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RE: drastic diet change update

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At 04:03 PM 5/5/02 -0400, you wrote:

> sucks!

>

>I sent this 8 hours ago :( No need to respond, since you already answered

>the question.

>

>Suze Fisher

>Web Design & Development

><http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/>http://members.bellatlantic.ne

t/~vze3shjg/

><mailto:s.fisher22@...>mailto:s.fisher22@...

>

>

>-----Original Message-----

>From: Suze Fisher

[<mailto:s.fisher22@...%5D>mailto:s.fisher22@...]

>Sent: Saturday, May 04, 2002 8:26 AM

>

>Subject: RE: drastic diet change update

>

>

>>>>> The teacher would not

>let her eat her sausage that I had packed for a snack because the teacher

>figures meat isn't healthy.

>

>

>****Hunh??!! " Would not let...?? " Oh no, no, no - not acceptable!!! Oh boy

>that irks me!! She had no right to shove foods that lead to degenerative

>diseases down her throat and deny her healthy foods! Grrr....that really

>pisses me off!!!

>

>(Big deep breath....breathe out....) OK, i'm calm now....what did you do,

>Heidi?

>

>

>P.S. I'm a former teacher who used candy in an award system i had set up for

>my fifth graders (out of ignorance, of course). I'm so ashamed!!! But would

>never have denied a student a food their parent packed for them. Wish i'd

>had a parent like you who could've helped educate me about nutrition...

>

>Suze Fisher

>Web Design & Development

><http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/>http://members.bellatlantic.ne

t/~vze3shjg/

><mailto:s.fisher22@...>mailto:s.fisher22@...

Agreed, this was sent last night and there's a few more that haven't gone

through this week. I've been thinking about alternative fund raisers for

schools etc. that support local community.

At 01:34 PM 5/4/02 -0700, Alec wrote:

Way back 32 years ago when I went to school girls were not

>allowed to wear pants or jeans to school (but micro mini skirts were OK if

>that makes sense). But the no pants rules was ignored on cold days (well

>when it gets below 60 here in San Diego we think we are dying).

ROTFL (rolling on the floor laughing ) Do I remember that! We couldn't wear

pants till high school. By the time we got to 7th and 8th grade we weren't

going to wear snowpants in the New England winter recesses. One day there

was a

king on the mountain thing at recess on the parking lot snowbank. Some boys

pushed some girls over and there was exposure. The principal our 8th grade

teacher called all the girls inside and called us all s*u*s. Pants were

allowed

for recess after that. The boys were not spoken to at all. Our perverted old

bus driver would turn to watch girls in shorter skirts walk up the bus stairs.

Wanita

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>>>At 08:25 AM 5/4/2002 -0400, you wrote:

>P.S. I'm a former teacher who used candy in an award system i had set up

>for my fifth graders (out of ignorance, of course). I'm so ashamed!!! But

>would never have denied a student a food their parent packed for them.

>Wish i'd had a parent like you who could've helped educate me about

>nutrition...

>>>>OK, here is a dilemma. My kids are now adults (no not the goats). But

when

they were in Brownies, Girl Scouts, Soccer, High School, they would sell

cookies or candy bars to raise money. Now having been a parent to one of

those little hucksters, what do I say to them now when they try to sell me

that poison? It is hard to say no to those little kids.

****Hmmm...that's a good question. The only thing I can think of is for you

to tell them you'd prefer not to eat the cookies because they are bad for

your health, but you'd be happy to make a donation to them nonetheless. You

can pay them the price for a box (or however many boxes), but declare it a

donation and don't take the cookies.

My personal feeling is that kids can deal with the truth quite well and i'd

rather call it as it is - " this is unhealthy " than to make up some untruth

so as not to make them feel bad about selling cookies.

Maybe someone else has an alternative idea...?

Suze Fisher

Web Design & Development

http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/

mailto:s.fisher22@...

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> OK, here is a dilemma. My kids are now adults (no not the goats).

But when

> they were in Brownies, Girl Scouts, Soccer, High School, they would

sell

> cookies or candy bars to raise money. Now having been a parent to

one of

> those little hucksters, what do I say to them now when they try to

sell me

> that poison? It is hard to say no to those little kids.

The solution is simple. Instead of buying their poison, just give

them some money. Then they get to keep their poison, still get money,

and you don't have the poison in your house! It's a win-win

situation. Unless, of course, they insist on you taking SOMETHING and

you lose :)

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Actually, Maranatha and East Wind are what I usually get because I shop at

our co-op much more often than I shop at Whole Foods. However, I prefer the

Whole Kids peanut butter because the palm oil behaves like the hydrogenated

oil in the big brand peanut butters and keeps it from separating. I *hate*

dealing with the separation!

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> ****Hmmm...that's a good question. The only thing I can think of is for

you

> to tell them you'd prefer not to eat the cookies because they are bad for

> your health, but you'd be happy to make a donation to them nonetheless.

You

> can pay them the price for a box (or however many boxes), but declare it a

> donation and don't take the cookies.

That's what I do. I've been told that they don't get the same credit for a

donation that they do for sale (how backward is that!). So I told them to

count it as a sale if they wanted to, but to deliver my boxes to a food

shelf instead. I felt slightly guilty about sending trans-fat and sugar

pucks to a food shelf, but even bad food is better than no food.

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On Wed, 01 May 2002 23:18:57 -0500 Clearview Acres <clearvu@...>

writes:

Hey folks.

<snip>

Sugar my old friend, seems to be the cause of most of my problems now

that

wheat has been eliminated from my diet.

******Good old white sugar and its relatives that appear in a myriad of

forms. A deadly " old friend " it is...

But it is sugar that is refined (dah) or heated like maple syrup, organic

or

not.

Rice, corn, seems to be ok, but cheese sets me off on the allergy side of

the

equation as well as stomach upset, but raw milk and quark is ok.

*****stick with the raw milk and give up anything that currently causes

you a problem.

Has anybody out there sped up the healing process with blue green algie?

If not would it work in theory?

*****I have had good results with algae that has not been heated. Many

more raw animal food oriented people disagree with me, but I have had

good clinical and personal experiences with blue green algae and so I

would recommend it.

<snip>

I know it took several years to get to this condition, and will take a

few to

get back to whats considered normal, but i work extrememly hard and that

has

been alittle tuff these past two weeks.

I read a thread today but lost it before I could catch it that

carbo-loading is

for the birds and it takes a while to adjust to another form of intake

for

fuel, what was that?

*****You can find the info at www.secondopinions.com.

How long is a little while to adjust to a lean mean fighting machine

without

wheat?

*****Add coconut products (best raw) and lots of raw butter and you

should get some immediate benefits. The general consensus is 6-12 months

but it can be a whole lot sooner depending on the individual. I've seen

it happen in as little as two weeks.

It seem I have come quite use to running on it and now there is a big

whole in

my get up and go, and I have to have it to do just what has to be done.

I'm not talking a trip to Tibet to climb mountians, I am moving into the

busiest time of the year and need a fix to get me through the day.

Meat seems to be ok but doesn't last to long. The fatter the better as

always

for me, but we are low on fatty cuts.

*****Yep the fatty cuts are the best.

Bianca

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>I read a thread today but lost it before I could catch it that

>carbo-loading is

>for the birds and it takes a while to adjust to another form of intake

>for

>fuel, what was that?

>

>*****You can find the info at www.secondopinions.com.

It's http://www.second-opinions.co.uk

_________________________________________________________________

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At 01:55 PM 5/6/2002 -0700, you wrote:

>How long is a little while to adjust to a lean mean fighting machine

>without

>wheat?

This isn't NT, but it worked for my hubby: he did a one week " Pepto Bismol "

routine. This is recommended by Dr. Fine, and it kind of heals everything

up and gives the gut a rest. He basically took it 3 times a day for a week.

It's pretty harmless: the bismuth is an old-time remedy, I guess. I have no

idea how it works.

Heidi Schuppenhauer

Trillium Custom Software Inc.

heidis@...

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