-
Low fat foods and high fructose corn syrup cause obesity!
Posted on February 5th, 2010 No commentsNot subscribed yet? Never been a better time. Follow this link and your in! Thanks for visiting!
Taking action

Found this great article by Jonny Bowden and thought I would add some to it and share it with you folks as it is a problem that affects us all! So much so that the first Lady, Michelle Obama, is now taking on childhood obesity as her cause from the white house! Maybe we can help her out! This post touches on the diet problems of our obesity epidemic but doesn’t get into the physical aspects, will write a post about that later so be sure to check back!Our diet issues
When you have something as massive and as scary as the obesity epidemic, it’s hard to point the finger at one single element and say, “that is why it happened.” But however you slice it, the low-fat movement played a part in the epidemic.
After World War II, heart disease rates began to rise precipitously. In the 1970s, a committee led by Senator McGovern issued a report advising Americans to lower their risk of hear disease by eating less fat. This recommendation was based on evidence that linked diet to heard disease. Unfortunately, the report wrongly singled out saturated fat as the wicked element in our diet responsible for all our problems.
This was the beginning of the low-fat movement, and the obesity epidemic. It’s more than a coincidence that they happened at the same time, and here’s why.
Once upon a time…..
Once dietary fat was “identified” as the chief culprit in heard disease (a huge case of mistaken identity in my opinion) food manufacturers sprang in to action. The race was on to produce low-fat & no-fat foods, and to engineer saturated fat out of everything.
This led to a slew of “Food-like” products, manufactured and processed edible substances bearing little resemblance to whole foods, and to idiotic experiments like margarine. Add to this witches’ brew the invention of high-fructose corn syrup and hydrogenated oil (to replace saturated fat) and you had the perfect dietary storm.
You see, if you’re the food manufacturer and you’re removing the fat from some food, you need to replace it with something else if won’t taste very good. So , we would up with a slew of low-fat products loaded with sugar. And since high-fructose corn syrup was now available cheaply, adding sweetness was an easy thing to do!
So easy, in fact, that high-fructose corn syrup started showing up I hundreds – if not thousands- of food products.
As the same time as all of this was happening, Americans started eating more of everything. This, too, is no coincidence. Here’s why: If I give you a carton of Domino’s sugar and tell you to eat till your heart’s content, you won’t consume very much. Same thing with butter. But if I put them together something magical happens. Combine sugar and fat and every one of your evolutionary buttons are pushed. Manufacturers know this. Cravings get activated, brain chemistry starts firing, and you can literally eat this stuff until you bust. And we did!
The whole low-fat movement coincided with a huge spike in food processing and those who precess and manufacture food products for a living have one goal-getting people to eat more of their products. That’s easy to do, just engineer combinations of sugar and a bit of fat, which work really well with the whole “low-fat” philosophy.
As long as it didn’t have to much fat, you could eat it right? Not really! Meanwhile, fat-the one macro-nutrient that keeps you full and satisfied- was lacking from most of what we were eating. Sugar, the one element that keeps cravings going, was plentiful. Portion sizes in general collectively took a shot of steroids, as the whole country decided that super sizing was its birthright.

Low fat has a lot to answer for. It may not be the only reason we are experiencing one of the worst health epidemics in modern times, but it sure is one of the biggest!
-
One Enzyme A Day Keeps The Doctor Away!
Posted on December 29th, 2009 4 comments
How Enzymes Work and Why You should Use
ThemThe number of enzymes the body is capable of producing is finite.
Enzymes for digestion come from two sources:
Internally – from our own digestive organs (digestive enzymes); and externally – from the food we eat (food enzymes).
Food enzymes occur naturally in raw foods and provide the body with additional support to break down those foods. Cooking or processing food at temperatures greater than 118°F destroys all enzymes and places the entire burden for digestion on the body.
The depletion of enzyme activity over time leads to chronic conditions and eventually the loss of life.
The health impact of food enzyme depletion has been largely overlooked in allopathic medicine, but today healthcare practitioners in many different disciplines are recognizing the importance of digestive enzymes. Supporting proper digestion with enzyme supplements can noticeably improve your health.
In fact, everyone could benefit from an enzyme supplement taken with meals. Remember, you are not what you eat but what you absorb.
Lack of enzymes in foods puts undue stress on the pancreas and other digestive enzyme-producing organs to produce all of the enzymes required for digestion. When an excess amount of resources is constantly used for digestion other metabolic functions in the body suffer, leading to chronic health problems.
The goal of enzyme supplementation is three fold:
1) To increase digestion and absorption of nutrients needed to maintain a healthy body.
2) To provide adequate support for digestive organs, relieving them of unnecessary stress and thereby extending their productive lives.
3) To increase availability of energy and valuable resources that can be used for other necessary metabolic functions, a preventive measure to reduce the onset of disease.
“The length of life is inversely proportional to the rate of exhaustion of the enzyme potential of an organism. The increased use of food enzymes promotes a decreased rate of exhaustion of the enzyme potential.” (Dr. Edward Howell, Enzyme Nutrition: The Food Enzyme Concept¹)
Choosing the Right Enzymes
Enzymes from animal sources, such as pancreatin, are most active in the alkaline environment of the small intestine (pH 7.2-9.0) after the body has already produced and released enzymes to support digestion. This means animal enzyme supplements do nothing to spare the pancreas and other digestive organs from producing an excess of enzymes.
Microbial enzymes are active over a broad pH range (pH 2.0 to 11.0) and begin digesting food immediately after entering the stomach. The presence of digesting food in the stomach signals the body to produce and release fewer enzymes. Microbial enzymes, therefore, are the better choice because they relieve the body of the total burden of digestion.
What to Look For in an Enzyme Supplement
The four enzymes commonly found in food, and therefore, needed in an enzyme supplement are:
Amylase for carbohydrates and starches digestion
Lipase for fat digestion
Protease for protein digestion
Cellulase to break down fibrous foods
Additional enzymes, such as glucoamylase, sucrase, lactase, alpha-galactosidase, phytase, and peptidase enhance and support complete digestion of each of the food groups.
When selecting an enzyme supplement be certain that the four primary enzyme types are present to assure digestion of all of the main food components, while noting that additional enzymes improve the digestive efficiency of the supplement.
Systemic Enzyme Therapy
For those clients that have already fallen into dis-ease, due to poor digestion, poor absorption or reduced metabolic enzyme production; enzyme supplementation can also be extremely beneficial.
In systemic enzyme therapy, larger dose of proteases or proteolytic enzymes are taken on an empty stomach one hour before and two hours after a meal. This allows the enzymes to be absorbed directly into the blood stream. It is well documented that protease enzymes act differently in the tissues of the body than in the digestive tract. Once in the blood stream, protease enzymes binds with alpha-2-macroglobulins, shifting them into their active form.
Research has shown certain protease enzymes exhibit greater activity in the blood than others and that the amount of needed for systemic activity is often much greater than that needed for digestion. Unfortunately, most systematic protease products on the market contain the same levels and combination of protease enzymes as are found in digestive products. Proper systemic enzyme therapy can reduce inflammation, boost immune function, maintain cardiovascular health, maximize endocrine effectiveness, aid in detoxification, promote normal respiratory function and on and on.
Volumes of scientific research exist on the benefits of enzymes therapy on a whole host of physical disorders.
One randomized, placebo-controlled study published by the University of Texas Southwest Medical Center determined protease-based nutritional supplements modulates the inflammatory response and accelerates healing time by up to 17% in 77% of the patients who received it.²
When enzymes are taken in formulation with vitamins, minerals, herbs, or phyto-nutrients the combination improves absorption and bio-availability of those nutrients, maximizing healing.
-
Rebounding, world’s greatest weight loss program
Posted on July 23rd, 2009 No commentsThere are many exercise programs cut there. Personally it comes very naturally for me to avoid al I of them. I do however sometimes jump on our mini-trampoline, not in hopes of getting my girlish figure back but to stimulate my immune system. When you jump on a mini-trampoline your body is for a split second weightless causing the lymph nodes to relax and expand. The gravitational pull then causes the nodes Read the rest of this entry »


