This & That: Notes During Covid-19

This & That

1.Do you have NAP syndrome (Dr. Mark Hyman)= “not enough pain” syndrome?   Sometimes,  unless we are in a panic or under severe stress, we don’t make lasting changes in our behavior. Covid is a time to choose new adaptive behaviors, rather than choose new (or old) maladaptive behaviors. So I recommend British physician Dr. Rangan Chatterjee’s new book:  “Feel Better in Five”.  Five minutes to make significant changes! 

2.Studies I heard this week suggest that in quarantine-like situations, 45% of people gain weight and 35% of people lose weight. Covid quarantine is a great time to observe what we are eating…or not eating. Keep a loving posture towards yourself, keep a food journal if it helps, and focus on emotional gratification as something different than oral gratification. What makes you happy?  A movie? Walk? Dance for a few minutes (put on your favorite music for 5 minutes an have yourself a little boogie!),  FaceTime with a friend? Music? Fresh air?

3.Keep on with your nutrition:  

a.hydrate at LEAST an 1/2oz. of water per pound of body weight.  Weigh 160 lbs?  Then you will drink 80 oz of spring water minimum= 10 cups of water per day.  And adjust:  add in  more if exercising, detoxing, having a glass of wine, or dealing with a chronic or acute health condition. Avoid plastic bottles!

b.Eat the rainbow of veggies and limited fruits. Pick local and organic whenever possible.

c.Choose 2 root veggies every day. Your gut bacteria will thank you. 70-80% of immunity is in your gut. 

d.Choose healthy proteins and good fats.

e.Eat a form of fermentation every day:  pickled veggies, yoghurt (I avoid cow dairy so I choose coconut yoghurt), kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, miso, whatever you like, so you can give a diversity of inoculation to your microbiome. Store bought kombucha is increasingly full of sugar and frequently not fermented long enough to grow robust bacteria, so make yours at home if you can. 

4.Seek out a heart connection.  Have a “heart snack” (Dr. Chatterjee). Find anyone in your day to spend 5 minutes with, put away social media and distraction , connect with someone you love. I work with many “carers”.  If you are caring for kids, parents, others,  find someone for five minutes that you are not taking care of.

5.One of the questions I am asked the most is “what are the good fats to eat”?

I like the list in Dale Bredesen’s new book:” The End of Alzheimer’s Program”.  On p. 117 he says: 

a. olive, avocado, walnut, macadamia, sesame, perilla, algae, MCT, coconut, red palm oils:   cold pressed and organic 

b.avocado, nuts, seeds, coconut, cacao butter, fatty cold water fish, egg yolk (pastured hens)

c.ghee, butter, lard (from pastured animals)

Do not eat a fat to which you believe you have a known sensitivity or reaction.

6.Do you also suffer from FLC syndrome (Dr. Mark Hyman)= “feel like crap” syndrome?  In addition to following the above recommendations, cut out sugar, alcohol, gluten, and dairy for 3 weeks and see if you don’t feel better!  Or contact me for the most accurate allergy and food sensitivity testing in the world (according to Mayo Clinic , Stanford, and many other doctors) to find out.  For example, I’ve found out I cannot touch gluten or cow dairy, ginger or turmeric, so I feel at ease with non-gluten starch like quinoa and goat ghee, goat cheese and other herbs and spices.

Each of us has to make our own “food playpen”, that circumference of foods that are safe and nurturing for our bodies.  Since every person in the USA is now dealing with more than 270 different toxins per day, our bodies tolerance for foods has decreased. Each of us needs to step carefully to reduce the inflammatory response that some foods will trigger.  Without testing, the biggest food groups to which humans react are gluten (wheat, barley, rye, and many additives), dairy, tree nuts, eggs, soy, peanuts, and shellfish/fish. 

Stay safe and well! Happy to report that not one of my nutrition clients world-wide has had Covid-19!  

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Notes During Covid

Reminders during Covid:

1.Wear a mask the moment you step out of your door. Wash your mask at least 3x a week unless it is disposable.

2.Wash your hands.  Hand sanitizers do not work nearly as well.  Hand sanitizers destroy good bacteria along with the bad. Use warm soapy water, work up a lather so the soap bubbles can encapsulate the bad bacteria. According to recent studies at Emory University, cold water with a soapy lather will work, though not nearly as well as warm water, to encapsulate and kill bad bacteria. Continue reading

What is Intestinal Permeability (Leaky Gut)?

Hundreds of books are being written about intestinal permeability, or “leaky gut.” I want to share with you the great explanation my mentor Dr. Tom O’Bryan wrote in The Autoimmune Fix.
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Summer Reads

Recommended Books To Help You On Your Healing Journey

In addition to staying up to date on research for my Nutritional Balancing program, I spend another 40 hours a month reading additional research. Here are some books I have read (and re-read!) for you to read as you progress on your healing journey:

Genius Foods – by Max Lugavere with Paul Grewal MD

The End of Alzheimer’s – by Dale E. Bredesen MD

The Loving Diet – by Jessica Flanigan CN

The Wahls Protocol – by Terry Wahls MD

Perfect Health Diet – by Paul and Shou-Ching Jaminet, PhDs

Grain Brain – by David Perlmutter, MD

Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis – by Izabella Wentz, PharmD

Food: What the Heck Should I Eat? – by Mark Hyman, MD

The Autoimmune Fix – by Tom O’Bryan, DC, CCN, DACBN

Sauna Therapy For Detoxification & Healing – by Lawrence Wilson, MD

The last 17 years have been unparalleled in human history with an explosion of quality medical research! Unfortunately, it takes an average of 17 years for this research to trickle down to a conventional medicine doctor’s office. Fortunately for us, this new information is coming out right now through books and lectures.

May you read well & be well!

Copyright http://www.vhHealth.com 2018

Need to Quit Wheat & Gluten?

I just graduated from the top Certified Gluten Practitioner (CGP) program in the world!

I began studying gluten-related disorders in 1985 due to life-long problems with eating wheat (something I did daily in my Dutch-American family the first 29 years of my life). In 2010, research led me to the work of world -renowned gluten specialist, Dr.Tom O’Bryan. Thankfully, Dr. Tom (www.thedr.com) developed a practitioner course to teach doctors and other health practitioners about gluten/wheat sensitivity, celiac disease, and related autoimmune disorders. In this course I learned that many gluten symptoms remain silent for years, that gluten KILLS people, and that gluten is the basis for at least 300 autoimmune diseases.

As a CGP, I can now offer you the newest state-of-the-art blood testing to give you definitive answers to these questions: Am I celiac? Am I non-celiac but still gluten sensitive? I am allergic to wheat but not to gluten? Can I eat wheat? If I cannot eat wheat, can I still eat barley and rye? What is the difference between being allergic to wheat or sensitive to gluten? Can I eat wheat once in a while without harming my body? Do I have intestinal permeability (“leaky gut”)? Continue reading

CoEnzyme Q-10: Clearing up the Confusion

Many of us already have heard about Coenzyme-Q10, the natural antioxidant synthesized by the body, found in many foods, and available in supplement form. It comes in two forms: ubiquinol, the active antioxidant form, and ubiquinone, the oxidized form, which the body partially converts to ubiquinol. Continue reading

Minerals: Our Source of Life

Minerals are perhaps the most important groups of nutrients human beings require. Unlike some vitamins, for example, minerals cannot be made inside the body and must come from our diet, supplements or drinking water. Minerals regulate most bodily functions by participating in all chemical compounds in our bodies. They also form the structure of the body.
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Help! Fructose or Glucose?

Craving a handful of super sweet Medjool dates or those juicy strawberries from the farmers market?  Enjoy, but careful!  Your fructose consumption should be kept at 15 to 25 grams per day. Continue reading

Nutritional Balancing Science

Hooray,  I have finished my academic studies and graduated with honors as a  certified Nutritional Balancing practitioner!   I am so happy to become a legal nutritional consultant, as I have been unofficially advising some of you about food as far back as 1985.
Along with my own 30-year journey studying food as medicine, I also have my clients to thank for motivating me to study the fascinating science of Nutritional Balancing.  It is an extraordinary program that originated in the 1940s with Dr. Paul Eck from the University of Chicago and is carried on today by Dr. Lawrence Wilson.
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