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The Importance of Nutrition
and Lifestyle
Eating healthy and taking
care of yourself is essential to obtain optimal wellness.
Most people roll their eyes or moan when confronted with
these ideas, but, in reality, taking care of yourself is
not as hard, time consuming, expensive, or dull as most
would have you believe. In fact, once people decide to
choose a healthy life, they notice more energy, increased
self-confidence, more time to do things that really
matter, and they spend less time in the doctor’s office
or hospital. It is less expensive to buy organic foods and
shop for most items at a health food store than it is to
buy candy, soda, chips, pizza, alcohol, and cigarettes.
Not only do people consume less food on a healthy diet
(you really can’t just eat one Pringle), they help their
bodies to become stronger and more able to fight disease,
which makes their health costs lower as well. The foods
are not dull or tasteless either. It does depend on what
you like, but, in general, unprocessed and whole foods
right from the garden (or produce section) are the
tastiest and most satisfying. If you don’t like fresh
snap peas, maybe you’ve not had them done right!
In our current society of
hustle and bustle, we often go for the cheapest and
quickest foods to get rid of that nasty hunger sensation.
But what does that do to you? Really? Most people don’t
know and they don’t care. They will care more when they
discover they have heart disease or diabetes or the
variety of other conditions caused by this type of
lifestyle. But patterns get established and it is so
difficult to stay away from the burgers or sodas for long.
Tastes get perverted (yes, that is the word for it) to
like too much fat, sugar, and salt in our diets. Foods
don’t taste as good without additives. In reality, they
don’t taste as good because cheap food is cheap food and
you wouldn’t eat it if you weren’t fooled by the
extras added in to either make it look, taste, or smell
better. A McDonald’s thin hamburger is grayish to begin
with, never mind that it has comparatively loads of fat in
its small size. Try just the burger without the cheese,
ketchup, mustard, onions, or pickles. Pretty bland. That
cheese (if you could call it that) is what they call
‘cheese food’. They cannot call it ‘cheese’
because of the processing. This ‘cheese food’ makes up
most of the sliced cheeses in supermarkets. Look at the
labels. The ketchup has corn syrup (sugar) and sugar
added. I could go on, but I won’t. The point is, these
additives are added to make an inferior product taste good
enough to sell at a cheaper price so the public will buy.
I guarantee in a taste test of a more expensive, yet
organic ketchup made with tomatoes that taste good, and
regular ketchup without any added sugar to either sample,
you would choose the organic one over the non-organic
based solely on freshness of taste. The same goes for
burgers, ice cream, breads, and many processed products.
The better the ingredient quality, the better it tastes
and the healthier it is for you.
It is best to limit the use
of anything processed (processed meaning things were done
to it, it is not directly or closely linked to the whole,
natural food; usually these foods are in boxes or bags),
but whole grain rice with spices and herbs in a box with
no unnatural additives is much better for you than the
usual Rice-a-Roni, mac and cheese, and the like. Read
those labels as well. If you cannot pronounce or
understand what an ingredient is, do not consume it. If a
product says ‘enriched’, this does not make it a
better product. In fact, things are enriched when they
have had those enriching items taken away. Processing
foods uses heat, cold, light, drying, or crushing which
all serve to deplete vitamins and minerals in the food. To
replace these essentials means the food was already
compromised. Look for foods that are as close to their
natural state and as fresh as possible. The best foods are
fresh straight from the earth. The next best is fresh from
the produce or bulk section. Then comes frozen, dried, and
canned, respectively.
You may wonder how the
Standard American Diet (SAD diet) affects your health
besides flavor and price. Processed foods, as mentioned
above, typically contain less vitamins and minerals than
the original foods that made them up. If you eat food
mostly from packages or boxes and are not reading labels,
not only are you not getting valuable nutrients, but also
you are consuming items that may be depleting nutrients in
your body. Sugar uses B vitamins from your body.
Preservatives and additives put an extra burden on your
liver, whose job it is to break these compounds down so
your body can get rid of them. What your body cannot get
rid of, it will store in fat, so these chemicals will not
be running around causing harm where they do not belong.
No where in nature will you find a body needs ‘blue dye
2’ or ‘propylene glycol’ necessary and good for
survival. Fat is the best storage place for these toxins.
Fat is found not only right under your skin but also
lining your nerves and in your brain. These may not be
places you wish toxins stored.
We commonly hear that fat
is bad and cholesterol is bad from the media. We do need
fat and cholesterol to live. Fats and cholesterol are
large components in healthy skin, all your cells,
hormones, and your brain and nerves. They are also a good
source of energy when needed. It is not good to severely
limit these items from the diet. It is the quality of the
fats that you consume that makes the difference. Some fats
that are good for your body are called essential fatty
acids, or EFA’s. Your body cannot make these fats,
therefore the essential aspect. You can find these helpful
fats in flax seeds, fish, evening primrose oil, borage
oil, and some other oils and foods. If you eat fat mainly
from grass-fed animals, butter, fruits, vegetables,
grains, fish, and get some EFA’s in your diet, you will
do well. Margarine contains fats called ‘trans fatty
acids’ which helps it stay solid at room temperature.
These trans fats contribute quickly to atherosclerosis and
heart disease. Trans fats are also found in many processed
foods like chips, fries, and some diet foods. Please read
labels. Do not eat any foods that say ‘trans fatty
acids’ or ‘hydrogenated’ or ‘partially
hydrogenated’. Hydrogenation is the process that forms
the trans fats.
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