Awareness
Based on my own intensive process of healing through nutrition, I found that in the end, the most important part of the healing process came not as much from changing what I ate as from developing a greater awareness, or mindfulness, around the whole eating process. This awareness can be broken down into 4 parts:- What does your body feel like when you’re eating, and after you eat?
- What are you eating / what are the ingredients?
- When are you eating / is there a regular schedule?
- What are you doing / what’s your state of mind while you’re eating?
Awareness of the Body – How Do You Feel After You Eat?
Most important in these 4 areas of awareness is awareness of the body during and after you eat. For those of you who do not have a body awareness practice, I will help you get started with a basic body awareness method; and for those of you who have an established practice, we will apply that to the eating process.Food Quality
Traditional Nutrition
One of the most revealing parts of my nutritional studies came when I learned about “traditional” nutrition – how people ate in pre-industrial times. Much of my education in this area came from Sally Fallon, her book Nourishing Traditions, and the Weston A. Price Foundation. Michael Pollan’s In Defense of Food, and The Omnivore’s Dillema are related books on this topic.From the beginning of human time, up to about 75 years ago, before the advent of refrigeration, efficient automobile and air transport, and the modern chemical industry, food remained about the same. It was for the most part cooked fresh daily, locally and organically grown, in season, preserved using lacto-fermentation (think pickled beets and sauerkraut) and other natural methods, and cooked using everyday cooking methods, usually by someone that you knew.
Modern Industrialization of Food
Over the past 75 years, the growth in technology and transportation has resulted in a food situation radically different than anything our ancestors experienced. Now, our everyday food in the supermarket can have a shelf life of years, is imported from around the world, grown with pesticides, chemical fertilizers, and genetic modifications, preserved with chemicals, and manufactured using chemicals, solvents, intense heat and pressure, usually by someone whose sole goal is to make a profit off of you. Sounds depressing, yes, but, this is the condition of much of our current food supply, and there are a lot of people with a vested financial interest in keeping it that way.Nutrient Density vs. Empty Calories
This incredible change in our dietary habits has been linked to many of our modern diseases, including heart disease, cancer, diabetes, obesity, and so on.One reason for the increase in nutrition-related diseases is that the foods we traditionally ate were “nutrient-dense”, while the modern food supply is full of “empty calories”. That means that even though we may eat the same amount of food, our body does not receive the same nutrition. This can lead to nutrient deficiencies, which register in our bodies as a lack of satisfaction. And this can lead to overeating, in an attempt to satisfy the desire for sufficient nutrients. When a high-quality, and thus nutrient-dense, diet is adopted, foods are more satisfying, and the tendency to overeat will likely decline.
A New Normal
A large part of our current food problem lies in the fact that, for most of us, we have never experienced food in any other context but this modern one, so it seems ‘normal’ to us. To make things more difficult, many highly processed foods filled with chemicals mask themselves as “health foods”, begging the question – “What foods are really healthy for me to eat?”Fortunately, the answer is rather simple – eat (for the most part) how your ancestors did. Or, as Michael Pollan puts it: “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.”
Returning to High-Quality, Nutrient-Dense Food
What he means by “food” here is what I’m calling high – quality food. Getting a solid education about what constitutes high quality food allows us to make the most informed, and hopefully, health-giving and nourishing choices.What determines a food’s quality?
- Freshness – Is the food locally grown or transported a far distance? How long has the food been on the shelf?
- Organic vs. Conventional – what chemicals have been used in the food production process?
- Manufacturing Process – how was the food made? How was the structure of the food changed in the process? Was it made under conditions of high heat and pressure, or with chemicals, solvents, and other modern food industry techniques? Is the food pasteurized or homogenized?
- Growing Conditions – for animal products, how were the animals raised? Did they live a life that is normal to an animal of its kind, or one dictated by the demands of a highly industrialized factory farm? Were they injected with hormones, antibiotics or other chemicals?
- Refined vs. Unrefined – is the food refined from its original form, and what effect does this have on how the body processes it?
“Wrecked” and “Empty” Foods
All of these factors directly influence the nutrient content of the food, determining whether you will be eating a nutrient dense food that is able to satisfy the needs of your body and mind, or a “wrecked” or “empty” food. “Wrecked” foods are those foods whose molecular structures have been altered by industrial processes in a way that makes them hard for the body to process, such as intense heat, pressure, radiation, microwaving, genetic modification, additions of chemicals, solvents and heavy metals, pasteurization and homogenization, etc. “Empty” foods are those that have been stripped of too many nutrients in the refining process, thus creating a food with low nutrient density. Refined white sugar, refined white flower, and refined white salt are examples of “empty foods”. These particular 3 empty foods also happen to be in a large majority of processed foods, even the ones labeled health foods.High-Quality Foods are Outside of the Mainstream Supermarkets
Eating only high-quality food may sound daunting, because most of the food that is available in our mainstream markets is not high-quality. In fact, it is hard to find even one item of high-quality food in most Safeways, Giants, and other similar supermarkets. This is because the items on the shelves are stocked based on low price point, long shelf life, brand name recognition, ease of use, and several other factors, none of the which have to do with how healthy the foods are. Many health food stores carry only about 50 – 60% high-quality foods, with the rest being marketed as high-quality on the packaging, but not actually fitting the bill.How to find High-Quality Foods
So how to go about finding and eating high-quality foods? First is to clearly identify and understand which foods are high-quality. This is an educational process that I can help guide you through. Next is to identify which high-quality foods are most important for you to switch to first. Depending on your health condition, or health goals, we can determine which changes would be most beneficial for you to make first, and which changes will be most beneficial down the road.The Benefits of High-Quality Foods
As you begin to make the change to high-quality foods, you may begin to notice some of their benefits: increased energy and immunity, greater sense of satisfaction from your meals and thus a reduction in food intake and a loss of excess weight, more sustained energy without the highs and crashes, increased resistance to stress and emotional ups and downs, clearer thinking, and increased mental focus and concentration. When making the switch to a high-quality diet, it is important to use the skills of Awareness that I mentioned in the first section, to assess for yourself what changes you notice in your own body, emotions, and mind.Chinese Medicine Food Energetics
Food Energetics: Understanding Foods Based on Felt, Qualitative Measures
Many traditional cultures classified their foods not according to proteins, carbohydrates, calories or vitamins, but according to how each food affected their bodies. They did not have advanced equipment to view cellular activity or understand the chemical components of each food. What they did have were their 5 senses and a felt sense of their own bodies, emotions, and mind. With these methods of observation, they discovered that each food has a particular energetic action.Categories of Food Energetics
In Chinese Medicine, the energetic action of a food is classified according to:- Temperature: cold, cool, warm, hot
- Flavor: sweet, salty, bitter, spicy, sour
- Internal organs affected
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar