliminate all grains from her diet except for stone-ground grain, it’s too late. The high-gluten, refined grain that we have all eaten from infancy has created a ubiquitous problem, from the gut to the bloodstream to the brain…and sometimes the joints, cardiovascular system and endocrine system, as well. The food sensitivity that our culture has dropped on us has done the kind of damage that leaves no easily identifying marks. Bread inflicts wounds so subtly and gradually that most of us consider ourselves immune to any such damage.

The huge and complex gluten protein, especially its gliadin fraction, is thought to be the worst problem in the glutencontaining grains. The proportion of gluten in wheat has been enormously increased by hybridization since our distant ancestors first started making food from wild grasses. Gluten’s name comes from the Greek word for glue, and its adhesive, elastic property is the very thing that holds a loaf of bread or bite of cake together. But when that glue hits the intestines, it interferes with the breakdown and absorption of nutrients in the accompanying foods of the same meal. And because gluten is of almost no nutritional value itself—nutrients having been bred out in favor of its adhesive properties—little value is gained from that meal. At best, even the person who considers himself immune to wheat allergy is getting a worthless, glued-together, constipating lump in the gut from what was considered a nourishing meal. A run-down, mildly fatigued feeling is a constant symptom of adults with the most minor reaction to wheat. We actually ruin every meal of the day with one of the most antigenic foods on the planet.

At worst, such diseases as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis and lymphoma can result from severe celiac disease or extreme gluten sensitivity. Less severe reactions are experienced by many who may have occasional unexplained diarrhea or intestinal gas and bloating, vague joint pains, infertility or brain fog.

In order to effectively replace wheat in our lifestyle, we need to find a way to mimic some of the adhesive/elastic properties of wheat flour and bread products. A sandwich thus becomes a lettuce wrap, or its contents are placed on a plate or in a bowl. Meats, vegetables and fruits play a more prominent role. A spoon is ready to scoop up the last of the sauce on the dinner plate. Lunch goes into a thermos.

You can make a lot of extra work for yourself by going to the supermarket and attempting to replace all of the breads and desserts in a typical diet with gluten-free grains, but you’ll still be getting a nutritionally depleted meal—poor compensation for spending extra time reading processed food packages for gluten content. The whole-food solution is the simplest and most nourishing. Shop the produce aisle and the meat counter, and let those purchases alone comprise your diet. It will make you discover new and delicious vegetables that you have never tried before, and it will set you free from the bread trap.