Guest guest Posted June 18, 2008 Report Share Posted June 18, 2008 A few typos in my last email corrected here: On 6/16/08, Masterjohn <chrismasterjohn@ gmail.com> wrote: > For insulin resistance, try intermittent fasting and/or intermittent > low-carbing. Try eating carbs mostly at night and eat low-carb in the > day time, eating totally low-carb one or two days a week and/or > fasting one or two days a week or eating very low-calorie (such as 600 > calories) one or two days a week. Being a recovering diagnosed diabetic, I do not recommend eating carbs at night. >> Also, increase your physical activity, and make sure you exercise on most days prior to consuming your more carb-heavy (relative to the others) meal. Exercise on fasting/low- calorie days if you can. << I'd also caution against that. I recommend bed rest on regenerative days. Exercise creates acidity itself, and we want to drain the body from an accumulation of acids creates by starch/sugar metabolism. Further, I recommend on those fasting days a soup of zucchini/squash, celery and parsley, slightly cooked and blended. These non-starchy vegetables provide the body with much needed alkalinity inducing minerals such as potassium, magnesium and calcium. Protein consumption creates acidity, especially if cooked. Thus, reduce proteins if possible, and pick your meats fatty. The pancreas' main mineral is potassium. The liver is the storehouse for sodium. In diabetes, both these organs and other glands are usually depleted from years of wrong nutrition. The acid/base balancing mechanism of the blood cannot be compromised as even a variation of a 10th % would put us into coma or death, thus the body needs to compensate in its detox. After years of accumulation, the liver cannot keep up anymore, and ingested toxins will enter the bloodstream. Glucose is just such a toxin. Of course, the mechanism is more complicated as the pancreas in involved as well, and many other co-mechanisms are at play - nobody said the body was anything but a most miracolous system of inter-connected functions. However, for the sake of simplicity, look at this condition as an accumulatio of toxicity, and the bodies need to 1) purge the toxins (acids, fat reserves in liver etc.) 2) be fed a more optimal diet conducive to alkalinity and best nutritional absorption If this advice is observed, and bed rest and mineral soups are given, diabetes can be cured in most if not all cases. They say diabetes is a " hoof and mouth disease " (too much too eat, too little exercise). For all intents and purposes, I would say this is a wrong statement. It clearly is only a mouth condition, i.e. caused by what organic matter you put into your body all day long for prolonged periods of time. Sedentary people need not get diabetes if they eat a nutrition that is more optimal. Conversely, diabetes cannot be healed by exercise. Exercise helps with reducing a little of blood glucose, and as such is treating a symptom, just like medications. Exercise is good and healthy for many other reasons, such as blood circulation, posture, regeneration of tissues, energy level, etc. But a cure for diabetes it ain't. Just one more thing of the guilt-tripping, brainwashing of the medical community, that creates nothing built poor guilt ridden people. If they changed their diet first, they'd loose their excess weight (if they are obese), and they will find an elevated energy level, both of which will naturally result in the desire to go out and do physical activity, as a natural extension of health. The doctors literally push these people out when their weight makes it not only hard, but even unhealthy to work out. It is a disservice to people. And nobody explains the metabolic mechanism to them, i.e. that they need cut carbs not fats. This is indeed comparable to mass murder, but then... we'd all be dead if all of us 6 billions humans ate the " right " foods.... digressing! Thrive, Boris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.