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Kate
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Let’s look at another way to make healthy changes in the way we eat. This time we are going to focus on what is essential in our diet, and which items are just plain dangerous. What things do we need to have as a part of our meals and how does this look when we get to the grocery store?
If we reduce the grocery list to the bare essentials it could look like this: vegetables, fruit, protein, grains, seeds, nuts, and dairy. Paper products, cleaning products, and personal hygiene products are not foods, so they are a separate expense, and just for the moment we will take them off the grocery list.
When we get back to basics, the handiest way to get there is to use a menu. You don’t have to make them up yourself; you can find endless menus on line. The advantage of making them up yourself is taking into consideration your families likes and dislikes, needs and eating patterns. Some people need 6 small meals a day – more like a series of snacks – and another person likes 3 meals a day. You get the idea. Another thought…eat less of everything to reduce your food bill. In America, we are sending 40% of the food we grow to the landfill! So waste not; want not!
Let’s get into why I buy foods that fill a specific criterion. Let’s take one typical breakfast as an example. I am a person who needs protein and good fats in the morning or I am fading away by 10 am. Some days I have an egg (free range, vegetarian feed, no antibiotics), with mushrooms or green onions and cheese (no rBST), a piece of organic whole grain toast and butter with a little local, raw honey. Why the specific types of each ingredient? Read on…
Eggs from factory farms are not good for you. The hens are stressed so their eggs have high LDL cholesterol, and also antibiotics. The free range hens that are fed a diet high in grains, or better yet can forage outside, and don’t need antibiotics because they are not packed together tightly, give us eggs that are much lower in LDL cholesterol and much higher in HDL (or good) cholesterol. Stressed, unhealthy hens = unhealthy eggs. The original research on eggs being high in ‘bad’ cholesterol came from factory farms.
Let’s look at bread now. Bread never used to have ingredients we couldn’t grow and couldn’t pronounce. Most breads had whole ground grains, yeast or starter, water, salt, and maybe an oil. It was that simple. It was made fresh and sold fresh, so no preservatives were needed. We can still get bread like that. However there is one more problem now. If the ingredient list contain any corn products, any soy products, and/or any canola oil, (and is not organic) you are eating a Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) which contains pesticides in every cell. I can find bread that is ‘clean’ and not organic in most supermarkets; however it is just as cost effective to buy organic bread on sale and freeze it. Are you getting the idea? Local raw honey is good for me and helps protect me from local pollen allergies if I have a teaspoon or so a day.
If we simply cut out the foods that, as Michael Pollan says, are “food-like substances”, we will decrease our food bills even if all the other foods we buy are clean and/or organic and more expensive. We will also decrease our medical bills. Here is a list of the “dirty dozen” foods no one should buy unless they are organic because of pesticide residue: Apples, Bell Peppers, Celery, Cherries, Imported Grapes, Nectarines, Peaches, Pears, Potatoes, Raspberries, Spinach, and Strawberries. If it is too expensive, buy on sale or have as a treat. If you want more information on these and other best green practices go to www.GreenAmericaToday.org or other similar websites.
So the key concepts to changing the way we eat might be summed up this way: simplify; buy and eat whole foods; learn how to cook them; read the labels and avoid GMO’s; and beware of all the toxins in prepared foods! (www.care2.com/causes/study-finds-arsenic-in-baby-formula-and-cereal-bars.html)
Posted by:
Kate
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You know, it’s scarey out there when you’re looking for good clean food. The chemicals, pesticides, toxins, and altered substances in our food are making us sick. Maybe some iffy ingredients once in a while would be OK. Maybe our bodies could rid us of the toxins we ingest if it were just a few. Now, though, babies are being born with 200 or more chemicals in their little bodies before they draw their first breath. If more are added every time we eat, how will the body ever get rid of all those toxins?
This cumulative toxin load is sending many of us into ill health. This is showing up in so many different ways, it’s hard to keep track. My suspicion is that it shows up in which ever place in the body is the weakest. For some it is allergies; for others it is diabetes, heart trouble, obesity, and lung trouble; and in others it is behavioral issues from ADD/ADHD to Depression. I know this may sound far fetched, so check it out yourself.
I looked up sodium benzoate in Wikipedia, a very common preservative for acid foods including fruit juices and soda pop. When combined with ascorbic acid it breaks down into benzene, a known carcinogen. When combined with certain food dyes, it has been linked to hyperactivity.
OK. What to do. Well, the answer is to change the way we eat. That feels like a very tall order! We go to the grocery store and buy the things we know our family loves, the foods we love, and just want to grab it and go. In our busy lives we don’t want to have to think about anything else. We’ve got the routine down and want to leave it all on auto-pilot. But we are getting sick, especially our children!
Since I know a lot of people in this predicament I’ve decided to devote a series of blogs to this topic – not the toxic part – the part about how to change. So let’s get started. What comes first?
1. Talk to your family and take a poll of their all time favorite foods. Find out what each person feels is the ideal meal and write it down.
2. Convert all the processed foods into their whole food equivalents. (Potato chips becomes sliced potatoes plus oil and salt.)
3. Have each person make an ideal menu for one day. Make this into a list of the basic ingredients – or have them do it if they are old enough.
4. Keep it simple!
Let me give you an example. I like spaghetti with garlic bread and salad. I find organic sauce on sale for $2.99 which is less than most of the other brands. Most pasta is just wheat: $1.00 a pound (remember less ingredients is better). I read the bread package and find that house made Italian and French breads have the fewest ingredients, pick the one with no canola oil at $1.99, and move on to the salad. The only hurtle in this meal is the packaged salad dressing. Make your own or get a plain olive oil vinaigrette. Also use butter with no hormones, or olive oil, with the garlic to spread on the bread. Dried garlic is better than the chopped preserved garlic.
Honestly, the most potentially toxic foods are the most processed and have the most ingredients. Think about your foods and what you are putting in your mouth. Go back to the basics. Most of our comfort foods are all basic anyway, so learn how to make them from scratch with whole foods and you will actually save money!
Most of all, start small. Each change is one step in the right direction, so just do it. You can move a mountain with a teaspoon, you just have to get a spoon and begin!
Posted by:
Kate
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Dear Women Friends and Sacred Sisters,
Come and join with other women in a MOON LODGE once a month during the New Moon. This will be a Dreaming Circle where we learn how to dream our own best life into being, share dreaming with our lodge of dreamers, and join in the dreaming with other Moon Lodges across the continent.
We dream and intend our next month on the New Moon. This is the time of the pregnant void, the darkness where all dissolves and all is created. This is the perfect time for women to connect with their beauty and power within themselves and each other.
If you feel drawn to join in ceremony and community with women at the New Moon, this is the Sacred Space to do that in. We, the women, are to help create the next world of peace and harmony by supporting each other, supporting our community, and supporting the world. We do this best in a group.
The first meeting of the Horse Dream Circle of the Sisters of Honua Project will be Monday night, January 23, 2012 on the New Moon. We will meet from 6:45 pm to 8:45 pm at For Heaven’s Sake, 4900 West 46th Avenue, Denver, CO 80212. There is a suggested donation of $15.00 per evening, although no one is turned away.
This will be a powerful and joyful way to dream 2012! Come enjoy the Beauty Way!
P.S. Please feel free to pass the word for me!