Archive for the ‘Weston A. Price’ Category

Beck’s First Yoga and Health Retreat, January 2012

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

This is my attempt, this e-mail with its calculated words, to describe accurately hosting my very first weekend retreat. I cannot say if it will even come near succeeding, so just imagine something so much more healing and emotionally balancing than I can describe!

Now is the time for each of us to bloom where we are planted, to say yes, to be brave and commit fully to ourselves, to be vulnerable, unfolding delicately yet fully into the space in which we find ourselves.

Despacho Ceremony

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Seven Reasons the Body Needs Salt

Monday, July 25th, 2011
  1. Salt provides two elements that are essential for life and good health: sodium and chloride ions.
  2. Sodium and chloride ions play an important role in the firing of the nervous system.
  3. Salt regulates blood volume and pressure, including the flexibility of blood vessels.
  4. Salt is important for digestion of protein, carbohydrates and fats.
  5. Salt is our main dietary source of chloride, the major component of hydrochloric acid. Hydrochloric acid keeps parasites and pathogens from entering the digestive tract. Symptoms of hypochlorhydria (low hydrochloric acid) includes bloating, acne, iron deficiency, belching, indigestion, diarrhea and multiple food allergies.
  6. Salt is critical for the development of the glial cells in the brain, which are necessary for brain growth and development of neurological function.
  7. Salt helps the adrenal glands produce hormones needed to keep the body’s metabolism running smoothly. Craving salt is a sign of poor adrenal function.

Reference:
“The Importance of Salt” by Sally Fallon Morell, Wise Traditions Summer 2011

Would you like to receive the quarterly Wise Traditions journal or support the real food movement by joining Weston A Price Foundation (you will receive the quarterly journal as well)? Follow this website: http://www.westonaprice.org/ to look up past journal articles, find important information on health articles for you and your children or look up specific questions you may have. Thank you for supporting!

Is Soy Beneficial to the Body or Incredibly Detrimental?

Thursday, July 14th, 2011
Just Say NO to SOY, Wellness Hammock

In the health food section at my local grocery store, there is a healthy amount of space dedicated to soy products. If an unsuspecting person decided “I want to eat healthy,” and went to the Health Food Section uninformed, he or she would assume all items in the section were healthy. But is soy healthy?

Soy was first used in Asia as a cover crop to enrich soil. Much later Asians used it to season and enrich their meals, only after the Chinese learned to ferment soy beans to make foods like tempeh, natto and tamari. In the West, soy was first used to make paper coatings, glues and even in fire-fighting foam. In the 1950s food companies began producing soy isolate and soy lecithin. Now soy is everywhere: soups, imitation meats, non-dairy creamers, infant formulas, cereals, protein powders, etc.

MYTHS and TRUTHS:

Myth: Soy foods provide a complete protein.
Truth: Like all legumes, soy beans are deficient in sulfur-containing amino acids methionine and cystine. In addition, modern processing denatures fragile lysine.

Myth: Soy formula is a good alternative to infants who are not being breastfed.
Truth: Soy food contain trypsin inhibitors that inhibit protein digestion and affect pancreatic function. In test animals, diets high in trypsin inhibitors led to stunted growth and pancreatic disorders. Soy food increases the body’s requirement for vitamin D, needed for strong bones and normal growth. Phytic acid in soy foods results in reduced bioavailability of iron and zinc which are required for health and development of the brain and nervous system. Soy lacks cholesterol, essential for the development of the brain and nervous system. Megadoses of phytoestrogens in soy formula have been implicated in the current trend toward increasingly premature sexual development in girls and delayed or retarded sexual development in boys.

Myth: Soy food can prevent osteoporosis.
Truth: Soy foods can cause deficiencies in calcium and vitamin D, both needed for healthy bones. Calcium from bone broths and vitamin D from seafood, lard and organ meats prevent osteoporosis in Asian countries–not soy foods.

Myth: Soy is good for your sex life.
Truth: Numerous animal studies show that soy foods cause infertility in animals. Soy consumption enhances hair growth in middle-aged men, indicating lowered testosterone levels. Japanese housewives feed tofu to their husbands frequently when they want to reduce his virility.

Myth: Eating soy is good for the environment.
Truth: In one soy crop in Cordoba, the monoculture has been detrimental for the forests and pasture lands. Because of the expanding soy crops, cattle raising farmers have bene displaced, increasing land conflicts and evictions, as well as deforestation. The deforestation rate in Argentina is 0.8 percent per year, twice as high as the Amazon area (0.38 percent). But in Cordoba the deforestation rate is 2.93 percent – almost four times the national average and thirteen times the global average (0.23 percent). Researches at at Cordoba’s National University stress the direct relationship with the advance of the agricultural frontier, especially the cultivation of annual crops, primarily soy.

HEALTH CONCERNS

Soy is difficult to digest, which can cause gas, bloating and general discomfort. Fermented forms, like the tempehnatto and tamari are more easily digested.

93% of U.S. soy has been genetically modified (GM): meaning the crop has been altered by a virus or bacteria with a certain trait, most commonly the resistance to a weed killer. We have been using GM foods for the past decade so we do not know the long term effects of these foods on our health. But the studies that have been completed thus far, begin to paint a bleak picture. Article: 15 years of GM Soybeans in Argentina

Soy can interfere with thyroid function, negatively affecting your metabolism.

SUMMARY

Soy can interfere with thyroid, its difficult to digest and does not allow us to fully absorb minerals. Soy is deficient in essential amino acids, contain trypsin inhibitors leading to stunted growth and pancreatic disorders, increases our need of vitamin D, has no cholesterol content, is deficient in calcium, lowers testosterone in men and increases infertility. It may cause early puberty in girls and late puberty in boys. It is not a complete protein that our bodies can use.

Crops like soy are increasing the deforestation rate in certain countries. The more soy consumed, the more soy planted, the higher the deforestation rate.

Traditionally soy was used as a condiment in fermented form and Asian cultures always used soy sparingly and traditionally processed (fermented). Soy milk, soy powders or protein bars did not exist in that culture of healthy soy foods. Research shows that soy’s benefits are inconclusive and may prove harmful for your body and the environment. If you enjoy soy, use sparingly and find traditional ways to ferment the product.

References:

Weston A Price
Kaayla Daniels PhD, CCN
Weight and Wellness

Letter to the Heart Health Seminar Leader at DCTC, MN

Thursday, February 17th, 2011
To Whom It May Concern:

I am a student in the interior design program here at DCTC. My interest was perked when I saw the email for a seminar about Heart Health and I was concerned about the information that would be given to students about heart health.

Over the last two years, I have been an advocate of real, traditional foods after reading a life-changing book called Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, by Weston A. Price, DDS.

I was a vegetarian for 4 years, eating a ‘heart healthy’ diet as endorsed by the American Heart Association, and eating according to the USDA guidelines.  My health declined and I was so astounded as to why, I was eating a seemingly heart healthy, low fat, low sugar diet, most of the food I was eating I prepared myself, luckily, I didn’t exist on processed food, like so many modern diets. I was very conscious and always researching ways to make complete proteins and ensuring I had took a quality source of supplementation for items in my diet I was not getting naturally. When all else failed, I started eating meat, again, following even more closely the USDA guidelines, exercising 5-6 days a week and eating almost religiously to the standards that I was taught were healthy.

After four years of eating this way, my health continued to decline, I had acne, eczema, asthma and I developed a major depressive disorder, as diagnosed by my therapist. On a quest for naturally healing myself, I began to dig deep and I found a wealth of information through a non-profit organization called The Weston A. Price Foundation. After learning about multiple studies that were done since the 1920’s debunking the lipid hypothesis, the basis in which the AHA exists; and the fact that the studies that are done that tell us about what we currently believe cause heart disease are funded by statin drug companies, shocked me.

I have since been existing on a diet that consists of low carbohydrate foods, such as bone broth soups from pastured, organic animals, organic virgin pressed coconut oil, ghee, spring fed organic butter, pastured eggs, fish, cod liver oil, pastured meats from animals eating their natural diet, living their natural lifestyle, organically grown vegetables, and fermented foods.  I strictly eliminated any foods containing HFCS, soy products, corn products, processed sugars, processed grains, artificial coloring and dyes.

Within not even two years of eating this way, I have NO SIGN of depression, I am not on any medications, acne is gone, eczema is gone, I have maintained a healthy weight and I have more energy and a sense of well being than I ever have.

As you can tell the subject and proper education about heart health and nutrition is very important to me. Since I can’t attend the seminar I am dropping off this information to the administrator in hopes that even one health professional can have this information. There are thousands of Americans who have used real food to get well, I am on a quest to ensure people get the right information, because it is not fair if the public continues to think that a diet high in carbohydrates, low in fat and low in animal products will make them healthy.

Sources for more information of real food nutrition:
www.weightandwellness.com

Thank-you for taking the time to read this…
Sincerely,

Clara Bullick