Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Whole Foods

The general condition of many people I encounter at the clinic seeking relief from degenerative diseases are conditions of nutritional deficiency. How can that be in this land of plenty? No one I see appears to be starving. In fact, most are rich in calorie intake yet deficient in minerals and nutrients, despite taking multivitamins and other supplements. 

The problem is that they eat refined food. Refined is nice in a human being, but horrible in food. White flour, white sugar, refined oils - you can find these robbers of health even in organic products. Common canola and other oils, like vegetable, sunflower, and corn, are some of the worst substances you can put in your body. Try to find "convenient" foods without those ingredients and your shopping cart is likely to be pretty empty.

What to do?  Rules of  thumbs, or a large notecard:

1.  Read the label. If you see words like refined white flour or sugar, evaporated cane sugar or syrup, or any oil besides olive or grape seed, put the product back quick. 
2. Read the label. If you can't pronounce any of the ingredients or have to take a breath to get through the entire name, then those ingredients are likely not to be whole food, so don't put it into your body. Put the product back. Your body needs real to goodness food.
3. The safest place to shop are the 2 ends of the store: the produce and the freezer section. Be careful of foods in the middle aisles. 
4. Organic is better, but not if it has refined ingredients mentioned in rules 1 through 3. White organic bread is still refined flour and all the benefits have been beaten out of it. Cane products (evaporated, juiced or powder) cause inflammation and spikes in your sugar level, leaving you tired and puffy. Even if it is organic. Put it back. 

I know you are busy, but you need to learn to cook, even if simply. Those packaged foods are fast and you might find them tasty, but if you change your diet now to whole foods, you are less likely to be seeking the help of a health practitioner later. Please believe me on that one.

To good health!

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