Bless this first post
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Gluten allergies are increasingly prevalent. Curiously, though, as humans have been eating bread for 10,000 years. But have we been eating the same wheat, all this time?
But as Dr. Davis has learned the hard way, the ubiquity of modern wheat has also created a host of potential problems. Most obvious is that if you are sensitive to wheat, it can be very difficult to find food to eat. Davis also knew that einkorn is sold in health food stores because it lacks the gluten of modern wheat and is said to be tolerated by people with wheat sensitivities. So Dr. Davis’s first goal was to find out if going back to the source would make bread safe for him.
Davis’s plan was to eat four ounces of einkorn bread on one day and four ounces of organic whole wheat bread the next. To begin, he hand-ground two pounds of the einkorn into flour and made a simple dough with water and yeast. He describes the einkorn dough as stickier and less stretchy than any he had seen before. It barely rose after a period of proofing. After baking, Davis nervously prepared for his first bite, but the nutty, denser bread caused him no problems — and a blood sugar test revealed only a modest rise from 84 mg/dl to 110 mg/dl, similar to consuming any carbohydrate. In his new book, Wheat Belly, he writes, “Afterwards … I felt no perceptible effects — no sleepiness, no nausea, nothing hurt. In short, I felt fine. Whew!”
The next day he baked a loaf of modern organic whole wheat bread and repeated the experiment. Before eating the four ounces, his blood sugar registered the same 84 mg/dl; afterward, it spiked to 167 mg/dl. “Moreover, I soon became nauseated, nearly losing my lunch. The queasy effect persisted for thirty-six hours, accompanied by stomach cramps that started almost immediately and lasted for many hours. Sleep that night was fitful, though filled with vivid dreams. I couldn’t think straight, nor could I understand the research papers I was trying to read the next morning, having to read and reread paragraphs four or five times; I finally gave up.”
A preventive cardiologist practicing in Milwaukee, Davis is the first to admit his experiment in no way represents a clinical trial; nevertheless, it set him on a path to learn more about the differences between ancient and modern wheat. His ultimate goal is to answer two questions that go well beyond gluten: Has our rapid crossbreeding of wheat outpaced the human body’s ability to digest the final product? Is twenty-first century wheat a major culprit in our current epidemic of obesity and diabetes?
The Begetting of Modern Wheat
Back in Neolithic times, einkorn was mated with another wheat and begat emmer, another wheat found in ancient tombs and still available in modern health food stores. (In fact, emmer is prized in places like Tuscany, where it’s raised under the name farro.) A big difference between einkorn and its progeny is that einkorn has 14 chromosomes and emmer has 28. Then emmer was mated with goat grass, which has 14 chromosomes and, more important, unique glutenin genes. The progeny of emmer and goat grass was essentially modern wheat, which has 42 chromosones and the gluten that makes modern bread chewy, elastic, and shapely.
In early times, plant hybridization was hit or miss and very gradual, depending on local farmers and local conditions. In the nineteenth century, plant genealogy and sophisticated breeding techniques began earning serious attention; nevertheless, modern wheat remained essentially the same until the mid-twentieth century, when the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (IMWIC) and other wheat research centers set out to combat world hunger. Over the following decades, thousands of new varieties were created to dramatically increase yields. According to World Wheat Facts and Trends, yields in China, now the world’s largest producer, have increased from eight to sixty-five bushels per acre. Some of these advances are attributable to nitrogen-rich fertilizers but also to the development of high-yielding dwarf wheat, with a large head and shorter, stouter straw, sturdy enough to support the extra weight without buckling. Some recent estimates have dwarf and semi-dwarf wheat comprising as much as 99 percent of all wheat worldwide.
According to Davis’s research, personal consumption of wheat has grown along with crop yields. For example, the average American now eats 133 pounds of wheat per year, 26 pounds more than in 1970. Davis again: “In parallel with increased consumption, we also have the silent replacement of wheat from four-foot-tall triticum aestivum with high-yield dwarf strains and new gluten structures not previously consumed by humans.”
Our Experiment in Mystery Wheat
As Davis writes, “The oversight in the flurry of breeding activity, such as that conducted at IMWIC, was that, despite dramatic changes in the genetic makeup of wheat and other crops, no animal or human safety testing was conducted on the new genetic strains that were created. So intent were the efforts to increase yield, so confident were plant geneticists that hybridization yielded safe products for human consumption, so urgent was the cause of world hunger, that these products of agricultural research were released into the food supply without human safety concerns being part of the equation.”
A wheat hybrid, for example, retains approximately 95 percent of its parent’s proteins, while the other 5 percent of proteins are new and may have novel characteristics. Gluten proteins seem especially susceptible to structural changes. One hybridization experiment cited in Wheat Belly created 14 new gluten proteins. Remember, these are individual experiments involving only two parents; over the past 60 years, many thousand such hybridizations have accrued in your breakfast bagel. If Davis is right, such relentless hybridization created almost infinite opportunities for wheat to go wrong.
The Case of Wendy
In his book, Davis tells the story of Wendy, a 36-year-old mother of three, who had “lived with constant cramping, diarrhea, and frequent bleeding, necessitating occasional blood transfusions. She endured several colonoscopies and required the use of three prescription medications to manage her disease, including the highly toxic methotrexate, a drug also used in cancer treatment and medical abortions.”
Wendy actually went to see Davis for heart palpitations, but once Davis realized that everything was okay with her heart, their conversation turned to Wendy’s other health issues. As it turns out, Wendy’s ulcerative colitis wasn’t responding to treatment, so her gastroenterologist was advising the removal of her colon. Even though Wendy had tested negative for celiac, Davis strongly suggested that she eliminate wheat from her diet. Wendy reluctantly agreed.
She returned three months later to say, “First I lost 38 pounds. And my ulcerative colitis is nearly gone. No more cramps or diarrhea. I’m off everything except my Asacol (an aspirin derivative). I really feel great.” A year later without wheat and gluten, Wendy was completely off her meds and fully cured.
Despite ongoing research, Davis remains at a loss to explain Wendy’s condition and her remarkable improvement upon the elimination of wheat and gluten. He writes, “Wendy’s experience highlights the many unknowns in this world of wheat sensitivities, many of which are as devastating as the cure is simple.” Over the years, Dr. Davis writes that he has recommended a wheat-free diet to more than 2,000 patients for reasons as diverse as acid reflux, cyclic cramping, irritable bowel syndrome, insomnia, lethargy, rashes, rheumatoid arthritis pain, asthma, and most commonly, obesity and diabetes. Why the wheat-free diet is so helpful remains unclear, but in the vast majority of cases, he says it is.
Celiac “Lite”
Take irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and acid reflux, two conditions affecting between 5 and 20 percent of the population, depending on how they are defined. Because of the cramping and abdominal pain, as well as loose stools, IBS sufferers are often given endoscopies and colonoscopies. If no apparent pathology is found, doctors may prescribe antidepressants to frustrated patients. Yet Davis refers to both of these conditions as celiac “lite.” He explains that numerous studies have looked at the relationship between celiac disease, IBS, and acid reflux, because more than half of celiac sufferers experience IBS symptoms, and upwards of 19 percent have acid reflux. What really interests Davis and other researchers is that 75 percent of celiac sufferers experience relief from acid reflux upon wheat elimination. And while Davis is quick to say that conclusive research doesn’t exist to quantify wheat and gluten’s role in IBS and acid reflux, he has “personally witnessed complete or partial relief from symptoms of IBS and acid reflux with gluten removal from the diet many hundreds of times” with his patients.
The Wheat Belly Phenomenon
Dr. Davis’s largest worry has to do with our growing consumption of modern mystery wheat and our growing epidemics of obesity and diabetes. He believes the two are directly connected. Why? In part, because wheat has a high glycemic index (72). As you probably know, the glycemic index is a measure of the effect that carbohydrates have on blood sugar levels. Carbohydrates that break down quickly during digestion, such as wheat, release glucose rapidly into the bloodstream, which triggers a release of insulin from the pancreas to move the sugar into cells. Over time, spikes of blood sugar and insulin lead to insulin resistance and ultimately to diabetes — and Davis believes that wheat is a major contributor. (Davis sees little difference between modern whole wheat and the wheat in white bread. As far as the metabolism is concerned, wheat is wheat.)
Davis also says that these blood sugar and insulin spikes from wheat also trigger the growth of an insidious kind of fat called visceral fat, which accumulates in the liver, kidneys, pancreas, large and small intestines, heart, and the abdomen — hence the name wheat belly. (Researchers don’t quite understand why our bodies choose to store visceral fat in the belly, as opposed to the buttocks or calves, say, but so it does.) The important difference between buttock fat, for example, and visceral fat is that buttock fat represents the straightforward equation of excess calories over caloric expenditure. Metabolically, it’s stable and relatively inert. Visceral fat is different and much worse. As Davis writes:
“[Visceral fat] is uniquely capable of triggering a universe of inflammatory phenomena. Visceral fat filling and encircling the abdomen of the wheat belly is a unique twenty-four-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week metabolic factory. And what it produces is inflammatory signals and abnormal cytokines, or cell-to-cell hormone signal molecules, such as leptin, resistin, and tumor necrosis factor… . As visceral fat increases, its capacity to produce protective adiponectin diminishes (for reasons unclear). The combination of lack of adiponectin along with increased leptin, tumor necrosis factor, and other inflammatory products underlies abnormal insulin responses, diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. The list of other health conditions triggered by visceral fat is growing and now includes dementia, rheumatoid arthritis, and colon cancer. This is why waist circumference is proving to be a powerful predictor of all these conditions, as well as of mortality.”
And the story gets worse. Ultimately, Dr. Davis’s greatest fear is not the glycemic rebounding or even the insidious belly fat. What worries Davis are the mystery proteins that may pass intact into our bloodstream and create the kinds of havoc that Wendy experienced.
What’s a Belly to Do?
Of course, there are a lot of things to worry about — plastics to pesticides to GMOs — and excessive worry may be more hazardous to our health and well-being than whatever we choose to eat. But another way to see our situation is to realize that we are all participants in an ongoing living experiment. Dr. Davis’s worries may or may not be overblown, but he makes a good case to shift our attention and perhaps to try something new. As an adventure in creative eating, do what I did: spend a month without wheat — and keep track of how you feel. Or change the wheat you eat. For example, Elisheva Rogosa is an organic farmer in western Massachusetts who spent many years in the Middle East researching ancient grains. She founded the Heritage Wheat Conservancy and grows einkorn and emmer on her farm. Farmers like Eli hold the seeds of the original wheat of our forbearers — and they allow us to take a step back in time.
Everyone has experienced heartbreak. Shakespeare wrote about it, pop songs convey particular flavors of it, and there are endless websites listed on google that promise to “heal the emotional pain of heartbreak.” I’d like to share how acupuncture alleviated the…
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Love rests on no foundation.
It is an endless ocean,
with no beginning or end.
Imagine,
a suspended ocean,
riding on a cushion of ancient secrets.
All souls have drowned in it,
and now dwell there.
One drop of that ocean is hope,
and the rest is fear..
~ Rumi
From: Hush Don’t Say Anything to God: Passionate Poems of Rumi - Shahram Shiva
Diagram that is in my book on Chi Nei Tsang which is amazing and so in depth! It’s such a great read after taking intense anatomy courses and being able to correlate energy systems with the most detailed actions of cellular activities. In this diagram (part of a chapter discussion on collecting and moving the energy systems that make up the atmosphere and earth), we can see an example of how meditation is a helpful tecnique.
1. The Healing Abilities of Trees
Taoist Masters observed that trees are tremendously powerful plants. Not only can they absorb carbon dioxide and transform it into oxygen, but they can also absorb negative forces and transform them into good energy. Trees strongly root with the Earth, and the more rooted the tree, the higher it can extend to Heaven. Trees stand very still, absorbing the Earth’s Energy and the Universal Force from the Heavens.Trees and all plants have the ability to absorb the light of the energies and transform it into food; in fact, they depend on light for most of their nourishment, while water and earth minerals make up about 30% of their nutritional intake. Trees are able to live very long lives.
Absorb Earth Energy
1. Create warmth in your navel and bring the energy up to the crown.
2. Project the Chi out into the top of the trunk of the tree. Enter the tree and feel that you have a connection with it.
3. During this process you can stand farther away from the tree (ten to thirty feet). As your practice continues you can project your energy easily from far away into the tree. Let the tree take in your negative or sick energy. The energy you receive back will be balanced.
4. Let your energy flow down the trunk of the tree to its roots and into the Earth. (Figure 2-34) Let the Earth Energy purify your energy. Bring this combined energy up through the soles of your feet to the perineum, then up through the Thrusting Channels, or through the Governor Channel running up the spine. Let the energy flow up to the crown and project it outward again. Repeat the process nine, eighteen, or 36 times.
The more you repeat the process, the more your energy will refine and increase. You will notice the Thrusting Channels and the Microcos¬mic Orbit are cleaner and brighter. Once you have established a good connection with the tree, you can send your sick energy to the tree from a far distance to refine your energy or improve your health.
g. Meditate While Sitting Under a Tree
Once you have developed the ability to feel the tree’s Chi, you can sit under the tree and meditate. Draw the tree’s energy into you through the stations (points) of the Microcosmic Orbit.
TreeQi
Acupuncture is often helpful for people who need to quit smoking.
Nicotine therapy doesn’t help smokers quit
Gums, patches and nasal sprays that supply smokers with nicotine do not help people quit cigarettes over the long term any better than going it alone.
Above: The Love of Souls - Jean Delville
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Soulmate - Twin SoulThe twin flame or twin soul – thought to be the ultimate soulmate, the one and only other half of one’s soul, for which all souls are driven to find and join. However, not everyone who uses these terms intends them to carry such mystical connotations.
Like the biblical story virtually all the ancient myths reference creation as involving the split of polarities from an original state of unity. The Chinese story of P`an-Ku, separating the unity of yin and yang principles. The Egyptian Atum myth where the air God Shu separates Geb and Nut from their initial love embrace. The Sumerian story of creation and the uncoupling of the god Anu and goddess Ki from their commingled state. The Akaddian story of Marduck splitting the goddess Tiamat. The New Zealand Maori story of creation and separation of Rangi and Papa. (Ranginui and Papatuanuku.) Aristophanes in the Symposium references how the Greek God Zeus cut the souls of humankind in half. “Man’s original body having been cut in two, each half yearned for the half that had been severed…..Love is simply the name of for the desire and pursuit of the whole. Plato in the Symposium: “The original human nature was not as they are now, but originally three in number; there was man, woman, and the union of the two.” (Third Gender).Soulmate Definitions:
- Soul lovers: someone you love, and would do anything for, and someone who loves you, and would do anything for you. And in that love, nothing is required for either person, because everything is already given.
- Soul sister/brother: someone belonging in the same soul group as you and therefore having an unusually strong bond and likeness to you. soulmate
- Spiritual and religious: concepts of reincarnation and karma. Soulmates have spent many previous lifetimes together. soulmate
- Karmic soulmate: someone who has a special mission or influence on one’s life.
- Companion soulmate: People with whom one has made a connection. soulmate
- Balance partners and messengers:The people you meet along the way who help you create balance in your life. soulmate
- Twin flame soulmate: A popular romantic belief that there is only one true soulmate.
- Divine complement: A new colloquialism for a ‘match made in heaven’, a twin soul, who holds inborn potentials that match and complement one’s own and who is linked eternally through a signature in the heart at the dimension of the spirit.
Jewish: Bashert
Bashert (Yiddish: באַשערט), is a Yiddish word that means “destiny”. It is often used in the context of one’s divinely foreordained spouse or soulmate, who is called “basherte” (female) or “basherter” (male). It can also be used to express the seeming fate or destiny of an auspicious or important event, friendship, or happening.
In modern usage, Jewish singles will say that they are looking for their bashert, meaning they are looking for that person who will complement them perfectly, and whom they will complement perfectly. Since it considered to have been foreordained by God whom one will marry, one’s spouse is considered to be one’s bashert by definition, independent of whether the couple’s marital life works out well or not.Bereshit Rabbah 8:1
Rabbi Shmuel Bar Nachman: “At the time that the Holy One, blessed be the One, created the ?rst adam, He created him double-faced and [then] split him, and made for him two backs – a back here and a back there.” they asked him: “But isn’t it written: ‘and He took one of his ribs [tzelah]’?” He said to them: “[This actually means] one of his sides…as we understand it, ‘and one of the sides [tzelah] of the tabernacle.’” [Exodus 26:2] Midrash Rabbah Genesis Volume I
Soul Friend ~ Amna Chara
Anam Chara is a Gaelic word meaning soul-friend. Anam - soul, Chara- friend. The concept derives from an ancient Celtic tradition and is still a popular practice in many spiritual traditions in Ireland today. The anam chara acted as mentor, teacher, companion and spiritual guide. The emphasis was on spiritual companionship and direction as opposed to today’s romantic notion of the ‘soul-mate’. The relationship was much deeper and often lasted a lifetime. soulmate
The Celts believed the anam chara was joined in an ancient and eternal bond with his/her friend of the soul and this bond could not be broken, even if the friend moved away and there was a great physical distance between them. The Celtic understanding did not set limits of time and space on the soul nor was there any split between the sacred and the mundane. All aspects of life were manifestations of soul. soulmate
Many ancient Celtic philosophies or perspectives passed into the Irish Christian Celtic tradition and in spite of many attempts in the past to ‘Romanize’ Irish Christianity, these remnants remain. There has been a surge in interest and an urge to reclaim the wisdom of our Celtic spirituality. soulmate
However, the danger lies in approaching the tradition as another fashionable and exotic spiritual programme. The anam chara reminds us that spirituality or soul work demands commitment and the willingness to embrace the light and the darkness of our life’s journey and allow it to be. soulmate“In everyone’s life there is great need for an anam chara, a soul friend. In this love you are understood as you are without mask or pretension. The superficial and functional lies and half-truths of acquaintance fall away. You can be as you truly are …. The anam chara is God’s gift…” John O’ Donohue kuriakon00.tripod
Try one of these each day for the next three months or so. Or pick a few to practice daily. Either way, carry your intention with you each day and strive to make some of these habits in 2012.
1. Connect with nature – Go for a walk in the forest, jungle, field of daisies, or wherever you feel…
The mother of all checklists
(Source: wakeup-world.com)
Winter.
(Source: tajh831)
The question of diet and insulin resistance - a graph from “Perfect Diet Health”, by Dr. Jaminet, as reviewed by Dr. Mercola on his website. Read the debate about ‘safe starches’ here.
“The key is to replace the carbs with healthy fats such as avocados, coconut oil, egg yolks, raw grass fed organic butter, olives and nuts. You would not want to use highly processed and genetically engineered omega-6 oils like corn, canola and soy as they will upset your omega 6/3 ratio. Of course you want to avoid all trans fats, but contrary to popular advice, saturated fats can be very good for you.”
Dr. Mercola continues,
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It seems that the evidence is quite clear that chronically raising your blood glucose will raise your insulin and leptin, which in turn will increase insulin and leptin resistance. And avoiding insulin and leptin resistance is perhaps the single most important factors if you seek optimal health and longevity.
That said, the degree to which you choose to reduce sugar and carbs however is, ultimately, up to you. And certain individual biochemical differences can make one diet more beneficial for you than others. The key point is to be aware that consuming sugar, grains and starches will promote insulin resistance to some degree or other, depending on the amount you consume.
If you are looking for an eating plan based on solid science I would strongly recommend Dr. Jaminet’s book Perfect Health Diet. Your goal will be to have 50-70 percent of your diet as healthy fat, which will radically reduce your carbohydrate intake. Most people will likely notice massive improvement in their health by following this approach as they are presently consuming FAR more grain and bean carbohydrates in their diet, and any reduction will be a step in the right direction.
But, if you are seeking to take it to the next level, then give Dr. Rosedale’s suggestions and try to eliminate nearly all non-fiber carbs. This can be very challenging to implement but may provide outstanding results.
Whatever diet choices you make, please remember to ALWAYS listen to your body as it will give you feedback if what you are doing is right for your unique biochemistry and genetics. So listen to that feedback and adjust your program accordingly.
“That said, I encourage you to review the latest installment in Dr. Rosedale’s and Dr. Jaminet’s discussion. It is very long, but if you’re looking for more in-depth information, their discussion may be of great interest to you.”
The holiday season is upon us. Beck’s suggestions are all good, but #3 resonated. I added bold font for the phrase I need to remember.
Strategy #3: Lose Control
You’re in the middle of a holiday feast, enjoying your favorite pie and eggnog, when your mother leans over and whispers, “Honey, have you tried Weight Watchers?” Those six words may wither your very soul, challenging every ounce of self-acceptance you’ve gleaned from myriad self-help books, support groups, and several enlightened friends. You might feel desperate to make Mom recognize all the hard-won truths you’ve learned about the intrinsic value and beauty of your body. You’ll want to argue, to explain, to get right in there and force your mother to approve of your appearance. You are coming perilously close to whacking the tar baby.
Remember this: Any attempt you make to control other people actually puts you under their control. If you decide you can’t be happy until your mother finally understands you, her dysfunction will rule your life. You could spend the next 20 years trying to please her so much that she’d just have to accept you—and she still might not. Or you could hold her at gunpoint and threaten her into saying the words you want to hear, but you’ll never control her real thoughts and feelings. Never.
The only way you can avoid getting stuck in other people’s craziness is to follow codependency author Melody Beattie’s counterintuitive advice: “Unhook from their systems by refusing to try to control them.” Don’t violate your own code of values and ethics, but don’t waste energy trying to make other people violate theirs. If soul-searching has shown you that your mother’s opinions are wrong for you—as are your grandfather’s bigotry, your sister’s new religion, and your cousin’s alcoholism—hold that truth in your heart, whether or not your family members validate it. Feel what you feel, know what you know, and set your relatives free to do the same.
If you’ve been deeply wounded by your family, you can stop trying to control them by accepting full responsibility for your healing. I’m not suggesting you shoulder all the blame, but rather that you acknowledge that you and only you have the ability to respond to injury by seeking cures instead of furthering pain. Whatever the situation, accepting that you can control only your own thoughts and actions will help you mend more quickly and thoroughly.
Very helpful advice. Don’t attempt to control others.