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Thread: How to avoid a lifestyle of illness

  1. #1
    Founder Luc's Avatar
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    How to avoid a lifestyle of illness

    "(NaturalNews) The list of illnesses plaguing today's society is astronomical. Diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, metabolic syndrome, obesity, sleep apnea, cancer, ADD/ADHD, allergies, depression, chemical dependency, back pain, autism, hyperlipidemia are just a handful of the ailments affecting a large portion of the country with astronomical costs associated with them. Obesity alone, costs roughly $270 billion per year. But why are we continuing to get fatter and sicker? Today's food has changed and so have the illnesses that plague the country. Fortunately, the handful of illnesses costing billions of dollars a year in healthcare, are typically preventable and reversible.

    Food and soil are not the same

    The food of 2013 is not the same food your grandparents, or even parents, ate. Genetically modified foods and the farming monopoly are detrimental to the population's livelihood. Access to fast food and instant meals is making us sicker by the day. Food has become overly processed, manipulated to be bigger and flavorless, injected with hormones, dyes and chemicals which, lead to food allergies/sensitivities, behavioral disorders and chronic lifestyle illnesses.

    The soil our food used to grow in was full of nutrients and minerals and has sense become depleted due to non-sustainable farming methods. Organic, grass-fed, hormone-free, natural meet is now advertised as being healthier and better for you. Years ago, animals were grass-fed and were naturally hormone free. 80 percent of today's food is laced with sugar, which greatly contributes to lifestyle illnesses. Four corporations control 58 percent of the chicken market, 66 percent of the hog and sheep market and 84 percent of the beef market. Monsanto controls the majority of the soybean and corn grown in the US. These companies are striving for bigger products by genetically modifying and mass producing them, but bigger is not better in this case.

    Our sick nation

    In 1985, the percentage of people with diabetes was 0.62 percent, in 2010 that percentage rose to 5.13 percent, a 727 percent increase. Metabolic diseases, (hypertension, diabetes type II, high (bad) cholesterol, heart disease, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, polycystic ovarian syndrome), can be decreased with a reduction in calories. Fast food equals fast cooking equals fast disease (Lustig, 2009). The rate of adult obesity has doubled over the past 20 years and has tripled in children. "One in three babies born will develop diabetes" and somehow that has become a "normal," acceptable diagnosis in today's society (Triple Solution for a Healthier America, 2007). Most of these "chronic" diseases are actually lifestyle diseases/choices that can be prevented and even reversed in many cases.

    Make a change today

    If something has more than five ingredients, it is not real food and processed. Stress, both physical and emotional, put our bodies in a hypersensitive state that affects all of our internal functions. Finding natural, healthy ways to de-stress is a must (exercise, meditate, chiropractic, acupuncture, positive mental attitude, daily affirmations). The stressed brain is more rewarded by food, creating a vicious food/disease cycle. Today's common and priciest health problems are preventable with healthy lifestyle changes.

    If you are diagnosed with a lifestyle illness and advised to take medication(s), it does not mean you cannot change the way you eat and exercise to get off of them in order to reverse your diagnosis. Lifestyle changes made early on can help to minimize your chances of having to take a dangerous prescription to manage your symptoms. Eating real food, eating less food overall, minimizing/balancing stress and exercising regularly will all help you from becoming a statistic."


    Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/038850_ch...#ixzz2JHBKjEhs
    Keep walking. Just keep walking.

  2. #2
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    We grow a lot of our own veges - it's the only way.

    This article mentions lifestyle - that's what it is all about - and habit - perhaps the same thing. I used to eat a lot of chocolate, cakes and biscuists. After having naseau and indigestion for months - maybe a year, I could only eat veges and fruit. That is when I tried to think what might be good for my brain so I began having fish once a week and eating salmon and sardines. I also started having and egg nog with yoghurt for breakfast.

    Now that the naseau is gone - I started eating those bad things again and find they taste like chaff! I am only doing it because I can, and am not even enjoying them, how weird is that! It is stupid, really! I also think to myself now when I am eating rubbish - what nutrients is this giving to my brain so it can heal faster? None! So grandma has some thinking to do!!!

    Good article, Luc
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  3. #3
    Founder Luc's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by grandmaD View Post
    We grow a lot of our own veges - it's the only way.
    It's pretty warm where you live, GrandmaD - I guess you need to do lots of watering?
    Keep walking. Just keep walking.

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    I need to ask this question - do you have any kangaroos in the area you live?
    Keep walking. Just keep walking.

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    lol!
    Meds free since June 2005.

    "An initiation into shamanic healing means a devaluation of all values, an overturning of the profane world, a peeling away of inveterate handed-down notions of the world, liberation from everything preconceived. For that reason, shamanism is closely connected with suffering. One must suffer the disintegration of one's own system of thought in order to perceive a new world in the higher space."
    -- Holger Kalweit

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    Hey Luc, yes we do! I guess people who come here expect to see them everywhere, but that is not so - although the weird thing is that when we lived in the big smoke, we saw one, only once, hopping down the road. You also seem them there lying about on the nice green golf fields.

    There is a little fella 2 blocks away I have seen him 3 times now, he is very cute and just stands stock still staring at me. I am also standing stock still staring at him! When we frst came here, we used to see them often hopping through our yard, but we have more people now in our street, so that doesn't happen.

    A few weeks ago, one was hopping through the paddock over our back fence towards the dam for a drink, but the stupid neighbour's dogs got out and chased it away. A friend then told me a roo can actually drown a dog if it wants to.

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    Yes, watering is a big bug bear. We have tanks and I fill up 3L milk bottles and hubby carts them to the garden in the barrow and helps me. We do this once a week unless it rains. Our septic coms out on some of the bigger shrubs, but now 4 of the 14 of them are dying. He is out now checking to see if the hose is blocked. Another garden we move the septic water to, had dying shrubs also and he found the hoses were blocked. I planted all drought hardy plants there, yet 2 were still dying! Hoping they will revive when it rains.

    Do you have a garden? What is it like in Poland to live? City or country?

  8. #8
    Founder Luc's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by grandmaD View Post
    Hey Luc, yes we do! I guess people who come here expect to see them everywhere, but that is not so - although the weird thing is that when we lived in the big smoke, we saw one, only once, hopping down the road. You also seem them there lying about on the nice green golf fields.
    Looks like those here, with a small difference; the kangaroo parents in the picture are punching each other, and the kids are dismantling the golf course/looking for this funny unknown "fast-moving round animal" that disappeared into the hole. LOL.

    Keep walking. Just keep walking.

  9. #9
    Founder Luc's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by grandmaD View Post
    Do you have a garden? What is it like in Poland to live? City or country?
    I have such place outside the city, though not able to get there much yet b/c of WD, but it's a matter of time. Living in a city. At that point, it all very much looks like Western Europe. Yep, the Big Pharma is here, too. lol.
    Keep walking. Just keep walking.

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