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Reference

Join Date: 12/5/2017 Posts Contributed: 2501 Post Likes: 298 Recommends Recd: 0 Ignores Issued: 0
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Posted: 2/20/2019 9:47:00 AM
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Originally posted by Dr. Davis on 2019-02-20
on the Wheat Belly Blog,
sourced from and currently found at: Infinite Health Blog.
| PCM forum Index
of WB Blog articles.
Wheat Belly:
Ten Rules for Healthy Eating
A hundred thousand years ago, you’d have
no doubt what and how to eat. You would wake up
every morning, grab your spear, club or axe and
go kill something, wander and gather berries,
nuts, or dig in the dirt for roots and tubers,
or set traps for fish and reptiles. If you
succeeded in the hunt, you would consume every
organ that included thyroid, thymus, pancreas,
stomach, liver, as well as meat. You’d drink
water from streams and rivers, allow skin surface
to be exposed to sunlight. You would NOT shower
with soap or shampoo, apply hand sanitizer, drink
chlorinated water, consume foods laced with
herbicides and pesticides or genetically-modified
foods containing glyphosate or Bt toxin, or take
antibiotics for a viral infection. You succeeded
in diet without knowing anything about calories,
fat grams, carbs, etc. but just following
instinct and need.
While we’ve enjoyed many technological successes
these past 100 years, we have also experienced
what it means to be given awful dietary advice that
achieves nothing and ruins health and be subjected
to healthcare-for-profit. While there is more to
health than diet, just getting diet right is crucial.
Let’s therefore consider some of the basic
truths in diet that help you regain a toehold in
health and weight. If you want to eat for health,
not to satisfy some ridiculous food pyramid or
plate scheme crafted by commercial interests,
then you should:
- Eat real, whole foods—Opt
for an avocado or egg over protein powder or meal
replacement shake or frozen dinner. A meal
replacement shake is never an adequate
replacement for the nutrient profile of real
food.
- Never count calories—Of
all things, the Biggest Loser TV show
illustrated what happens when you restrict
calories. Extreme exercise combined with limiting
calories does indeed allow weight loss, even to
extravagant degrees, in the beginning
. . . only to be followed by regain
of all the weight when your body adapts by
reducing metabolic rate. Nearly all Biggest
Loser successes regained all the weight they
lost despite maintaining a calorie-restricted
diet. Limiting calories is misery and is
ineffective for long term weight loss
success.
- Don’t limit
fat—Just as a wild human enjoying
a fresh kill does not say “Just give me
some of the lean meat and throw out the
fat,” so you should never buy lean meats,
trim the fat off meats, or turn away butter,
olive oil, the oil left after cooking bacon,
or coconut oil. Yes, throw away the corn,
cottonseed, and safflower oils that corrupt
agencies have told you are preferable because
they are unsaturated, but don’t limit
fats and oils of the sorts that humans have
consumed for millions of years and yielded
virtually zero heart disease.
- Don’t sweat the
protein—When you do not limit
fats, protein intake is self-regulating. If
you feel like having four eggs rather than
three, go ahead. If you strength train and
feel hungry for more steak, go ahead. Do not
count protein grams but follow your appetite
and instincts that become reliable without
the distortions of wheat and grains. Occasional
indulgences in higher protein intake also
break ketosis and its harmful
long-term effects such as kidney stones,
osteoporosis, and diverticular disease.
- Ignore diet advice from mainstream
healthcare professionals—We have
a peculiar situation in which the American Heart
Association, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics,
the American Diabetes Association and other
agencies eagerly accept huge donations from Coca
Cola, Pepsi, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi Aventis,
Merck, Kellogg’s, Kraft, General Mills and
other commercial sources, making them willing to
craft messages favorable to their donors. These
interests in turn “educate” health
professionals with messages such as
“everything in moderation,”
“move more, eat less,” and other
ridiculous and ineffective messages. It may be
tough, but ignore it all. Their practices have
made these agencies irrelevant and counter to
your health interests. This also means that,
if you saw it in a TV or magazine commercial,
don’t buy it. Nobody is advertising eggs
from pastured chickens or organic broccoli, so
those are the sorts of foods you should
choose.
- Eat no seeds of
grasses—People are often shocked
to hear that wheat and grains are the seeds of
grasses. For the same reasons you cannot eat the
grass clippings from mowing your lawn, you
cannot and should not consume the seeds of
grasses called wheat, corn, rye, barley, millet,
sorghum, etc. as you are incapable of digesting
the proteins they contain that thereby exert
peculiar immune, gastrointestinal, and mind
effects due to indigestible peptides.
- Eat nothing with added
sugar—Which becomes easy once you
have taste perception restored by banishing wheat
and grains from your life. You begin to recognize
that almonds are actually sweet, as are unsweetened
yogurt and Brussel sprouts, while formerly tasty
treats like milk chocolate become sickeningly sweet
and inedible. There is no reason to add sugar or
consume foods with added sugars. The sugar industry
may have paid off doctors to conceal the dangers of
sugar and divert public attention towards saturated
fat, but you should not fall for such commercial
shenanigans.
- Salt your food—People who are
grain-free, as we are in the Wheat Belly lifestyle,
need salt. By normalizing insulin blood levels and
removing the sodium-retaining gliadin protein of
wheat, we actually improve metabolic status by
adding salt to our foods, not to mention foods
taste better with salt.
- Limit dairy—Unlike the seeds
of grasses (grains) that have no precedent in dietary
consumption and are completely foreign to the human
dietary experience, humans are mammals that survive
on breast milk for the first two to four years (in
primitive societies that follow instinct and not
Nestle). But the amino acid sequence of proteins in
non-human breast milk are indeed an issue. We
therefore limit dairy, choosing fermented forms such
as cheese and yogurt that convert lactose to lactic
acid and denature (break down) the immunogenic
casein beta A1 prevalent in North
America.
- Drink water—If you were a
primitive human hunting for your next meal or digging
in the dirt for roots and tubers, you’d stop for
a water break at the river’s edge. You would
not have access to fruit juices, soda, and the other
ways that industry has corrupted beverages. Tea and
coffee, being little more than water, are benign.
But steer clear of orange juice, grape juice,
soda—sugar-containing or
aspartamed-up—and opt for the liquid that
has sustained humans for millions of years:
plain water.
Beyond diet, recognize that modern life has created
deficiencies in several nutrients such as iodine,
magnesium, and vitamin D that, if not addressed,
will limit health success. This is why the Wheat
Belly lifestyle is based on eating healthily but
goes further in addressing these common deficiencies.
I hope that this list illustrates just how far
off-course the modern diet has wandered. Look
around you and see the result: obesity,
all-you-can-eat buffets, record-setting medical
bills, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth in
every third or fourth American, and healthcare fat
cats profiting from the health and weight disaster.
But you know better than that. Follow your instincts.
There are no obese squirrels, possum, or lions, yet
they don’t follow a food pyramid or plate,
don’t have dietitians to guide them,
don’t have a health insurance card to
cover doctor visits.

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Tags: autoimmune,belly,free,gluten,grains,Inflammation,PCM,undoctored,WBB,wheat
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