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Re: The body knows (long)

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,

>This does seem to be something you can teach yourself. Recently, I had to

>get on a medication and it made me soooooo tired. I decided to see if I

>could :hear: what my body needed. I meditated and got the image of a

>particular color of blue green. Jumped from that to :spirulina:. Sure

>enough, adding a lot more protein to my diet, some of it in the form of blue

>green algae, really helped.

>

>

It may be something we need to " relearn. " I have had similar

experiences with what I call " gut level cravings, " not addictive in

nature, but clearly the body asking for something.

>The other thing this connects to in my mind is that alcoholism is the only

>major addiction that you can die from in withdrawals. A person has to be

>pretty far gone, but it is possible because the body of the alcoholic has

>shifted the way it gets energy. No other addiction is like this.

>

>YR

>

Actually, the prescription drug Xanax also has withdrawal symptoms that

include death, or at least it did when I was a pharmacy tech years ago.

I tell you, some of those prescription drugs are pretty scary,

especially with so many new ones coming on the scene. After working and

reading and looking at the huge foreign molecules from the literature of

various drug bottles the public at large never sees, I stay far away

from meds.

Deanna

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--- In , Rathbone <yvonr@e...>

wrote:

> Well, my big exception is glucose addiction. Once you control for

that, it

> becomes much easier to :hear: the often quite unambiguous messages

that our

> bodies tell us. I do not know of any studies regarding this so I

only have

> anectodal evidence and reasoning to back up my idea.

>

> The first major experience I remember along these lines goes as

follows: I

> had a weird dream, one of those dreams that lingers all day as an

unnamable

> feeling. The dream took place in South America. As I was driving

home from

> work thinking about the dream, I suddenly had an intense desire for

Brazil

> nuts. Up to that point I had never liked the taste of Brazil nuts,

but I

> didnt question the urge. I stopped at the store and bought some

nuts and

> they were the best tasting food I had ever eaten. I wondered how I

could

> have ever disliked them. A couple of weeks later, I was reading an

article

> on Selenium deficiency and recognizing symptoms that I had had up

to the

> point of eating the nuts. Sure enough, Brazil nuts were listed as

the top

> source of natural selenium.

VERY INTERESTING, MOREOVER BECAUSE I AM FROM BRAZIL AND ACTUALLY LIVE

IN BRAZIL.

> I got to thinking (this is the reasoning part), if cows can search

out herbs

> that help with various ailments, maybe it is just the way bodies

have

> evolved. Our bodies can analyze the nutrition in food and create

cravings

> for those foods it needs. Our bodies have all sorts of feedback

mechanisms

> to tell whether certain hormones or enzymes are needed. Its not a

big jump

> to think that the body can tell if it needs other things.

I MUST HAVE HAD SIMILAR EXPERIENCES, BUT CAN'T RECOLLECT ANY RIGHT

NOW. ONCE A RUSSIAN GUY, WHO WAS LIVING IN MY HOUSE AS A GUEST, HAD

SEVERE DIARRHEA. HE WOULDN'T TAKE MEDICINE, BUT INSTEAD ASKED ME TO

GIVE HIM SOME BREAD. THEN HE TOASTED THE BREAD UNTIL IT WAS LIKE COAL

AND ATE THAT. I FOUND THAT STRANGE, BUT LATER I LEARNED THAT COAL CAN

STOP DIARRHEA AND CLEANSE THE BOWELS. I DON'T KNOW IF HE DID IT

BECAUSE OF A PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE OR ACTED ON INSTINCT. BUT SOMEHOW

HIS BODY NEEDED THAT COAL AND HE ATE IT.

>

> Since this time I have worked to find out how my cravings relate to

my

> experience in my body. I dont think you can just eat whatever

smells good.

> The cravings for things you need arent always based on what seems

like it

> will taste good. Another anecdote: Because of antibiotic overuse,

I am

> prone to yeast infections. One herbal remedy that helps me a lot

is Myrrh

> tincture. This stuff tastes awful!!! And yet, after I had taken

it a few

> times, my body started to crave it whenever I had binged on junk

food. This

> is not a craving for the taste at all. I still have to hold my

breath when

> I take it, but my body clearly tells me: I need this stuff.

ISN'T THIS LIKE BOLDO? DO YOU KNOW BOLDO? IT IS EXTREMELY BITTER. I

GET NAUSEA JUST TO PUT A SMALL PIECE INTO MY MOUTH. BUT WHEN THE

LIVER IS NOT WORKING, THE BODY MAY ACCEPT IT MORE EASILY. DOGS AND

CATS EAT GRASSES WHEN THEY GET SICK. AND HENS SIMPLY FAST.

> This does seem to be something you can teach yourself. Recently, I

had to

> get on a medication and it made me soooooo tired. I decided to see

if I

> could :hear: what my body needed. I meditated and got the image of

a

> particular color of blue green. Jumped from that to :spirulina:.

Sure

> enough, adding a lot more protein to my diet, some of it in the

form of blue

> green algae, really helped.

SO YOU HAVE THIS SIXTH SENSE, HAVEN'T YOU?

> The wrench in the works is glucose addiction. This is when

something is

> happening in the body that causes a person to crave glucose when

they dont

> really needed it. Or shouldnt need it. If you have a systemic

yeast

> infection (and men get those too) the yeast will eat a lot of the

sugar you

> injest making you want to eat more. You will not get a good

reading on how

> much carbs you really need until you beat back the yeast to

reasonable

> levels.

>

> As far as I can tell, glucose is the only substance naturally used

by the

> body that can so easily get out of whack like this. Endorphins are

the

> other substance, but you have to get addicted to opiates for that.

Its a

> little bit easier to get hooked on wheat!

THAT'S WHAT HEIDI HAS BEEN TALKING ABOUT. YET I SEE IT IS EASIER FOR

SOME PEOPLE TO QUIT AN ADDICTION THAN IT IS FOR OTHERS. THINK OF

TOBACCO. I DON'T KNOW WHAT IS AT STAKE HERE. DISCIPLINE? WILL POWER?

> The other thing this connects to in my mind is that alcoholism is

the only

> major addiction that you can die from in withdrawals. A person has

to be

> pretty far gone, but it is possible because the body of the

alcoholic has

> shifted the way it gets energy. No other addiction is like this.

DON'T YOU BELIEVE IN AA?

THIS WAS A VERY INSTRUCTIVE POST TO READ. THANK YOU.

José

> YR

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--- In , Rathbone <yvonr@e...>

wrote:

> On 6/18/05 12:33 PM, the Muses inspired José Barbosa to

write:

> I dont know what Boldo is. But it does sound like the experience I

had with

> Myrrh.

** Also called Peumus boldus, the technical name. It is a shrub

coming from Chile.

>

>

> > SO YOU HAVE THIS SIXTH SENSE, HAVEN'T YOU?

>

> That makes it sound like this is something psychic or paranormal.

I dont

> think it is. I think other animals do this instinctively. The body

> produces some kind of message in the form of a craving for a

particular

> food. I dont think the mechanism has to be supernatural.

>

> I do think that because humans use language so much, we often

discount or

> ignore the messages our bodies give us. :Listening: to the

messages of the

> body often involves some kind of translation into imagery or poetic

> language. So my craving for Brazil nuts gets expressed in dream

imagery of

> South America. My craving spirulina gets expressed in a blue green

color

> and a pond scum smell. If I am patient, I can sometime realize

what these

> mean. But these kinds associations probably had a lot to do with

how my

> brain is wired, what images are near what other images, etc.

Again, no

> psychic stuff.

** I agree. Actually, I was thinking of " intuition " . This is a most

powerful " sense " and I know it can be developed.

>

> I am a smoker. I havent smoked for a very long time, but I can

still feel

> the addiction. I have heard that tobacco is the most addictive

substance

> around. I dont know what makes some addictions harder to kick than

others.

>

** I was a smoker. I quit it about twenty years ago and feel no

desire. My father was also able to quit some ten years before he

died. I know of people who stop and start again like a yo-yo. It must

be very hard for a heavy smoker to adapt to an occasional cigarette

or a couple of cigarettes a day. It seems to be all or nothing.

, may I ask you if you are now into physical exercise? I think

it helps you to quit tobacco.

> >> The other thing this connects to in my mind is that alcoholism is

> > the only

> >> major addiction that you can die from in withdrawals. A person

has

> > to be

> >> pretty far gone, but it is possible because the body of the

> > alcoholic has

> >> shifted the way it gets energy. No other addiction is like this.

> >

> >

> > DON'T YOU BELIEVE IN AA?

>

> How does that connect?

** Well, isn't AA the acronym of Alcoholics Anonymous? Wasn't it

founded in the USA? I always read and hear good reports from them. I

tend to think it works. So maybe alcoholism has a solution.

** My conclusion from this conversation we had is that yes, we can

train the body to tell us what to eat, among other things. I was

somewhat sceptical about it in the beginning. You sort of convinced

me it is possible. Yet it is a very complex mechanism, if I may say

so. Maybe the practice of meditation or mindful observation or

intuition, dream interpretation etc may apply in this case. Thank

you, .

JC

>

> YR

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Thank you for the explanation. My English failed again.

José

--- In , Lynn Siprelle <lynn@s...>

wrote:

> > ** Well, isn't AA the acronym of Alcoholics Anonymous? Wasn't it

> > founded in the USA? I always read and hear good reports from

them. I

> > tend to think it works. So maybe alcoholism has a solution.

>

> AA worked for me (18 years sober in October), but sobriety wasn't

> really what she was talking about. She was talking about dying of

> withdrawal when you're a hardcore late stage alcoholic--someone who

is

> very very deep into the disease and will probably die of it anyway.

I

> was lucky, I got out early and young.

>

> Lynn S.

> 10/15/87

> married to A. 3/15/90

>

> ------

> Lynn Siprelle * web developer, writer, mama, fiber junky

> http://www.siprelle.com * http://www.thenewhomemaker.com

> http://www.democracyfororegon.com * http://www.knitting911.net

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> > Re: Re: The body knows (long)

> >

> >

> >> ** Well, isn't AA the acronym of Alcoholics Anonymous? Wasn't it

> >> founded in the USA? I always read and hear good reports from

them. I

> >> tend to think it works. So maybe alcoholism has a solution.

>

> According to Ross who ran addiction clinics and authored " The

Diet

> Cure " and " The Mood Cure " the failure rate for groups like AA (and

other

> organizations/clinics that use a pyschological approach) is about

90%. It's

> only when she started using amino acids to correct brain chemistry

that her

> clinic's own success rate increased dramatically.

>

Gee, that was news to me, really. Thanks again. JC

> Suze Fisher

> Lapdog Design, Inc.

> Web Design & Development

> http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg

> Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine

> http://www.westonaprice.org

>

> ----------------------------

> " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol

cause

> heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -

-

> Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at

Vanderbilt

> University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher.

>

> The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics

> <http://www.thincs.org>

> ----------------------------

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Hello Lynn:

I was a little embarrassed when you first contradicted my impression

about AA. Not that you shouldn't have done so. But I was embarrassed

anyway.

Now I am confirming that you know what you are talking about. And I

appreciate it.

Thanks.

JC

--- In , Lynn Siprelle <lynn@s...>

wrote:

> > According to Ross who ran addiction clinics and

authored " The

> > Diet

> > Cure " and " The Mood Cure " the failure rate for groups like AA

(and

> > other

> > organizations/clinics that use a pyschological approach) is about

90%.

>

> AA's success rate is 15%, which considering that going it alone the

> success rate is closer to 5% (probably a lot lower) is pretty good.

And

> the " failures " include people who come back three or four or more

times

> before they finally " get it " --who knows how many times people like

that

> get counted. I'm not saying nutrition can't help--obviously it

can.

> But dismissing AA for its failure rate isn't very useful.

Alcoholism

> wrecks people's lives, and getting sober is just the start of a

long

> process. When you sober up a drunken asshole, what you've got is a

> sober asshole. AA helps people stop being assholes and start being

> responsible for themselves, including their pasts. I'm a much

better

> person for having been through alcoholism and recovery, with more

still

> to do! :)

>

> Lynn S.

>

> ------

> Lynn Siprelle * web developer, writer, mama, fiber junky

> http://www.siprelle.com * http://www.thenewhomemaker.com

> http://www.democracyfororegon.com * http://www.knitting911.net

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