SUNDAY PALEO / October 30, 2011

Annapolis.jpg

Annapolis, Maryland. Image: CyberMed, LLC

ANTHROPOLOGY

Are We Living In The Anthropocene? 

They acknowledge that humans are "undoubtedly" the dominant species on Earth, but stress that there are many specific regions/ecosystems that are still intact. ....despite popular belief, humans have not changed everything. - Science 2.0

Face-to-face with an ancient human

From their studies of rubbish in and around Vistehola, the archaeologists determined that this clan ate fish – mostly cod – as well as oysters, mussels, cormorants, elk and wild pig. - University of Stavanger

ENVIRONMENT

Dow starts mass-marketing solar shingles

Though obviously much more reflective, the CIGS (copper, indium, gallium, and selenide) thin-film solar shingles resemble typical asphalt composite shingles in shape and size, and when installed mimic the same brick pattern. The shingles boast easy installation and durability, with Dow Solar claiming they can be walked on or even dropped from a two-story roof with no damage inflicted. – CNET News

PALEO CUISINE

Berlin Restaurant Caters to Modern Cavemen

Many people think the Paleolithic diet is just some hipster trend but it's a worldwide phenomenon, with an online community that spans the globe," Sauvage's Boris Leite-Poço told SPIEGEL ONLINE of the growing interest in caveman cooking. – Speigel Online International

HEALTHY LIVING

More Power to the Cranberry: Study Shows the Juice is Better than Extracts at Fighting Bacterial Infections

Camesano’s lab explores the mechanisms that the virulent form of E. coli bacteria, the primary cause of most urinary tract infections (UTIs) in people, uses to form biofilms. This strain of E. coli is covered with small hair-like projections known as fimbriae that act like hooks and latch onto cells that line the urinary tract. - Worcester Polytechnic Institute

RECIPE

Bison Stew

We were fortunate to receive some tasty bison stew meat from US Wellness Meats. We love bison, and we love everything that we receive from US Wellness, so we were very anxious to cook up something amazing with this product! – Primal Palate

SUCCESS STORY

Suicide: One Bite at a Time

I came to realize that basically I was committing suicide one bite at a time with all the “comfort” foods I was consuming. Within about three months after gradually ramping up with the Primal lifestyle I had lost 40 to 50 pounds and was off all medications except for my blood pressure meds. - Mark's Daily Apple

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Welcome to the Anthropocene: Humankind's layer on the Earth

Paul Crutzen coined the term “anthropocene” while attending a scientific conference. When the chairman kept using the term Holocene to describe the current epoch, Crutzen exclaimed “Let's stop it, we are no longer in the Holocene. We are in the Anthropocene." 

Progression to Primal, Evolution Step III ~ You Have Arrived

photo.JPG

By Leslie Why Reap

Hello!  Wow, how do you feel?  Everyone has arrived at Progression to Paleo:  Evolution Step III!  I have evolved significantly since I wrote the first of these three  posts, way back on August 28th.  I had two major revelations along the way.   

First, I learned that the goal of being 100% Paleo is great but the actual practice of Paleo as it works for me and perhaps for many others, would better be defined as “Primal” (see Mark Sisson’s blog www.marksdailyapple.com ).  Mark talks of not just nutrition but a lifestyle shift. He talks about the 80/20 rule and about having the physical and emotional  health needed to truly enjoy life.  After all, life is not entirely about nutrition (no snickers here from those that know me well).  Life is for living.  Let’s do it cleanly and smartly.  So, I am officially changing the name to “Progression to Primal.”   

Secondly, I learned that most everyone likes short blog posts.  High quality, low word count.  As much as I wanted to educate the world, I have learned that the world can only digest small bites of hard hitting, engaging facts with some key action item(s) that they incorporate and make their own.   

Brief Summary of the Three Evolutionary Steps:(This summary is for my brother who is just realizing now how smart I am and he wants to catch up.)

Progression to Primal ~ Step 1:   Eat lots of vegetables and fruits, 50% of your plate at each meal.  Drink water and skip almost all other beverages.  Eat “real” food, 3 meals, and 2 snacks if needed.

Progression to Primal ~ Step 2:  Give up grains.  Eat high quality protein and increase your healthy fats.

Progression to Primal ~ Step 3:  Write shorter blog posts...oh wait, that is my evolution.  Heal your gut.  Adopt a Primal lifestyle.  Get your needs met. 

A. Heal Your Gut:  “All Diseases Begin in the Gut.”  Hippocrates, 460-370 BC

If you have read the last few posts you will be familiar with the knowledge that 70% of our immune system cells reside in and along our gut.  Without the proper balance of microflora in our guts our immune system weakens and puts us at risk for not only significant digestive issues but for all sorts of inflammatory issues such as allergies, autoimmune diseases, cancer, heart disease and more.   Adopting the right Primal or Paleo diet, may be enough to restore balance to a gut that has been overexposed to the typical American  diet and lifestyle.   Depending on the current state of the gut however, some individuals cannot simply change their diet and restore the bacterial balance.  Perhaps their guts have become  more permeable or “leaky” due to do  long term exposure to the typical American diet plus the additional destructive elements of NSAIDs, antibiotics, birth control pills, environmental and food toxins, chronic stress and/or chronic sleep deprivation.  With increased permeability, instead of letting just the nutrientsthrough into the blood stream, large molecules of undigested food proteins as well as other toxic matter can leak through.  This can by caused by an overgrowth of Candida Albicans a yeast that goes fungal and starts puncturing your intestinal wall when the “good” bacteria is no longer there to police things.  Or it could be a H. Pylori, C. Difficile, Klebsiella overload or simple a combination of the aforementioned evils.  Whether it is diet, stress, infection, antibiotic use or a combination of those factors, just be aware that you may need to take extra steps necessary to heal the lining and seal your gut.  Part of this process will be finding the right gut healing diet for you.  Once you are healed then you can progress to a full Primal diet of organic fruits and vegetables, high quality protein, nuts and occasional raw dairy and limited or no grains or legumes.  There are two very similar dietary approaches that have significant antidotal and some very scientific evidence to support their gut healing properties.  For further information on healing your gut, please investigate The GAPS diet (http://gapsdiet.com/) and/or The Specific Carbohydrate Diet . (http://www.scdiet.org/1about/index.html). 

  1. Adopt a Primal Lifestyle

A Primal or Paleo lifestyle is just that, a lifestyle.  It goes beyond just what you eat.  It is about how you sleep, exercise, relieve stress AND what you put in your mouth.   Our Paleo ancestors were not “plugged” in 24x7, kept up til well past dark with Facebook and Kindles.  All that electronic blue light just gobbles up melatonin, never to return again that night.  Disrupted melatonin = poor sleep.  Poor sleep or too little sleep (less than 7 hours) will make you 3 xs more likely to get a cold or the flu.  Chronic sleep depravation has been linked to higher levels of obesity, depression and disease.  So unplug at least 1 hour before bed and have a face to face conversation or read a real book.  Exercise!  It comes in many forms.  Paleo people walked everywhere or ran or hiked or climbed.  So just move.  Run up the stairs, walk from the far side of the parking lot, hike up a hill, get outside, and reconnect with the earth.  Do a few sprints like your being chased by a bear and then throw down 20 pushups every day.  No need for 45 minutes a day, just do something every day to build strength, your heart included.   Find something you love to do that gives you energy and fills your emotional bucket and schedule time to do it, often.  Connect and spend face time with the people that you love and that love you.  Here is a summary of Mark Sisson’s 10 “Primal Blueprint Laws,” worth consideration, I think:

  1. Eat lots of plants and Animals
  2. Avoid Poisonous things
  3. Move Frequently at a Slow Pace
  4. Lift Heavy Things
  5. Spring Once in a While
  6. Get Adequate Sleep
  7. Play
  8. Get Adequate Sunlight
  9. Avoid Stupid Mistakes
  10. Use Your Brain

C.  Get Your Needs Met

What are your needs?  Do you know what your needs are?  Sit down with a pencil and piece of paper (note I didn't say computer) and write down your needs.  Don’t include the needs of your children, spouse, parents, friends, and boss, try to pull apart that big glob of gunky, nebulous “needs” and identify YOUR needs.  Is it my need or my child's need to attend an Ivy League school?  Big difference isn’t it?  Write down everything, emotional needs, physical needs, spiritual needs, financial needs, any needs you might have.  Then put them in categories.  Then prioritize them in each category and overall.  What is rising to the top?  Are these top 10 needs being met?  What would you have to do in order to have them be met?  Is the action required legal and safe? (Have to ask yourself that one before proceeding!)  Maybe the list looks like something like this…"I need to feel fit and healthy.  I need to retire at 65.  I need to retire with 500K in my 401K.  I need to work out every day.  I need to feel loved and appreciated.  I need to eat high quality, nutritional foods."  Identify the top 10 needs that AREN'T being met and write down how you are going to get from where you are now, to where you want to be. 

The unmet need, just like the unspoken thought, word, or feeling is one that can become toxic if it is not expressed.  Yes, it can make you physically ill.  Stress kills.  Get it out, find your voice and get on with this wonderful life.  It is the only one you’ve got. 

SUNDAY PALEO / October 23, 2011

Grand_County_2.jpg

Grand County, Colorado. October 2011. Image: CyberMed

ANTHROPOLOGY

Discovery Of An Early Human Ochre-processing Workshop

"All of these objects--the toolkits and stone implements both--were associated with the preparation of ochre, colored earth or rock that could be ground down to produce a colorful powder. ...Early humans may have used it to decorate bodies and clothing; it was later applied to cave walls to create some of the beautiful artwork that can still be found today." - Science20

FITNESS

Exercise As Effective As Drugs In Preventing Migraines

"The study lasted for a total of three months, during which the patients' migraine status, quality of life, aerobic capacity and level of phyical activity were evaluated before, during and after their treatment. Follow-ups were then carried out after three and six months. ...The results show that the number of migraines fell in all three groups. There was no difference in the preventative effect between the three treatments." - Science20

RECIPES

Succulent Duck Confit

"Duck confit came about centuries ago because of a practical need to preserve meat for long periods of time without refrigeration. While modern society has mostly lost the need to preserve meat for months, it has not lost its taste for duck confit; in fact, the dish has been elevated from practical peasant food to high-end, gourmet fare." - Mark's Daily Apple

Surviving Halloween!

"Instead of baking halloween cookies and filling up on candy, we make popcorn balls and roasted pumpkin seeds with the boys, prior to heading out to tour our neighborhood.  My mom started the pumpkin seed and popcorn ball tradition when we were kids; you see, she was not a candy fanatic either and we lived so far out in the country, trick or treating was not even an option, so every year we would look forward to making the gooey treats." - Everyday Paleo

REJUVENATION

Meditation: Small Dose, Big Effect

"Even with this small amount of practice, the researchers found big differences in brain functioning. Specifically, meditation training seemed to shift activity in the frontal regions of the brain towards a pattern indicative of greater positive, approach-oriented emotional states." - Psychology Today

SUCCESS STORIES

My Parents Have Been Right This Whole Time!

"I can’t believe how amazing I feel 45 lbs lighter (and still going), NO asthma, NO aches and pains, NO medication, NO stomach pains, NO illnesses, barely ANY outside allergies, I actually LIKE exercising – did I mention I can actually wear really cute clothes?!" - Mark's Daily Apple

Brain Health: Stay smart with exercise

fitness.jpg

John Oró, MD

The authors of a new report published in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings reviewed 1,600 articles on the role exercise in cognitive function and found 130 studies pertinent to the issue. According to Medscape Neurology, the lead author, neurologist J. Eric Ahlskog, MD, PhD, notes:

Normal aging is associated with brain shrinkage, and this appears to be primarily mediated by progressive loss of synapses and related neuronal connections (the 'neuropil').

Dr. Ahlskog summarized the findings: 

We concluded that you can make a very compelling argument for [aerobic] exercise as a disease-modifying strategy to prevent dementia and mild cognitive impairment, and for favorably modifying these processes once they have developed.

While the type and amount of exercise varied among the studies, to Dr. Ahlskog, the studies suggests increasing "the heart rate to about 60% of maximum" in several sessions for a total about 150 minutes each a week. Even though the literature on resistance training was "less extensive", Dr. Ahlskog noted it was also beneficial. Cyrus Raji, MD, PhD of the University of Pittsburgh, not a participant in the study, concurred: 

While the majority of the evidence shows that aerobic physical activity is the best type of physical activity for this purpose, resistance training with weights may also be helpful.

Dr. Raji's impression of the study:

This paper nicely summarizes all of the latest evidence showing how regular physical activity can promote better brain health with aging and reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease.

Paleo Pals children's book coming early next year

paleo_rocket_ship-1.jpg

Sarah Fragoso has announced the new book Paleo Pals: Jimmy and the Carrot Rocket Shipscheduled for release on February 7th, 2012.  As Sarah writes in her blog Everyday Paleo:

The Paleo Pals are three superhero children who come to the rescue when kids aren’t sure about eating paleo foods and they arrived determined and able to help! 

My wife, a school nurse, while reviewing the history of school nursing found this quote in Conserving the Health of Colorado’s Children, A Handbook for Teachers (1944) which, with slight modification, is pertinent to Sarah's own book:

She who helps a child helps humanity with a distinctness, an immediateness, which no other stage of life can possibly give.

Congratulations to Sarah for carrying the nutritional beacon for today's children.

SUNDAY PALEO / October 16, 2011

Grand_County.jpg

Late afternoon in Grand County, Colorado. October 2011. Image: CyberMed

ENVIRONMENT

Vermont Eyes 90% Renewable Energy Use By 2050

"The plan, the culmination of Gov. Peter Shumlin's efforts to move the state toward a sustainable energy future, calls for the development of cleantech projects, energy conservation, increasing residential and commercial electrical and heating efficiency and making a push toward establishing plug-in electric vehicle infrastructure." - EnergyBoom 

HEALTH / FITNESS

7 ways to protect your heart before it breaks

"Your heart is one impressive, overachieving organ: In the minute it takes you to read these paragraphs, it will have pushed a whopping 1.5 gallons of blood through 60,000 miles of blood vessels—that's more than twice the circumference of Earth. Yet despite your ticker's superpowers (and the fact that it keeps you, well, alive), most women don't do enough to safeguard their heart health." - TodayHealth 

How I Would Change Gym Class 

"No, I’m not considering a new career path, and no, this isn’t a policy discussion. I’m not proposing comprehensive school reform (although that’s probably what it’d take to work). I’m just having fun. In the process, hopefully I outline some tangible activities you parents find helpful enough to try." - Mark's Daily Apple

NUTRITION

Paleolithic eaters find community at breakfast

"Layton started the Facebook group Eating Paleo in Montreal a year ago. Roughly one hundred local dieters, from professional athletes to firsttimers, exchange recipes, review restaurants and list grocery store finds. They also organize monthly breakfasts." - The Gazette

Could you go without processed foods for a month?

"Because eating well doesn't just make us healthier, it makes us happier. "It feels really good," Wilder said. "Physically, yes, but emotionally, too. I can't think of a better way to have good relationships with people than around the dinner table." - Grist

Bad Genes? Fruits and Vegetables Fight Heart Disease Risk

"In a new study, people with alterations in a gene called 9p21 had an increased risk of having a heart attack. But if they ate a diet high in raw fruits and vegetables, that increase was virtually eliminated." - MyHealthNewsDaily 

My Escape From Vegetarianism

"To other vegetarians, I know that any time a former vegetarian speaks about their negative experiences with vegetarianism, it can feel almost like an insult to their own beliefs. Which is why people like Lierre Keith who have spoken out publicly (and in her excellent book, The Vegetarian Myth) have been violently attacked for doing so. So it's not easy finding the right words to describe my own personal experience." - Everymon to Ironmom

RECIPES

Primal Texas Chili

"Texas chili doesn’t let anything get in the way of and distract from the two main ingredients, chunks of beef and chili powder. Hearty, heavily seasoned and ranging from a bit of heat to fiery-hot, this is the type of chili that’s so thick you almost need a fork to eat it." - Mark's Daily Apple

Grilled Chicken Kabobs

"This weekend we decided to make the most of the summer weather (hitting 80 in October is definitely summer weather when you live in the north east) and make some grilled chicken kabobs.  It was really easy and turned out delicious." - Against the Grain 

SUCCESS STORIES

How I Lost 70 Pounds On The Primal Diet

"Losing weight is a challenge. It has taken me most of my adult life to find a workable way to do it. Along the way I have tried many, many different approaches from heavy exercise regiments, to calorie restriction and even becoming a vegetarian. Up until about one year ago ..." - Courageos Mind

Eat This!

By Leslie Why Reap

This is exciting stuff.  This is Paleo side dish heaven on earth.  Seriously, it is exciting for those of us who have given up grains and starchy tubers like potatoes but would still love to languish in the glorious texture of mashed potatoes.  Languish, luxuriate and leave the high glycemic index of potatoes behind and instead dip into a like dish that is jam packed with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and there for anti-cancer properties!  Who knew that CAULIFLOWER could be so tasty….maybe you all did, but I didn’t.

This dish is PERFECT for those of you on the Paleo diet, GAPS diet, the CORE diet, an Anti-Candida Diet, Gluten/Grain Free or Low Glycemic diet.  It also fits in well with Weston A. Price and Nourishing Traditions.   Let’s face it, this dish is universally awesome and tastes great (yes even Vegans can enjoy this dish with some minor alterations.  Yes, I just used the word “Vegan” in a Paleo post.  (Vegans are people too you know.)  Perhaps I am so enthusiastic about this dish because in addition to being over-the-top healthy, it is an excellent vehicle for my favorite condiments, golden grass fed butter and lovely Celtic sea salt.

So this is how it all happened. 

Developing a Modern Paleolithic: Many dams are “relics of a bygone age”

Glines_Canyon_Dam.jpg

Removal of Glines Canyon Dam as of Oct. 4, 2011. Image: WikimediaBy Dr. John

You may be aware that removal of the Glines Canyon Dam on the Elwha River, which began on September 17, represents the largest dam removal in American history. Earlier this year, two outdated dams no longer in use on the Twelve Mile River in South Carolina were also removed.

Regardless of your position on the environment, removal of many dams should not be a contentious issue. The article American Waterways: Go with the flow, published in the Oct. 1 issue of The Economist, provides pertinent data on dam removal:

  • “In this century’s first decade, 410 American dams were removed. While that is just a small portion of the more than 84,000 dams in America, the rate of removal is growing; more than twice as many dams were removed between 2000 and 2010 than in any other decade.”
  • “Some – around 2,540 – generate hydropower, but most do not.”

The Economist also notes:

Like the Twelve Mile River dams, many of them are relics of a bygone age: holdovers from the Industrial Revolution built to power mills long defunct for industries that have largely vanished from America.

The goals of dam removal include public safety (the older the dam, generally the greater the risk of failure), water recreation (fishing, rafting, etc.) and restoration of aquatic life (for example, the salmon population of the Elwha River is expected to boom from 3,000 to 400,000 following dam removal).

Undamming rivers, when possible, helps restore our natural world – remember clean air, clean water, flowing streams and rivers (OK, maybe you don’t). It also helps restore the Paleolithic resources on which we depend.

SUNDAY PALEO / October 9, 2011

Food_Market_Otavalo.jpg

Food market, Otavalo, Ecuador, South America. Image: John MichaelANTHROPOLOGY

Prehistoric Children Finger-Painted on Cave Walls

"Researchers have uncovered evidence that children as young as 2 decorated France’s Rouffignac caves with markings known as finger flutings at least 13,000 years ago, drawing not only simple lines but also symbolic shapes." - History.com

ENVIRONMENT

World’s second tallest structure will power 100,000 homes a day with hot air

"If a clean energy project in the Arizona desert goes forward, the second tallest structure on Earth will be a 2,600-foot solar updraft tower, which could last 80 years and generate 200 MW of electricity each day -- using only hot air." - Grist

Nearly All Deep-Sea Fisheries Are Unsustainable

"The authors of this Marine Policy paper say that the best policy would be to end economically wasteful deep-sea fisheries, redirect subsidies to help displaced fishermen and rebuild fish populations in productive waters closer to ports and markets, places far more conducive to sustainable fisheries." - Save Our Seas

The Self-Sufficient Office Building

“The story is that this building is pushing the boundaries of performance in all categories, not just in one or two,” said Jason McLennan, the chief executive of both the certifying institute and the Cascadia Green Building Council, a chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council that administers the better-known LEED rating system. “For this building type and this scale, it’s the first in the world to go this far.” - The New York Times 

MODERN DISEASES

How Inflammation Affects Your Health

"Chronic inflammation is another story. It occurs when inflammation persists, and the dilated blood vessels and hyped-up immune system become the body's new norm. However, not only is it not part of the normal healing process, research indicates that it may be at the very core of chronic diseases such as asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, ulcerativecolitis and Crohn's disease." - MyHealthNewsDaily 

Low Vitamin B12 Tied to Brain Atrophy, Cognitive Impairment

"The study found that higher levels of several markers of vitamin B12 deficiency, most notably methylmalonic acid (MMA) and homocysteine, were associated with lower global cognitive function scores and lower total brain volume roughly 5 years later." - Medscape Neurology 

Junk Food Looks More Tempting When Blood Sugar Drops

"More worryingly, after a mild blood sugar drop, our brains are less able to fight our desire for ice cream and pizza, the researchers said. And the response from the part of the brain responsible for inhibiting such cravings was particularly weak in obese people, the study found." - MyHealthNewsDaily 

Brain scans show obese less able to stop food cravings

"Brain scans of thin people who looked at pictures of high-calorie foods showed increased activity in a region of the brain used for impulse control, but obese people showed little activity in this region, the researchers found." - MSNBC.com

RECIPES

Dad’s Grilled Lemon Chicken

"Anyhow, what I’ve learned first hand is that Paleo can be done and it’s not as difficult as many people think.  I knew this going into it because, well my wife runs this very popular blog called Everyday Paleo, which most of us have heard of.  And yes I have cooked many meals in the past, for those who remember Dad’s Pork Chops, yeah that was me." - Everyday Paleo 

Harvest Spiced Drumsticks

"Fall is here, which means the kids are back in school, cozy sweaters are being worn, pumpkins are ripe for the picking, and warm comfort foods are on our tables. This fall, we have created a tasty chicken recipe that will fill your home with all the wonderful aromas of fall flavors, and is also a perfect 'left-overs' option to send along with your kids to school." - Primal Palate

The microenvironment: “… an entirely new way of thinking about cancer”

walking_brisk_s.jpg

Image: iStockphoto

Mainstream media is slowly recognizing the importance of exercise in reducing chronic inflammation. On October 3rd, USA Today published the article Cells ‘neighborhood’ can help prevent breast cancer byLiz Szabo. The story featured Lu-Ann Doria in her fight with breast cancer, and, more broadly, presented exercise as an important tool in improving the cellular microenvironment of our tissues. The health of this microenvironment is crucial to keeping microscopic cancer cells, which are probably developing continuously, from becoming serious, and sometimes deadly, tumors.

Szabo, after interviewing William Li, MD, President & Medical Director of the Angiogenis Foundation, Lynn Matrisian, PhD, Professor and Chair of Cancer Biology at the Ingram-Vanderbilt Cancer Center, and Patricia Ganz, MD, medical oncologist at UCLA’s Jonnson Comprehensive Cancer Center, writes: 

  • “Exercise helps improve the neighborhood, keeping cancers in check.”
  • “Exercising, for example, sends out anti-inflammatory signals that make it harder for tumors to grow.”
  • “Failing to exercise – and putting on a lot of weight – damages the neighborhood, making it easier for cancers to wreak havoc.”
  • Exercise reduces inflammation by lowering “insulin and sex hormones such as estrogen that let tumor cells survive and spread” while “smoking, heavy drinking, being obese and eating processed foods all increase inflammation.”

According to Li,

"It's an entirely new way of thinking about cancer. The microenvironment actually protects us from cancer in ways we don't fully understand."

And, quoting Lynn Matrisian:

The microenvironment, in some cases, may make the difference between a tiny little cancer that doesn’t hurt you, and one that becomes a major danger to your life.

Exercise, like the anti-inflammatory Paleolithic diet, is a powerful tool for controlling inflammation, a component of many illnesses including cancer. Maybe its time to put down your computer or smartphone and go for a walk, a sprint, or enjoy another Paleo fitness activity. Maybe, I should too. 

Related posts:

Inflammation impairs frontal lobe brain function

An "Insight of the Decade": Chronic inflammation kills

Are mainstream nutritionists beginning to recognize the value of Paleolithic

Stop the madness, Break the cycle!

By Leslie Why Reap

I have had limited feedback on my blogs with the exception of the first one I posted entitled “Progression to Paleo.” I pretty much got taken apart piece, by out of context piece, by a hardcore Paleo-ite (yes I made that up).  Oh yes and then there was my mom consistently and persistently emailing me after every post to say, “It’s great!  What do you think about making them shorter?”  Well today this was corroborated by one of my closest friends so….“Mom, you have been validated.”  Well, at least I have three readers!

So I spent my work week perfecting the template for my updated Nutrition Plan offering.  It has a new moniker, “The Anti-inflammatory and Alkaline Approach to Excellent Health.”  I spent hours weaving together the critical elements of: immune system, gut microflora (bacteria), blood pH levels, chronic inflammation, and disease to create what I hope to be a cohesive and compelling fabric so to speak.  This high nutrient, healthy fat, low/no grain, low glycemic approach will meet the needs of even the staunchest of grain and sugar addicts.  I also learned a few things along the way . . .

Ah-ha!

You have 2-3 pounds of bacteria in your gut!  Wow, really?  70% of your immune system cells are housed in your gut.  Not a surprise.  But 2-3 pounds of good and bad bacteria, little guys (and girls I guess) tooling around down in there doing their thing…Wow, that’s quite a colony.   100 Trillion bacterial buggers to be approximate.  WHAT are they doing?  Ialready knew this but thought you might not.  They are training and developing your immune system.  They are actually digesting the food that YOU eat, extracting critical nutrients (or trying to anyway).  Perhaps one of their most important tasks...the good bacteria are the police.  They are keeping the undesirable buggers and their cousins, fungals and yeasts,  in check, kind of like permanent martial law.  You don’t want to see what happens when the fungals, yeasts and other bad guys start to out number the good guys…your immune system starts to breakdown and anarchy reigns.  Although I am guessing several of you may already be experiencing this immune dysfunction and not have a clue as to why.  Take a look at what and who you are feeding those 100 trillion.  Are you feeding the good guys or the bad guys?  

Bananas rot from the inside out.  Cheese rots from the outside in.  Which food is alive?  Yes, bananas are the “live” food here.  I guess this was not an “ah-ha” as much as it was just a really good analogy (that I borrowed).  So it turns out that we humans rot from the inside out as well.  What does that mean?  It means that just because you look okay on the outside, doesn’t mean your internal terrain (your microflora) and therefore, your immune system, is intact, healthy and thriving.  Here are some external warning signs that let you know the bacterial balance  inside might be heading toward anarchy (aka, that you are over feeding the bad guys):  repeated sinus, ear and eye infections, constipation, diarrhea, gas, IBS, stomach pain,  allergies, headaches, fatigue, skin eruptions (hives, acne, excema) athletes foot, nail bed infections, hormonal imbalances and strong carbohydrate cravings (sugar feeds yeast!)

Here is my pitch:

It is not a new one, but hopefully it is one that brings to light the simplicity of what is going on in the USA today.  It is a message that can be easily grasped by the public at large…ready to grasp?  Here we go: 

Poor Diet and Lifestyle Choices = Acidic Body (altered pH) = Inflammation = Pain = Stress = More Inflammation = More Pain = Damaged Tissue = Chronic Inflammation.

 

Chronic Inflammation + Poor Diet + Stressed Lifestyle = “Dis-ease,”

Disease and Early Death.

Stop the madness, break the cycle. 

You choose, health or dis-ease.  Any questions?

SUNDAY PALEO / October 2, 2011

Grand_Tetons.jpg

Grand Teton National Park. Image: CyberMed, LLC

ENVIRONMENT

There Will Be Oil

"The date of the predicted peak has moved over the years. It was once supposed to arrive by Thanksgiving 2005. Then the "unbridgeable supply demand gap" was expected "after 2007." Then it was to arrive in 2011. Now "there is a significant risk of a peak before 2020." - Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal embraces peak oil denialism

"The thing is, Yergin has been demonstrably getting it wrong about oil for years. There are countless examples, well chronicled here, but he is so wrong, so often, that it only takes about 5 minutes with Google to find an egregious example." - Grist

FITNESS

Strong Support for the Brain Benefits of Aerobic Activity

"We concluded that you can make a very compelling argument for [aerobic] exercise as a disease-modifying strategy to prevent dementia and mild cognitive impairment, and for favorably modifying these processes once they have developed." - Medscape Neurology 

Interval Training for Fat Loss

"Are you looking to kick things up a notch this summer? Are your abs almost visible? Interval training can help you lose fat and improve your fitness. What’s not to like? Here are 4 reasons to incorporate interval training workouts." - Defined Wellness 

NUTRITION

Junk Food Looks More Tempting When Blood Sugar Drops

"The researchers scanned the brains of 14 people (five obese and nine nonobese) while they looked at images of high-calorie foods (such as ice cream and hamburgers), low-calorie foods (salads and fruit) and nonfoods (a chair or a lamp). Participants were hooked up to an IV and their blood sugar (glucose) levels were manipulated." - MyHealthNewsDaily 

Feeding the flame: Some foods worsen inflammation – but the right diet can soothe body

"The physical symptoms of chronic inflammation are wide, ranging from joint pain, gastrointestinal problems like bloating and diarrhea, skin problems and lack of energy. Experts warn that over time, low-grade, chronic inflammation can lead to more serious problems, such as Alzheimer’s, fibromyalgia, colon cancer and heart disease." - The Daily

PALEO LIFESTYLE

Ken Korg Finally Gets It

"The pantry has finally been purged. It was a big job, one Ken began immediately after that first chat with Valentina but only just finished because he had run out of garbage bags for all the old food (their pantry is a walk-in and just massive)." - Mark's Daily Apple

RECIPES

Mint Lamburgers - Make it Paleo Recipe

"These juicy burgers are just packed with flavor, and sit atop a crisp Greek salad. We think so highly of this recipe that we shared it with Liz (who writes Cave Girl Eats) and her "Cave Husband" when they spent a day with us at the beach this past summer." - The Food Lovers Primal Palate

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Becoming Paleo, Part 1: The Yale Food Addiction Scale

The Yale Food Addiction Scale is a survey designed to detect and measure the severity of food addiction. While food addiction’s not fully recognized by the medical establishment as a disorder, several studies have been conducted to explore the possibility of its existence.