Guest guest Posted July 15, 2005 Report Share Posted July 15, 2005 You might try Magnesium Citrate (the best we've found for my ASD grandson and myself is the NOW brand in capsules - 166 mg each cap). Mag Citrate is the most soluble, and it loosens stools. By far the best results I've had for myself even, and I'm old enough to have tried darn near everything! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2005 Report Share Posted August 2, 2005 Hi-- I think the main reason for doing the epsom salt baths/creams is to get the sulfate into the body to help the pst (phenolsulfotransferase--sp?) issues with ASD. The magnesium comes along as 'icing on the cake', kind of like a fringe benefit. So if you want sulfate to help PST, continue to use epsom salts in some form (i.e. bath, cream, or spray). If you want supplemental magnesium, magnesium glycinate is a good form. W > I'm always reading about epsom salt baths/cream and all of the positive > benefits of their use. I'm wondering, could you get the same results > with supplementing extra magnesium (say, glycinate), or is it the > sulfate (or the fact that it's absorbed through the skin) that is > important? We had been doing the baths regularly, but my son prefers > showers now. I can still do the cream, but supplementing would be > easier. What is a good amount of magnesium to give on a daily basis > for general health in an ASD child (50 lbs.)? If I use the cream, is > once a day too much/too little? Sorry so many ?'s!!!! > > Thanks, > Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 28, 2006 Report Share Posted February 28, 2006 Betty, I had evaporated milk formula too then we had raw milk from a family cow. Now I get mucous reactions from casein, milk protein no matter where it is from. Am almost 50. Fought hypoglycemia for 15 years. Could have been diabetes. My Mom just lost her second leg to diabetes. Had a short bout of what could be considered chronic fatigue 17 years ago. Doctor passed off as not physical. Would it be helpful if it wasn't what your Mom fed you or what the food industry pushed? What if it were the genes you were born with? Some celiac tests test for genes, others for intestinal damage with biopsy. Celiac disease is genetic. Better news is that even though celiac is the last diagnosis it is linked to all the other diagnoses. Do a google search on gluten fibromyalgia or any of the others with gluten and you'll see how the autoimmune system can react. Within a month of not eating gluten I had a few dozen noticeable improvements. Some I'd never realized. Magnesium citrate made me weak and nauseous. Asthma is included in this Brain Allergies article http://www.alternativementalhealth.com/articles/brainallergies.htm I had terrible colic and eczema on evaporated milk formula. Eating gluten and dairy free isn't as terrible as it sounds. Humans have lived longer historically on meat, veggies, fruits and nuts than they have from grains, dairy and processed food. Wanita Betty Pearson <betty@...> wrote: I have been told that I am low in magnesium, and that is why I have muscle cramps and pains. I have a friend who has given me a supplement called, " CALM " . Has anyone heard of it? It is made from Magnesium Citrate. I'm trying to improve my health! :-) After fifty years of a not-so-good diet (I thought it was good), well, time is giving me problems. I have diabetes, chronic fatigue, fibromylagia, asthma, and now celiac disease and bursitis. When I exercise to help my diabetes/fibromyalgia, I get bursitis! Another friend who managed a health food store told me my problems started when I was fed canned milk as a baby instead of being nursed by my mother. I grew up in a home that used margarine and vegetable oils. My father sold candy & snacks for a living, and he'd bring home the old stuff for us to eat...yep, sometimes rancid. Whether or not this led to my current problems I guess can be debatable. I hate to blame my poor mother because like most mothers, food industries have mislead many people. But I sure would like to fix my problems! ANY suggestions??? Betty in Lehi Protect your photos from natural disasters http://bettykarl.myphotomax.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 --- In , " Betty Pearson " <betty@...> wrote: .... I have > diabetes, chronic fatigue, fibromylagia, asthma, and now celiac disease and > bursitis... ....ANY suggestions??? > > Betty in Lehi, I suggest you join this list: GFCFNN/ I think you will find it very helpful. B. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 Betty, I do know that those little eye twitches we can all get from time to time are due to low levels of magnesium. Sufficient amounts of magnesium are crucial to good digestive health as well. I can recommend a book for you to read called Digestive Wellness by Liz Lipski, phD, CCN. I have heard her lecture on celiac disease-- and pretty much all of the ailments you listed as having-- and its genesis in your GI tract. As part of my own holistic health counseling practice, the digestive tract is often the first place where clients will begin their healing process. If you'd like to discuss more about this in greater detail, please let me know. Most likely you only need the tools to begin rebuilding your digestion, from the inside out...and there are many supplements that can aid you in the process. It could be that you have low levels of hydrochloric acid in your stomach, which can lead to calcium and magnesium deficiencies, due to malabsorption of nutrients. -Kate Short http://www.integrativenutrition.com/graduates/KShort.aspx Betty Pearson <betty@...> wrote: I have been told that I am low in magnesium, and that is why I have muscle cramps and pains. I have a friend who has given me a supplement called, " CALM " . Has anyone heard of it? It is made from Magnesium Citrate. I'm trying to improve my health! :-) After fifty years of a not-so-good diet (I thought it was good), well, time is giving me problems. I have diabetes, chronic fatigue, fibromylagia, asthma, and now celiac disease and bursitis. When I exercise to help my diabetes/fibromyalgia, I get bursitis! Another friend who managed a health food store told me my problems started when I was fed canned milk as a baby instead of being nursed by my mother. I grew up in a home that used margarine and vegetable oils. My father sold candy & snacks for a living, and he'd bring home the old stuff for us to eat...yep, sometimes rancid. Whether or not this led to my current problems I guess can be debatable. I hate to blame my poor mother because like most mothers, food industries have mislead many people. But I sure would like to fix my problems! ANY suggestions??? Betty in Lehi Protect your photos from natural disasters http://bettykarl.myphotomax.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 Hi Betty, This is one of my favorite sites when it comes to how micronutrients effect us in terms of disease: http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/minerals/magnesium/index.html As for what to do about it: I second 's suggestion to join GFCFNN. -Lana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 RE: magnesium - epsom salt in your bath is supposed to give you all the magnesium you need in about 20 minutes. My kids love it. Not sure low magnesium is the whole cause of your problems, tho. My husband says " If you're a hammer, everything looks like a nail " to me, but anyone with chronic fatigue should get checked for lyme. Some estimates say around 20% of the population have it. You can read up at www.canlyme.com. Quest lab has about a 70% false negative rate for lyme, so Igenix or Bowen are better labs. Other possible causes, are you drinking enough water? Could you have a candida problem? Have you had your blood sugar tested lately? The diabetes can cause the fatigue if your blood sugar isn't managed well. Interestingly, my grandmother had type II diabetes and it went away when she watched what she ate. Doctors claim this is impossible, but I've heard others say they have also recovered from diabetes. Still, the list of symptoms you gave sound very much like the ones people coming to the lyme forum list, and when they treat the lyme they feel much better. A common indicator of lyme is a stiff neck that crackles when you turn your head, tho not everybody gets that. Hope this helps! - Renate --- In , " Betty Pearson " <betty@...> wrote: > > I have been told that I am low in magnesium, and that is why I have muscle > cramps and pains. I have a friend who has given me a supplement called, > " CALM " . Has anyone heard of it? It is made from Magnesium Citrate. I'm > trying to improve my health! :-) After fifty years of a not-so- good diet > (I thought it was good), well, time is giving me problems. I have > diabetes, chronic fatigue, fibromylagia, asthma, and now celiac disease and > bursitis. When I exercise to help my diabetes/fibromyalgia, I get bursitis! > > Another friend who managed a health food store told me my problems started > when I was fed canned milk as a baby instead of being nursed by my mother. > I grew up in a home that used margarine and vegetable oils. My father sold > candy & snacks for a living, and he'd bring home the old stuff for us to > eat...yep, sometimes rancid. Whether or not this led to my current problems > I guess can be debatable. I hate to blame my poor mother because like most > mothers, food industries have mislead many people. But I sure would like to > fix my problems! ANY suggestions??? > > Betty in Lehi > Protect your photos from natural disasters > http://bettykarl.myphotomax.com > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 Start eating ANIMAL FOOD with lots of ANIMAL FAT. Cheese, butter, (not milk) are fine... and are great for making meals that are not boring. Think of all the dishes one can make with eggs and meat and cheese and butter and tallow and lard and spices. Sausage and cheese omelets are great with the right spices! This is a VERY HEALTHY way to eat! Diabetes is the result of the immune system sensing the widespread tissue damage from insulin, targeting the source cells in the pancreas and destroying them. Insulin resistance type diabetes is the result of the tissues themselves rejecting insulin. Neither form is found in any other animal in nature, man's carnivorous pets fed a grain based diet may also suffer this syndrome. In the absence of dietary carbs, the body does not need to produce insulin and the diabetes essentially 'disappears'. You will never be told this by a doctor because then you would be free of the need for medical intervention and your daily ration of drugs. All the assorted ills diabetics suffer are actually caused by insulin, cataracts, heart attacks, bad joints, etc. These are the kind of damages done to the tissues by insulin, and the injected kind is a far more powerful damaging agent than the endogenous hormone. Blood monitoring on a zero-carb regime will quickly confirm the stability of blood glucose. You don't need all these insulin producing carbs from veggies and fruit and grains and legumes. Meat and organs have all the nutrients (the true nutrients) you need. Dean _____ I have been told that I am low in magnesium, and that is why I have muscle cramps and pains. I have a friend who has given me a supplement called, " CALM " . Has anyone heard of it? It is made from Magnesium Citrate. I'm trying to improve my health! :-) After fifty years of a not-so-good diet (I thought it was good), well, time is giving me problems. I have diabetes, chronic fatigue, fibromylagia, asthma, and now celiac disease and bursitis. When I exercise to help my diabetes/fibromyalgia, I get bursitis! Another friend who managed a health food store told me my problems started when I was fed canned milk as a baby instead of being nursed by my mother. I grew up in a home that used margarine and vegetable oils. My father sold candy & snacks for a living, and he'd bring home the old stuff for us to eat...yep, sometimes rancid. Whether or not this led to my current problems I guess can be debatable. I hate to blame my poor mother because like most mothers, food industries have mislead many people. But I sure would like to fix my problems! ANY suggestions??? Betty in Lehi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 They have lived longer on meat and fat from animals... with NO other foodstuffs longer than any other diet. Dean _____ Eating gluten and dairy free isn't as terrible as it sounds. Humans have lived longer historically on meat, veggies, fruits and nuts than they have from grains, dairy and processed food. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 More true than my statement. We wouldn't be here, doing what we do, if not for that. Was thinking more on the gatherer line than the agricultural for the plants. Wanita Dean <dean@...> wrote: They have lived longer on meat and fat from animals... with NO other foodstuffs longer than any other diet. Dean _____ Eating gluten and dairy free isn't as terrible as it sounds. Humans have lived longer historically on meat, veggies, fruits and nuts than they have from grains, dairy and processed food. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 I have not thought about Lyme disease. Don't you catch it from a tick? They are rare in the West, I think. I've never heard of anyone here getting that disease. Betty in Lehi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 Right... for a LONG time humans ate pretty exclusively from hunted game... then came a shorter period of hunter-gatherer, then agriculture (ugh!)... it just all came to fast for our poor bodies to adjust quick enough! :-( _____ More true than my statement. We wouldn't be here, doing what we do, if not for that. Was thinking more on the gatherer line than the agricultural for the plants. Wanita Dean <dean@...> wrote: They have lived longer on meat and fat from animals... with NO other foodstuffs longer than any other diet. Dean _____ Eating gluten and dairy free isn't as terrible as it sounds. Humans have lived longer historically on meat, veggies, fruits and nuts than they have from grains, dairy and processed food. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 The hunter-gatherer period was longer than than the 12,000 years since agriculture but shorter than the hunter, human brain development period. Pastoral period pre agriculture for some while many remained hunter- gatherer. Wanita Dean <dean@...> wrote: Right... for a LONG time humans ate pretty exclusively from hunted game... then came a shorter period of hunter-gatherer, then agriculture (ugh!)... it just all came to fast for our poor bodies to adjust quick enough! :-( _____ More true than my statement. We wouldn't be here, doing what we do, if not for that. Was thinking more on the gatherer line than the agricultural for the plants. Wanita Dean wrote: They have lived longer on meat and fat from animals... with NO other foodstuffs longer than any other diet. Dean _____ Eating gluten and dairy free isn't as terrible as it sounds. Humans have lived longer historically on meat, veggies, fruits and nuts than they have from grains, dairy and processed food. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 So, Wanita, How long do you think the hunter-gatherer period was? And, due to the last ice age, how could it have been very long at all for many people in the far north? I think they would have continued scavenging and hunting during the ice age time (after a couple million years of the same). _____ The hunter-gatherer period was longer than than the 12,000 years since agriculture but shorter than the hunter, human brain development period. Pastoral period pre agriculture for some while many remained hunter- gatherer. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 > > Right... for a LONG time humans ate pretty exclusively from hunted game... > then came a shorter period of hunter-gatherer, then agriculture (ugh!)... it > just all came to fast for our poor bodies to adjust quick enough! :-( I don't know if I can believe humans, or their descendants were exclusively hunters at one point. I think there had to have been some type of gathering in all of human history. I mean, we didn't evolve from completely carnivorous primates then get smarter and decided to only hunt and not gather any of natures bounty, did we? I dunno, I could be wrong, but I don't think humans or the descendants of humans were ever just hunters. Just doesn't make sense that it would happen that way. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 On 3/2/06, gdawson6 <gdawson6@...> wrote: > > > > > Right... for a LONG time humans ate pretty exclusively from hunted > game... > > then came a shorter period of hunter-gatherer, then agriculture > (ugh!)... it > > just all came to fast for our poor bodies to adjust quick enough! :-( > > > I don't know if I can believe humans, or their descendants were > exclusively hunters at one point. I think there had to have been some > type of gathering in all of human history. I mean, we didn't evolve > from completely carnivorous primates then get smarter and decided to > only hunt and not gather any of natures bounty, did we? > > I dunno, I could be wrong, but I don't think humans or the descendants > of humans were ever just hunters. Just doesn't make sense that it > would happen that way. > > - Yes, I'd also say the idea that we were all once eating exclusively animal foods is ludicrous. Especially on the timescales given above, which would seem to say that in the time since the last ice age we evolved, say, incisors for eating fruit. It seems clear that humans have been so successful precisely because we are so adaptable, and that such adaptability could not have been developed without a varied diet since the " beginning. " Otherwise, why would closely-related ancestral species found in archaeological digs also show varying versions of the dentition of an omnivorous animal? Carl Sauer (an older source, but one whose work is worth reading for its amazing insight and beautiful prose) posits that humans must have evolved along the coasts of Africa rather than the inland savanna (as was usually argued) -- we're the only primates who are particularly adapted to swimming (float easily, relatively hairless, appendages well-suited), we seem particularly healthy with seafood in our diets, etc, and most importantly that there seemed to be a niche there for an omnivorous gatherer species that could eat a large variety of the rich foods available along coastlines. There's lots of other evidence cited, of course, but that's the beginning of the argument. The point being that omnivorous roots had to have been there well before agriculture and the ice age. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 Do you believe cats were obligate hunters? Do you know why this would be the most efficient means of survival, and only available to the ones on the top of the food chain? Now, once we started scavenging (a LONG time ago) cat kills, to get the bone marrow and brains, we began to grow bigger brains. Once we got bigger brains and started organized hunting practices (which then in turn contributed to our ever expanding brain via using our brains) we got better at hunting. This obviously didn't happen overnight. The " bounty " you refer to would have been the game meat that was plentiful way back. The game being plentiful is what drove our evolution, and our migration over the whole globe. But, when the " bounty " is animal food, everything else is " food for animals " . It is a simple mathematical equation of energy expended to get energy. If you drive a bunch of wild herbivores over a cliff, you get a LOT of energy with very little expended. Eating animal fat would satiate you so much you would not be hungry and would not seek out other food sources. Only when game got scarce did humans resort to " food for animals " . This is just pure logic. Now, later, when the game did get scarce, if we had only had the brains of cats we would not have been able to adapt and start eating omnivorously. So, good thing for that. But, I don't think we have adapted well to non-animal food yet. At least some of us haven't... especially those from northern Europe who would have come out of the last ice age very recently, and still then would have adopted animal husbandry for their subsistence. I for one do much better on a totally animal food diet. That doesn't mean that I eat only this food, but if I could I certainly would. I try to anyway, and when getting plenty of good animal fat, it is much easier. Dean _____ I don't know if I can believe humans, or their descendants were exclusively hunters at one point. I think there had to have been some type of gathering in all of human history. I mean, we didn't evolve from completely carnivorous primates then get smarter and decided to only hunt and not gather any of natures bounty, did we? I dunno, I could be wrong, but I don't think humans or the descendants of humans were ever just hunters. Just doesn't make sense that it would happen that way. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 , The development of our teeth was important for speech. We do have carnivorous teeth as well. We DID adapt to eating other food when we needed to. Probably more easily due to those " omnivorous roots " , as you point out. We are still adapting to this day, though. And, for some of us, we haven't adapted as much as others. It would be great if I could eat all the fruit and nuts I wanted and never gain a pound of body fat, or never have any digestive issues eating all other plants. But, this is not reality (at least not for me). And seafood from the coastline... hmmmm... sounds like lots of animal food to me! ;-) Dean _____ Yes, I'd also say the idea that we were all once eating exclusively animal foods is ludicrous. Especially on the timescales given above, which would seem to say that in the time since the last ice age we evolved, say, incisors for eating fruit. It seems clear that humans have been so successful precisely because we are so adaptable, and that such adaptability could not have been developed without a varied diet since the " beginning. " Otherwise, why would closely-related ancestral species found in archaeological digs also show varying versions of the dentition of an omnivorous animal? Carl Sauer (an older source, but one whose work is worth reading for its amazing insight and beautiful prose) posits that humans must have evolved along the coasts of Africa rather than the inland savanna (as was usually argued) -- we're the only primates who are particularly adapted to swimming (float easily, relatively hairless, appendages well-suited), we seem particularly healthy with seafood in our diets, etc, and most importantly that there seemed to be a niche there for an omnivorous gatherer species that could eat a large variety of the rich foods available along coastlines. There's lots of other evidence cited, of course, but that's the beginning of the argument. The point being that omnivorous roots had to have been there well before agriculture and the ice age. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 Dean, Great post! is this the way you eat? do you eat any vegetables? do you eat any carbs at all or just animal products? I'm reading Life Without Bread. Carolyn --- In , " Dean " <dean@...> wrote: > > Start eating ANIMAL FOOD with lots of ANIMAL FAT. Cheese, butter, (not > milk) are fine... and are great for making meals that are not boring. Think > of all the dishes one can make with eggs and meat and cheese and butter and > tallow and lard and spices. Sausage and cheese omelets are great with the > right spices! This is a VERY HEALTHY way to eat! > > Diabetes is the result of the immune system sensing the widespread tissue > damage from insulin, targeting the source cells in the pancreas and > destroying them. Insulin resistance type diabetes is the result of the > tissues themselves rejecting insulin. Neither form is found in any other > animal in nature, man's carnivorous pets fed a grain based diet may also > suffer this syndrome. > > In the absence of dietary carbs, the body does not need to produce insulin > and the diabetes essentially 'disappears'. You will never be told this by a > doctor because then you would be free of the need for medical intervention > and your daily ration of drugs. All the assorted ills diabetics suffer are > actually caused by insulin, cataracts, heart attacks, bad joints, etc. These > are the kind of damages done to the tissues by insulin, and the injected > kind is a far more powerful damaging agent than the endogenous hormone. > Blood monitoring on a zero-carb regime will quickly confirm the stability of > blood glucose. > > You don't need all these insulin producing carbs from veggies and fruit and > grains and legumes. Meat and organs have all the nutrients (the true > nutrients) you need. > > Dean > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 This is the way I try to eat. And, it gets easier all the time. One must like to cook different meats with different spices and such. When I do eat consistently like this, I feel FANTASTIC! You should try it for a few weeks. Make sure to eat PLENTY of animal fat! BTW... animal food is all dairy fat and eggs too. " Life Without Bread " ... what a GREAT book! Yah, I try to eat as close to zero carbs as possible, and pure animal food. I call it the " antivegan diet " . ;-) Dean _____ Dean, Great post! is this the way you eat? do you eat any vegetables? do you eat any carbs at all or just animal products? I'm reading Life Without Bread. Carolyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 I should point out that you DO need to TRANSITION into this WOE! It is NOT something that you should jump right into! But, after a few weeks or even months of bringing your carbs down, you will notice a HUGE difference in your health (your hair, skin, eyes, and of course the way you feel!). Dean _____ This is the way I try to eat. And, it gets easier all the time. One must like to cook different meats with different spices and such. When I do eat consistently like this, I feel FANTASTIC! You should try it for a few weeks. Make sure to eat PLENTY of animal fat! BTW... animal food is all dairy fat and eggs too. " Life Without Bread " ... what a GREAT book! Yah, I try to eat as close to zero carbs as possible, and pure animal food. I call it the " antivegan diet " . ;-) Dean _____ Dean, Great post! is this the way you eat? do you eat any vegetables? do you eat any carbs at all or just animal products? I'm reading Life Without Bread. Carolyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 3, 2006 Report Share Posted March 3, 2006 On 3/2/06, Dean <dean@...> wrote: > The development of our teeth was important for speech. We do have > carnivorous teeth as well. We DID adapt to eating other food when we needed > to. Probably more easily due to those " omnivorous roots " , as you point out. > We are still adapting to this day, though. And, for some of us, we haven't > adapted as much as others. It would be great if I could eat all the fruit > and nuts I wanted and never gain a pound of body fat, or never have any > digestive issues eating all other plants. But, this is not reality (at > least not for me). I agree with all of this-- your statement from the original post sounded much more extreme, as if it was saying that people had never eaten non-animal foods until after the last ice age, so that's what I was responding to. > And seafood from the coastline... hmmmm... sounds like lots of animal food > to me! ;-) Yes, definitely-- I mean that was a big part of the lesson to be learned from Price et al. But he does also document them eating quite a lot of other things IIRC, like various seaweeds etc. Also interesting to me is Cabeza de Vaca's accounts of the natives along the Texas coast and the various tubers they dug etc. Of course the natives in the plains had basically been farming grass for big game (and hence eating a ton of big game!) by annual burns that actually shaped the landscape much more than people generally imagine. It's always talked about as if it was some pristine untouched wilderness before the whites arrived, when really the great plains were probably created by the natives themselves. But even they (the natives) were semi-cultivating things like specific pecan groves and migrating according to the cycles of various fruit and nut trees. I don't really have an argument here, I just think such foodways are really interesting. > Dean > > > _____ > > Yes, I'd also say the idea that we were all once eating exclusively > animal foods is ludicrous. Especially on the timescales given above, > which would seem to say that in the time since the last ice age we > evolved, say, incisors for eating fruit. It seems clear that humans > have been so successful precisely because we are so adaptable, and > that such adaptability could not have been developed without a varied > diet since the " beginning. " Otherwise, why would closely-related > ancestral species found in archaeological digs also show varying > versions of the dentition of an omnivorous animal? > > Carl Sauer (an older source, but one whose work is worth reading for > its amazing insight and beautiful prose) posits that humans must have > evolved along the coasts of Africa rather than the inland savanna (as > was usually argued) -- we're the only primates who are particularly > adapted to swimming (float easily, relatively hairless, appendages > well-suited), we seem particularly healthy with seafood in our diets, > etc, and most importantly that there seemed to be a niche there for an > omnivorous gatherer species that could eat a large variety of the rich > foods available along coastlines. There's lots of other evidence > cited, of course, but that's the beginning of the argument. The point > being that omnivorous roots had to have been there well before > agriculture and the ice age. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 3, 2006 Report Share Posted March 3, 2006 , I think that non-animal food was cultivated when it was needed, but I really think that humans ate as much animal food as they could get their hands on. Their whole ways of living revolved around being organized hunters. There are no cave paintings of people planting corn, or picking berries! :-) This way of life they had... it's how our brains evolved. Dean _____ Of course the natives in the plains had basically been farming grass for big game (and hence eating a ton of big game!) by annual burns that actually shaped the landscape much more than people generally imagine. It's always talked about as if it was some pristine untouched wilderness before the whites arrived, when really the great plains were probably created by the natives themselves. But even they (the natives) were semi-cultivating things like specific pecan groves and migrating according to the cycles of various fruit and nut trees. I don't really have an argument here, I just think such foodways are really interesting. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 3, 2006 Report Share Posted March 3, 2006 On 3/3/06, Dean <dean@...> wrote: > , > > I think that non-animal food was cultivated when it was needed, but I really > think that humans ate as much animal food as they could get their hands on. > Their whole ways of living revolved around being organized hunters. There > are no cave paintings of people planting corn, or picking berries! :-) This > way of life they had... it's how our brains evolved. > > Dean Well, there are relatively very few paintings of people alltogether. Not disputing what you're saying, I just think it's interesting. There are quite a few engravings of what look like seed heads and various types of plants. Just looking at Leroi-Gourhan's table of " styles " of markings from the Upper Paleolithic I found several (though he wants to call them all penises or vaginas, I forget which). Interesting though that, at least in this set in front of me, the plantlike shapes start to appear only in the Upper Paleolithic, say 30,000-10,000 years ago. Here's an ivory rod from Espélugues in the Hautes-Pyrénées that's in the shape of a plant with kernels, and another from Moravia, both " Upper Magdalenian, " i.e. pretty damned close to agriculture. But here's another from the Aurignacian (say 30,000ish years ago... I don't know if these definitions are deprecated or changed since this source in the 70s) that's got grain heads next to a long list of lunar tallies (according to this author, Marshack), as if to record when grains appeared or somesuch. Fun stuff. > _____ > > Of course the natives in the plains had basically been farming grass > for big game (and hence eating a ton of big game!) by annual burns > that actually shaped the landscape much more than people generally > imagine. It's always talked about as if it was some pristine > untouched wilderness before the whites arrived, when really the great > plains were probably created by the natives themselves. But even they > (the natives) were semi-cultivating things like specific pecan groves > and migrating according to the cycles of various fruit and nut trees. > > I don't really have an argument here, I just think such foodways are > really interesting. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2006 Report Share Posted March 6, 2006 I'm sorry, but although this makes sense in theory, that eating no carbs means you use no insulin, it is not true in practice. I have gone on no-carb diets, and I still needed to inject insulin to keep my blood sugars from being high. They do not go as high as with carbs, but they stay high much, much longer because protein takes a long time to digest. I also feel ill and dizzy on no carbs, and my eyesight becomes blurry. So I think that shows everyone is different -- it may work for one person and not another, and it is not a cure for diabetes, though it may be a helpful management tool if your system tolerates it. Sorry. I feel best on the type of diet that has 65 to 70% healthy animal fats and coconut oil, 20% carbs and 10-15% protein. And raw milk is great for my diabetes, and is the main source of my carbohydrates. Eating this way makes my blood sugars very stable and they come down easily into the normal range when I inject insulin appropriate to the small number of carbs in my meals. Yes, I do believe the synthetic insulin is not the greatest thing for the body, but it's what we have, and it works better than just letting blood sugar run high all the time. I don't have the money to chase after beef and pork insulin, since the American Diabetes Assn. decided synthetic was better and it's so hard to get animal insulin these days. By the way, vegetables do NOT need insulin to be digested, except peas, potatoes and corn. Green veggies have so little carbs and so much fiber that they do not raise blood sugar at all. Ann > --- In , " Dean " <dean@> > > > > In the absence of dietary carbs, the body does not need to > produce insulin > > and the diabetes essentially 'disappears'. You will never be > told this by a > > doctor because then you would be free of the need for medical > intervention > > and your daily ration of drugs. All the assorted ills diabetics > suffer are > > actually caused by insulin, cataracts, heart attacks, bad joints, > etc. These > > are the kind of damages done to the tissues by insulin, and > the injected > > kind is a far more powerful damaging agent than the > endogenous hormone. > > Blood monitoring on a zero-carb regime will quickly confirm the > stability of > > blood glucose. > > > > You don't need all these insulin producing carbs from veggies > and fruit and > > grains and legumes. Meat and organs have all the nutrients > (the true > > nutrients) you need. > > > > Dean > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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