Guest guest Posted January 11, 2005 Report Share Posted January 11, 2005 Hi all, I have a brother who is 50 yrs old and is in nursing school. He is becoming very much indoctrinated by *the system* I love him dearly, but we butt heads when it comes to nutrition and health. I'm just wondering if maybe you all have any wonderful rebuttal ideas to the below email I received from him a few days ago. Here it is (names have been changed on the off chance that the cousin in the message just happens to be on this group - not likely, but you never know): Joan is an example of someone who had done her best to maintain her health thru cautious living. You could say she is the Queen of organic holistic life styles. She is extremely careful about everything she eats, raising much of her own food on their land. When she buys food it has to be organic. She is about 5.5 ft and weighs maybe 115-120 lbs. I admire her determination and effort when it comes to healthy living. However, for all of her discipline, she is not at all healthy. I spoke to Joan 2 days ago. Her blood pressure is 168/92 which has her upset because she has done everything right to prevent this condition. She exercises, eats like a bird and only organic. She has also had 2 surgeries (female issues) and a hysterectomy. Several years ago she was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome. Joan is doing her best to maintain her highest level of health. No one should criticize her efforts, discipline and conviction. After talking with her, unfortunately, what she doesn't get is her family genetic pool. Her parents had diabetes, cancer, asthma, and the list goes on and on. All of Joan's sisters are experiencing varying degrees of declining health similar the their parents. Joan is under the illusion that if she can just continue her disciplined life style she can prevent disease and illness. I suspect she would be happier if she would try to strike a balanced approach to her health, knowing that there are health issues that we can not control and simply accept that. At conception, each of us receive 46 chromosomes, 23 from our father and 23 from mother. Locked up in these 46 chromosomes are 2 billion bits of chemical information that determine everything we will be, from our intelligence, eye color, life expectancy, and often quality of health issues. What I am trying to say is we do not have complete control over our health. Each of us must decide to take care of our bodies and get the most out of what we have to work with, but at the cellular, tissue levels, we have limited influence. Well enough of that. Speaking of eating, I am hungry and have not had breakfast. Your brother [Rhonda] My thinking, though I have yet to bear it out in my own life, is that somewhere along the line of lineage the cycle CAN be broken. Maybe I'm wrong here. My maternal grandmother died of ALS, by mom has sarcoidosis and my dad has polycythemia vera and high blood pressure. I am 48 yrs old and am very healthy (LOL I'm home today with the 1st cold I've had in over a year), don't have high blood pressure, but I am about 60 lbs overweight. Anyway, I'm thinking about how Dr Price saw a big difference in only one generation of eating poorly making a huge decline in health. Later in the book he talks about and shows dramatic pictures of the little boy who was so sick and how within 6 mos or a year the child had good health restored thru nutrition. I agree with my brother about genetics, but I still think that a person CAN restore their health, or at the least keep poor health at bay for many years with good nutrition. In the case of the cousin with the high blood pressure, what nutritionally speaking could help? Maybe she's so *organic* that she's not doing healthy saturated fats? I haven't seen her in maybe 25 years or more and I think she's gotta be about 55 yrs old by now. Part of a previous email he sent is below: Rhonda, Rhonda, Rhonda, Your emails are funny. Your big brother does not care what you eat. If you have access to, and want to pay extra money for higher quality foods that's great. Just remember that nutrition is only part of healthy living. I am sure that you are doing your very best to stay healthy. I certainly could improve on what I eat. We are blessed with good genetic history. If we don't abuse our bodies, we will probably live to a ripe old age. Just remember that a long life of good health is not possible for some. Many factors beyond our control determine health and longevity of life. Nutrition and pure organic foods are one factor. It would be extremely naive to believe everybody could live without disease or illness or a body the does not age or experience pain or fatigue by simply eating ourselves to good health. I don't want to minimize nutrition. It's important, and proper nutrition allows us to live optimally. People experience disease and illness for lots of reasons not connected to what they eat. The human body is extremely complex. Millions of chemical reactions are taking place every second. It's complexity does not allow a simple " fix all " to address all of the many diseases and illnesses that our bodies can experience. I say this will all sincerity, Rhonda, I hope you live a long healthy life free of disease. But I hope you do understand there is no fountain of youth,or silver bullet, and that eating God's intended foods will not guarantee or exempt you from the possibly of experiencing serious health issues. To believe that is to be living in a state of denial. [Rhonda] So, I can understand much of his thinking, but sometimes it reeks of just a little too *mainstream medicine indoctrination*. Anyone have any thoughts on all of this? 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