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Archive for May, 2007

Schiff Bio Foods Breast Health 60 caps

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Schiff Bio Foods Breast Health 60 caps
Product Description: The Breast Health Formula Provides Calcium D-Glucarate, The Patented Form Of Glucaric Acid, A Substance Found Naturally In The Body. Calcium D-Glucarate Assists In The Removal Of Unwanted Compounds From Our Systems.* Boron Plays A Role In The Healthy Metabolism Of Calcium.* A Number Of Antioxidants, Such As Soy Isoflavones, Selenium, Citrus Bioflavonoids, Green Tea And Rosemary Extracts Were Added To Help Protect The Body’S Cells From Free Radical Damage And Facilitate The Health Of A Woman’S Body.*

Alternative Medicine: How to deal with a bodily imbalance? Eat betterSeattle Post Intelligencer, WA – 19 hours agoThe university’s Seattle teaching clinic, Bastyr Center for Natural Health, is the Northwest’s largest natural medicine clinic. .

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Profound Chinese Medicine

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Cheng Koh grew up with Chinese Medicine in Singapore. Her father
owned an herb dispensary, and her grandmother was a village
barefoot doctor, taking pulses and subscribing herbs. “She
taught my father a lot about Chinese Herbal Medicine. As a child
growing up, anytime that I was sick it was off to my Father’s
herbal dispensary and if he can’t cure us then we were off to
see the Western Doctor! So I grew up with Chinese Medicine first
and Western Medicine last. Today, most of us use Western
Medicine first and Chinese Medicine as a last resort.”

Chinese medicine was just a part of Cheng’s life, and little did
she know at the time that it was her destiny. “I grew up
surrounded by Chinese Herbs and unexplained and un-clarified
dietary advice. I never thought that I would practice
Traditional Chinese Medicine, but when the opportunity was
presented to me I was drawn to the subject like a magnet; I have
not stopped since. It became important to understand the
unexplained and the unclarified principles that I was taught
from childhood. It has become a great part of my life today and
I value the teachings and the profound knowledge of Traditional
Chinese Medicine.”

Cheng studied Traditional Chinese Medicine in Canada with a
Chinese Doctor in Toronto. In 1988, she began her clinical
practice, and by 1994 she was doing her advanced clinical
studies in Shanghai, China, under the guidance of medical
masters, working in an out-patient clinic of Shanghai First
People’s Hospital. Cheng also broadened her knowledge with
continuing education in Japanese and Korean acupuncture
techniques studying with many renowned practitioners. With a
background in Aesthetics (trained in London) she uses her
knowledge today in Facial Rejuvenation treatments using
acupuncture. Cheng has taught professionally at the Canadian
College of Naturopathic Medicine and the Canadian Memorial
Chiropractic College. She is a regular guest lecturer at York
University in Toronto. She started the Acupuncture and
Traditional Chinese Medicine Institute in 1995, bringing in
world renowned speakers for TCM, Qigong and TaiChi.

Chinese Medicine has a tradition spanning over 5,000 years, and
incorporates several modalities. “This I call the ancient art of
healing,” says Cheng. “It is a complete system on its own using
Acupuncture, Chinese Herbal Medicine, massage, nutrition,
exercise with Qigong and TaiChi, and meditation. These
techniques all focus on regulating and controlling the flow and
balance of energy, Qi. This is the goal and essence of
Traditional Chinese Medicine: harmony and balance. Our bodies
become ill when we are not in harmony and balance. Chinese
medical theory allows for preventative therapy. If you think
back on how the Chinese emperors had their physicians by their
side, they were there to keep them healthy. That was their role.
This medicine excels in its preventative therapy.”

Unfortunately, the Western tendency is to seek out medical help
only when there is a problem. This mindset is actively promoted
by the “see-your-doctor” commercial media, that focuses
attention on cures and balms, rather than promoting a
preventative approach to overall health. “And, worse than that,”
says Cheng, “Patients only seek help from Chinese medicine when
Western medicine cannot help. Very seldom in clinical practice
do I get a patient walking in saying, ‘I really don’t have
anything serious, but my parents weren’t so healthy. Could you
assess me and maybe find a way to keep me healthy?’ Traditional
Chinese Medical practitioners spend an hour to an hour and a
half in consultation to assess your constitutional health and
your health concerns. It is our belief that: the further back
you look the further forward you can see. The ability to read a
body before structural damage occurs enables Chinese Medicine to
prevent disease before it develops or to slow down the
progression of generative diseases. We tend to want to treat the
root cause of a problem, not just the manifestations of signs
and symptoms. ”

This individualization is something Western medicine cannot
accommodate, since the entire system focuses on getting a
diagnosis that matches a known condition that then can be
administered a drug. “The Traditional Chinese practitioner feels
your pulse observes your tongue and face, studies your health
history to determine your constitutional health and determines
the kinds of imbalances that you have in the body,” says Cheng.
“Obviously, Western medicine has its place–I think it’s really
good for emergency and acute conditions when you need to correct
something right away.”

Because most people seek out Chinese medicine in the hope of
getting some immediate assistance from symptoms, many practitioners
have resorted to a “cookbook” type of prescription. Cheng
stresses it is important treat the whole person, history and
all, over time. “When you take into account a patient’s basic
constitutional health, it enables you to prescribe
individualized treatment whether it be a point prescription for
acupuncture or a herbal prescription customized for that
patient’s pattern of disharmony.”

“One of the biggest mistakes that I have encountered is the
self-prescribing Chinese Herbs,” says Cheng. “There have been
many articles written about the efficacy of certain herbs, and
has resulted in the Western Herbal manufacturers making remedies
focusing on one singular herb. In Chinese Herbal Medicine
formulations are made up of four or heavier herbs, and have a
particular purpose of harmonizing, balancing the body, and
offsetting the effects of other herbal medicines in a particular
prescription. We usually do not prescribe singular herbs. It is
also not advisable to go to a health food store to buy a Chinese
Herb because of an article in a magazine. Herbs have certain
properties and can create a greater imbalance in your body.”

Cheng points out that Chinese medicine is all about energy, and
correcting the subtle imbalances occurring on the day-to-day,
rather than waiting until the imbalances turn into measurable
and miserable conditions. “If you look at statistics, you’ll see
that Chinese women suffer less during menopause, because all the
little imbalances and problems that arise from their menstrual
cycle and changes in life are very much corrected as you go. So
a lot of Chinese women traditionally change their diet. They
know what to do, and make adjustments through their life–try to
keep the theory of moderation in their lifestyle.”

“Chinese medicine is very logical in its explanation of how
things work,” says Cheng. “For example, we call something like
‘Qi stagnation,’ energy that is ’stuck,’ and does not move
properly. I like to use this analogy: Imagine Qi and blood in
the body to be like traffic moving on a highway–smooth flow, no
congestion, everybody gets to where they need to go. Congestion,
slowing down of traffic, will lead to traffic jams. A traffic
jam is similar to serious health problems like heart attacks,
strokes, tumors, cancers, etcetera. We treat when your traffic
is slowing down. Western Medicine treats traffic jams. A common
example can be seen in pre-menstrual syndrome with breast
swelling and distension, mood swings, bloating and menstrual
cramps. These symptoms are not acceptable to Chinese Medicine as
it indicates that the Qi and blood do not flow freely.”

Cheng stresses that the entire approach to health with Chinese
medicine is to create balance–not just in the body, but in
life. “Promoting smooth flow of Qi throughout the whole body can
be achieved through lifestyle changes, practicing moderation in
all aspects of our lives, whether it is diet, emotions, or work;
or a balance between personal life and working life. Anything
excessive is not good because your body will eventually suffer
from it.”

From the Chinese medicine perspective, adopting the balancing
lifestyle for a person should go beyond practitioner treatments.
“Tai chi, Qigong and Yoga are the three foremost exercises for the
promotion of Qi & blood flow,” says Cheng. “Qi and blood moves
freely through the body when the body is in a calm, relaxed
state. Any exercise that puts your body in a tense state–like
playing squash, rock climbing— any activity that puts your
tendons and muscles in a tight, tense position for too long,
will eventually create joint problems. Those who like those
forms of tense exercises or working out in a gym need also to do
the Tai Chi, Qigong or Yoga. The further you like those kinds of
exercises, the innumerable you have to do Tai Chi, Qigong or Yoga as
you need to balance your body between those forms of activity.
One relaxes, the other tightens.”

Because Chinese medicine is all about energy, Cheng has made
extensive use of Subtle Energy Solutions formulas. “What
attracted me to the subtle energy products is because of some of
the descriptions that it is a little bit like acupuncture
without needles. I have taught patients to use the E-1, E-2, and
E-4, locally. That is, if they have the E-3 cream, and they want
to enhance the effect of the stress amelioration, they can actually
put one or two drops of E-1 into the cream and use it. It
strengthens the effect of the cream.”

Even Otis, Cheng’s dog, has been rewarded for his association
with her. “Animals, pets, respond really well to energy
medicine. My dog takes Chinese herbs regularly, and I include
the subtle energy medicine: E-1 for when he needs calming, E-2
to balance his digestive organs, and E-4 as a foundational
support. Otis gets the E-3 cream for any kinds of little nicks,
cuts and bruises, or itching on the skin. For calming I take a
little bit of the cream and pet his forehead with it. I wouldn’t
live without E-1, E-2, E-3 or E-4. They’re just great.” Cheng
has made available a line of equine energy medicines, as well,
at pawpourripethealth.com.

E-3 cream “With every patient that receives treatment here, the
treatment is completed with E-3 cream,” says Cheng. “To each,
depending on the patient, I take the opportunity to explain that
this is a wonderful cream, but it has a wonderful energy in it,
and it will help hold the results of the treatment, and help
balance their body. I’ll teach them to balance themselves in the
morning by placing the cream between the eyes, the palms of the
hand, the soles of the feet, and wherever they feel they need
it–neck, shoulders or low back, and any areas of pain or
irritation.”

Cheng uses the subtle energy formulas to increase the speed and
compellingness of her treatments. “The E-3 cream is used on all
patients who are sensitive before starting an acupuncture
treatment,” says Cheng. “For complicated cases or emotional
conditions, I like to begin with the energy medicines before I
introduce Chinese herbs. Chinese herbs have a long, long history
of efficientness, but it is still a substance which you need to
absorb and break down. Energy medicine can prepare the body for
accepting Chinese herbal medicine.”

In her busy Toronto practice, Cheng Koh continues to change
people’s lives, giving them new tools to achieve the level of
health they want. “I just found Chinese medicine to be so
profound,” enthuses Cheng, “Especially as a preventative
medicine. Today, I feel sorry sometimes for people who don’t see
that. You can use it to correct a problem, obviously, but their
ability to keep someone healthy is so profound.”

Contact Cheng Koh, D.Ac., CMD, Dipl.Ac.(NCCAOM), at her clinic,
276 Willard Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, phone:
416-767-6266.

About the author:

Boyd is a well-known writer and musician (drummer) in the
Portland, Oregon, area, having toured the U.S. and Europe with
national-level musical acts. He is an avid, daily Bikram Yoga
student, with a keen interest in metaphysics, natural health,
and alternative healing methods.

Kroger, independents to buy some Farmer JacksDetroit Free Press, MI – May 23, 2007Farmer Jack shoppers are worried about where they will buy food and how an empty store might affect their neighborhoods. "One of the biggest concerns here .

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If This Is Tuesday, It Must Be Chicken, or How to Rotate Your Food for Better Health

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If This Is Tuesday, It Must Be Chicken, or How to Rotate Your Food for Better Health

Bottle Drive for a Cure-NHL Broadcasters Team Up to Fight LeukemiaCCNMatthews (press release), Canada – May 23, 2007This weekend The Beer Store, in partnership with United Food & Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 12R24, will be asking customers to donate all or a portion of .

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Lessons About Life from a Lost Dog

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Copyright 2006 Cari Haus

I always thought it would be hard when something happened to
Zack, our 9-year-old Golden Retriever. He was well-mannered,
loving, gorgeous, and truly a “member” of our family. What I
didn’t anticipate was how soon something would happen, or just
how hard it would be.

Although my parents had Collies as pets, dogs were never allowed
in the house. Things were different for Zack and my own family,
however. We not only let him in, we took him with us on rides,
hikes, school picnics, church programs, and just about anywhere
else a dog was allowed. Although rather rambunctious as a puppy,
Zack eventually settled down and matured into what my husband
called the “Elder Statesman”. With his graying muzzle and
friendly ways, Zack found his way into the hearts of just about
everyone he met.

I remember the day Zack disappeared as though it was yesterday.
He went for a little tromp in the woods with our other dog, and
simply didn’t come back. We live in the country, and there is a
stream not too far from our house where the dogs loved to wade.
There were also deer to chase, and a small pond nearby where, if
the dogs were lucky, they could scare up a Canada goose.
Sometimes I wish we had put up a fence for the dogs, but they
loved to run and we hadn’t had any problems.

It was late in the day when I got home from work and found out
that Zack was gone. My husband had to leave for work, so I sent
my two teenage boys through the woods in a circle, calling in
vain for Zack. But our beloved retriever, aka Zackie, Sad Zack,
and a zillion other fond little names, never came home. We
posted pictures all over, offered a reward, combed through the
woods, banged on doors and called every vet and animal shelter
in the area not once but many times–but never did find our
“puppy”.

It’s been 8 months now since we lost Zack, and our family has
learned a lot from the experience. We all grieved in different
ways. I cried for what seemed like a whole week. My husband felt
like a black cloud was hanging over our house. My sons didn’t
shed any tears that I saw, yet I caught them tromping aimlessly
through the woods major than once, and both were willing
participants in the many rides we took looking for Zack. Through
it all, I feel like I learned some very interesting things.

Lesson #1: Others Could Share Our Pain

Through this experience, I have learned that there are an awful
let of dog lovers out there. People I don’t even know share my
pain, for many of them, like me, have lost a beloved pet. I have
been a dog lover for as long as I can remember. As a child, when
I was in trouble with the rest of the world, I would often
literally go into the “doghouse” with our Collie. He was always
glad to see me, and no matter how unloved I might have felt at
the moment, he never seemed to care. I always knew that I loved
dogs, and that others did too. But I was amazed at the depth of
emotion people showed when I told them about Zack. As much as
losing him hurt, it helped to know that others cared and
connected with what we were going through.

Lesson #2: It’s Amazing What You Will Do for Your Dog!

I hate knocking on doors. I hate meeting people I don’t know,
and I certainly don’t like sharing my emotional pain with a
stranger. Yet this is exactly what I had to do while looking for
Zack. If somebody reported a dog that might have been Zack, I
hurried over to the neighborhood with flyers and made the
rounds. I was completely out of my comfort zone, but at that
point, really didn’t care.

Lesson #3: This Could Be Much Worse!

I would never minimize the pain of losing a pet. Yet one night
as we were talking about Zack and how much we missed him, my
husband said something that really struck home.

“Losing a dog is so terrible–but think how people must feel
when their child is missing!” We just heard on the news about
those poor parents whose girl disappeared on her senior class
trip. We were starting to understand what it meant to have lack
of closure, to accept that we might never know what happened.
This seemed like a very difficult thing for us–and yet, as sad
as we were over Zack, it would be so much worse in the case of a
missing child. And I really began to feel empathy for others who
had a loss with no closure in ways I could never have fathomed
before.

Lesson #4: You Never Stop Looking

Just this week, a friend told me she saw a dog running by the
side of the road about 5 miles from here–a dog that looked just
like Zack. He was an older Golden Retriever, male, with graying
muzzle. I wish with all my heart she would have stopped and
picked him up, but she said she couldn’t–she was taking her Dad
to the doctor and just couldn’t do it.

So today I found myself in a nearby post office, posting a flyer
about Zack once again, and explaining the situation to yet one
extra sympathetic postmaster. In the health food store, I met a
lady who once again shared my pain. She had lost a pet monkey in
Brazil. She said they traced him for blocks and blocks–but the
trail finally left off at a bus stop and they never saw him
again.

It seems like a slim chance that we will ever find Zack. My
husband has given up, so I’m the only one looking. Yet when I
called once acquaintance who lives where the golden was sighted,
she confirmed that there had indeed been an older male Golden
Retriever in their yard just a few weeks month ago. He was a
large male, with a graying muzzle–a very nice dog, she said. I
don’t know if that dog, or the other ones like him that I have
missed by just a few hours, are Zack. In some ways, life has got
to go on.

We have a new dog now, a gorgeous stray Golden Retriever / Saint
Bernard mix that somebody thought might be Zack. The people who
found him said he was too nice to take to the pound, but they
already had three dogs. We fell in love with him right away, and
he’s now an important part of our family. But somewhere, deep in
my heart, there’s a special place that only one grand “Elder
Statesman” can fill. Which is why, when someone nearby says they
saw a gorgeous older male golden wandering around, I still go
looking for Zack.

About the author:

Cari Haus, CPA and entrepreneur, sells log furniture on her
website, http://www.logcabinrustics.com/

Korea TimesAn image released by DreamWorks Studio shows Shrek in a scene from .Korea Times, South Korea – 10 hours agoThe Chicago Sun-Times recently put it this way about Shrek’s new job as a health advocate: `Shrek Shills Dietary Dreck _ Dump him.? Exactly. .Shrek is no role model Chicago Sun-TimesShrek as role model difficult to swallow Boston Heraldall 8 news articles

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Rationale for Creating the First

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o creature other than humans cooks its food.  Does nature have it all wrong? Additionally the modern glut of sugars and carbohydrates is totally out of sync with our genetic design. Little wonder we are suffering myriad degenerative diseases unheard of in creature that respect the laws of nature. A new ‘Un-Cereal’ helps to solve this problem

The advent of agriculture about 10,000 years ago and the subsequent scale-up to mass feeding made possible by the Industrial Revolution solved problems of quantity but not quality. Average life span has increased paralleling these changes, due in large part to agricultural productivity, efficient food distribution and preservation, and the development of public utilities. No, it is not modern medical measures that have extended our lives, but rather farmers, truckers and plumbers.
The primary products coming from farmers’ fields today – grains and legumes – deliver calories but are not natural human nutrition. The argument can emphaticly be made that it is the conversion of the human diet to one based on grains that has led to the modern epidemic of chronic degenerative diseases and obesity. 

Putting Things In The Perspective Of Time

If we draw a line 276 miles long representing the estimated time of life on Earth, the time since the Industrial Revolution – about 250 years ago – would occupy only about one inch on the last itsy bit of the entire line. Put another way, if we scaled down the amount of time of life on Earth to one year, our modern industrial times would be less than 2 seconds. Although we have grown up in the new era of fluorescent lights, plastic surgery and Mars bars, these are totally unique circumstances from a genetic perspective.  

The Genetic Perspective

Human genes and those of every other living creature are obviously tuned to the 276 miles, not the last one inch. Think of a fish. Its genes are programmed for life in the water and eating smaller fish. If we attempt to deny this fact by taking it out of the water and trying to feed it lasagna, it will suffer ‘dis-ease’ and die. This extraordinarily simple concept is so obvious it seems elementary for me to even point it out. But few people get it! Instead we eat any sugar-coated thing that will go in our mouths, indeed do try to feed lasagna to farm raised fish and even carnivorous pets, live carpe diem and believe modern medicine can repair whatever goes wrong.

A Simple Truth

It was only after much independent study, experience and thought that I arrived at the following embarrassingly simple truth:

If things are not used according to the way they are designed, they fail and break.

Our parents taught us the proper way to use our toys, we know enough to read instruction manuals, and a test for intelligence we all can pass is to not put a square peg in a round hole. Applying these same simple principles is the master key to health.

What Our Genes Expect

What are human genes programmed for; what does our instruction manual say? Since 276 miles on the time line represent living out in nature and eating natural foods found there, that is the data our genes properly accept. not the new synthetic environment we have created in the last one inch of time. Our genes are encoded with the external world we were designed for. When we are born, our genes fully expect to be dropped onto the forest floor and renecessary within that context for a lifetime. We should not confuse our origins just because we were born into this new synthetic world.

Today’s modern world is one of unnatural leisure, cocooned living in air-conditioned plastic dwellings, polluted air, little sunshine or exercise, polluted and treated municipal water and fractionated, synthetically fortified, processed foods that are barely recognizable as having ever come from nature. We are, in effect, fish out of water and in a genetic time warp.

 

Food As An Environment

Food is such an important component of health because, in effect, it is an environment we choose to bathe our tissues with. Should we not select the food environment we are adapted to, the food of the 276 miles minus the one inch?

In a way it is unfortunate that the body is so resilient and will attempt to adapt to whatever food it is provided with. This permits society to fatuously consent to an “adaptation to toxicity,” rather than face problems squarely and address causes. If we got sick to our stomach every time we ate something that was not correct, choices would become easy. But instead of relying on a vomiting reflex – if health is our goal – we must use intelligence and foresight in our day of endless plenty and symptomatic palliation.

The situation we are faced with today is that our bodies dutifully seek homeostasis at high and higher levels of toxicity. This desperate survival mechanism will ultimately be stressed beyond its limits and the result is disease, degeneration and loss of vitality. Unfortunately, consequences like these are temporally so far removed from the etiologic eating regimen, and the body is so forgiving and long-suffering, that few understand the relationship between the effect and the cause.

 

Using Simple Logic

So how do we sort through all of the competing food ideas to get back on track? I am going to explain here a very simple principle that is so reasonable you need not even look for proofs. Follow along with me and see if you don’t agree.

Consider the following three premises:

Just like a tree is genetically adapted to absorb certain nutrients from soil, and a lion is genetically adapted to thrive on prey, and a deer is genetically adapted to browse on vegetation, so too humans are genetically adapted to certain kinds of food.

 

The majority of modern processed foods are products of the Agricultural/Industrial Revolution. They occupy a small part of the genetic history of humans and are not natural human foods.

 

The natural, genetically-adapted-to food for humans must predate them. In other words, how could humans exist before the food they needed to survive existed? We were completely developed biologically prior to agriculture and any method of food processing. That means the archetypal diet humans ate was the perfect diet because that was the diet responsible for the existence and development of the incredibly complex human organism. That diet was the milieu, the environmental nutritional womb, if you will, from which we sprung.

If you consider these three premises, the logical conclusion derived from them is that the incomparable food for humans is what they would be able to eat as it is found in nature. There is no big mystery as to what healthy and natural food is. It is exactly what we could find, eat, digest and survive on if we were abandoned in the wild . without matches. The list is really quite short: fruit, nuts, milk, honey, some vegetables, eggs and prey/carrion.

 

The Raw Truth

A feature of all natural food is that it is raw – alive if you will. The salubrious interest of this fact is inferred from the Law of Biogenesis that says life can only come from preexisting life. Life begets life. In spite of scientists’ dreams to the contrary, we have never observed life springing from non-life, nor have we ever even been able to create life from non-life in a laboratory. If we eat living foods, we enhance our own life. If we eat dead, devitalized foods we become devitalized and dead. Granted, this will not happen all at once, but as the adaptive reserves are exhausted and equilibrium can no longer be achieved, we become just like the dead food we eat.

This accords with what Hippocrates, the father of medicine, said thousands of years ago: “Foods must be in the condition in which they are found in nature, or at least in a condition as close as possible to that found in nature.” We were not suddenly dropped from outer space onto Earth with matches, microwaves, ovens, extruders, deep fryers, rotisseries and fry pans. We began on the forest floor, not in a line to a fast food counter. Our natural bodies are designed for a natural world, exactly like every other creature.

Now then, every other organism on Earth eats raw foods exactly as they are found in nature. Do you think nature doesn’t notice our decision to change all that? Have humans, among all the millions of species of creatures on Earth, discovered an error in nature and corrected it by cooking their foods? Hardly. If you would like to find a devil that has possessed the modern mind in order to cause disease, it is the Hades of cookery.

 

Grains Are Not A Natural Human Food

Grains have become a centralstay of modern processed foods. Although they are “natural” (having come from nature), they are not a natural food of humans. We can conclude this because of the unnatural heat needed to unfold their starches to make them digestible, and to neutralize the toxins the seeds contain to inhibit disease and infestation in the field. Grains do not pass the test of matching food to our genetic expectation.

Our immersion in modern cookery and food processing has misled us. We assume that which is usual and ordinary is how things should be. Even the “health food” industry has been hoodwinked. Granola, tofu and whole grain breads and cereals are not natural human foods at all. (Although they are better than the refined white pabulum versions.) They cannot be found in nature in a form that permits their safe consumption in the raw state. No human in the wild could ever survive by attempting to forage and consume them. They are there to grow other plants and as food for other creatures.

 

Perils Of Heat Processing

Although cooking is commonly justified on the basis that it makes (unnatural) foods digestible and palatable, and that it neutralizes certain toxins and pathogens, little attention is given to its inherent toxic and nutritionally vitiating effects.

Heating foods, particularly in mixtures, can racemize amino acids, carbohydrates and vitamins, oxidize essential fatty acids and cholesterol, form Maillard protein-sugar reaction products, change the physico- chemical state of food, form acrylamides, hydrogenate fatty acids, destroy enzymes, chelate minerals, destroy vitamins. to only begin the list. The end result is a food matrix that might smell, look and taste great, have an ingredient label and nutritional claims that are beguiling, but be nutritionally imbalanced and disease-producing.

The bottom line is that true food is a complex, biological, holistic matrix, not a mere assemblage of reductionistic parts and pieces that can be treated with impunity. Heat is the enemy of nutrition as can be easily predicted by observing what happens to any other complex thing that is set afire.

 

It is characteristic of life and real, living food that it is highly ordered and of low entropy. Heat accelerates the inevitable thermodynamic rise in entropy, i.e., the loss of order that characterizes life and differentiates it from non-life. In effect, the healthful information (another version of thermodynamic entropy) in food is lost with the introduction of heat and thus that information cannot transfer to and benefit the eater.

 

Fixing Things

It would be very difficult today to achieve the ideal, raw, natural diet. First of all, we would have trouble with aesthetics and palatability due to the perversion of our palate, and secondly there are few choices available in the market. Nevertheless, understanding the above principles helps us understand how to make eating decisions and compromise the least. It gives us an ideal that we can at least strive toward.

Frustrated with the misdirection of the food industry and their unwillingness to see or apply the above principles, over two decades ago I set about trying to bring this message to thinking people and to create healthy alternatives. Of particular interest over the past several years were breakfast cereals and snack bars. These products are consumed in massive amounts in our on-the-go society and improving them could bring widespread benefit. So, using the principles above, our research facility set about developing a healthy alternative to breakfast cereal and snack bars that would have great taste, incorporate truly natural human foods, help with weight reduction, be nutraceutically enhanced and not be heat processed.

 

Health-First Design

The challenges in creating a packaged, shelf-stable product using these principles are no small matter and include:

 

Non thermal processing – It is critical that the product not be heated above 118 degrees F, the critical temperature above which food enzymes and other nutrients are destroyed, decreased, or adversely altered. It is little wonder that heat is so widely used in food processing, it melts ingredients to permit forming, dries them to decrease water activity (critical for shelf stability) and sterilizes them.

 

Special Processing Care – To create a finished product that reforemosts raw but has crunch, good taste and package stability requires specially engineered equipment, hand preparation and individual batching. To protect it on the way to the table, the end product must also be shielded from photo-oxidation and air by drying under vacuum, flushing with an oxygen-free atmosphere and the use of light-barrier packaging.

 

Truly Natural Human Food Ingredients

The following natural human food and nutraceuticals were selected to create a new non-thermally processed, nutritionally superior “Un-Cereal™”:

 

Nuts (not legumes) provide a bounty of minerals, vitamins, protein and essential fatty acids. Using raw nuts has required the development of special processing to remove the bitter tannins in the outer layer, thus making them massed palatable, digestible and nutritious.

 

Sprouts have the highest nutrient concentration and are at the most digestible stage in the lifecycle of seeds. In the early stages of development, sprouts lose the anti-nutritional elements that rehead in grain seeds that must be neutralized by cooking. In this application they provide a raw vegetable “flour” matrix that permits forming without the unnecessary starch (sugar, once digested and metabolized) carbohydrates of mature cereal seeds.

 

Colostrum is the primary component of new (first) milk and is arguably one of the most important of all food sources. It is a concentrated source of vitamins, minerals, enzymes, protein, immune-enhancing antibodies and pathogen-fighting iron chelators, lactoferrin and lactoperoxidase.

 

Flax (and the above nuts) provide omega-3 essential fatty acids, antioxidants and fiber, all universally deficient in the modern diet but abundant in raw natural human foods. Grain predominant heat processed diets shift the ratio of omega-6:omega-3 from the natural 1:1 ratio to 20:1 or even heavier. Moreover, the application of heat to these fragile oils can convert them to toxic trans configurations and other isomeric and oxidized forms.

 

Fructooligosaccharides are prebiotics that enhance the growth of beneficial intestinal bacteria (probiotics) which in turn promote digestion, detoxification and immunity.

 

Probiotics are active (live) yogurt-like cultures of beneficial microorganisms that increase immune strength and digestive function as well as synthesize nutrients. By incorporating a variety of species, a spectrum of beneficial actions are capitalized upon.

 

Enzymes are a part of all natural foods but are very delicate and are destroyed above body temperature. Natural enzymes within raw foods aid in digestion, nutrient absorption and sparing of digestive organ (particularly pancreatic) reserve.

 

Pollen is the nutritious “egg” of plants and contains hundreds of phytonutrients, the highest antioxidant activity of any fruit or vegetable yet tested, enzymes, phytosterols, amino acids, fatty acids including omega-3, naturally chelated minerals, and a variety of vitamin complexes.

Vitamins and Minerals are in their most complete spectrum, most appropriate ratios and in their most bioavailable form as part of the natural unaltered ingredients themselves.

 

Antioxidants – Both fat and water soluble vitaminic and herbal oleoresin natural antioxidants are used to help extend shelf-life and to protect fragile nutrients from being lost or turning into dangerous free radicals.

 

Lipids – Health boosting and weight reducing saturated and unsaturated fatty acids are outstanding consumed as part of raw natural foods. Within the natural “shell” of living foods, lipids are stabilized by a complex host of structural and biochemical features.

 

Fresh fruits – Are included for the vitamin and antioxidant bounty they provide. Additionally our research has shown that certain fruit purées are particularly capable of increasing food stability by inhibiting bacteria that are food degrading and potentially pathogenic. This is a wonderful alternative to the chemical potpourri used in conventional foods for preservation.

Ingredients

Almonds, Brazil Nuts, Pecans, Cashews, Macadamia Nuts, Prebiotics (including Fructooligosaccharides), Flax, Plums, Walnuts, Maple Syrup, Apples, Dairy Concentrate (including Colostrum, Lactoferrin, Lactoperoxidase), Honey, Bee Pollen, Bananas, Blueberries, Strawberries, Enzymes, Oat Sprouts, Probiotic Cultures (including Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus bifidus, Enterococcus faecium), Quinoa Sprouts, Spelt Sprouts, Vanilla, Cinnamon, Coral Calcium, Milk Calcium, Wysong Oxherphol™ (Vitamin E Tocopherol Epimers, Fat-soluble Vitamin C, Organic Chelators and Natural Botanical Oleoresins)

The Result

The resulting Un-Cereal™ (consistency of a chunked granola) and formed snack bar are expensive to produce because of the sheer cost of ingredients and the difficult and time-consuming processing. But a little goes a long way. Even adding a small amount to salads, shakes or conventional breakfast cereals greatly boosts their nutritional density.

The products have also proven to be very satiating. A small bowl or a bar eaten along with some yogurt or fruit, or mixed into a smoothie, will “stick to the ribs” for hours thus serving as a meal substitute and high protein diet food.

We have limited production capacity due to the scale of our R&D facility and the tedious hand batching required. Nevertheless, to the degree we are able to provide the product along with its educational rationale, people can become reacquainted with their “food genes” and perhaps incorporate the healthy principles into other food and lifestyle choices. Clinicians may also find it of benefit to incorporate into diet programs, to help wean patients off carbohydrate dependence or to use as a teaching tool to demonstrate to patients the features they should be looking for when selecting healthy foods.

 

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Further reading and resources of scientific references:

Wysong, R. L. (1976). The Creation-Evolution Controversy. Midland, MI: Inquiry Press.

Wysong, R. L. (1990). Lipid Nutrition: Understanding Fats and Oils in Health and Disease.

 Midland, MI: Inquiry Press.

Wysong R. L. (1993). Rationale for Animal Nutrition. Midland, MI: Inquiry Press.

Wysong, R. L. (1993). The Synorgon Diet: How to Achieve Healthy Weight in a World of Excess.

Midland, MI: Inquiry Press.

Wysong, R. L. (2002). The Truth About Pet Foods. MidlandHealth Fitness Articles, MI: Inquiry Press.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dr. Wysong: A former veterinary clinician and surgeon, college instructor in human anatomy, physiology and the origin of life, inventor of numerous medical, surgical, nutritional, athletic and fitness products and devices, research director for the present company by his name and founder of the philanthropic Wysong Institute. http://www.wysong.net. Also check out http://www.cerealwysong.com.

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