I have just thought of a couple more. I also stopped getting gout and acid reflux. The usual cures for gout that I have seen have suggested a reduction in high protein foods such as meat. I am actually eating more meat now than I was when I had gout. What seemed to get rid of gout was reducing carbs. The carbs seemed to have been causing some sort of stress that caused my body problems in dealing with the uric acid in protein. I found this out totally by accident after reducing carbs, to combat acid reflux and candida.Warren David wrote:Before paleo I was suffering with...
Lower back problems
Dry skin
Sinus problems
Chest infections
Candida
Low blood sugar
Pains throughout my digestive system
All gone after switching to a paleo diet.
Idle dreamer
Ludi Ludi wrote:
People apparently used fire before we were Homo sapiens. Homo habilis apparently used fire, Homo erectus may have used it. Personally I think it would be stretching it to claim the Paleolithic diet didn't use fire, when clearly Paleolithic Homo sapiens used fire.
Warren David wrote:
A "paleo" diet is simply anything that can be eaten raw. This doesn't mean that it must be eaten raw though.
BTW. Woolly mammoth may soon be back on the menu! Look here
I'll have a side please.
I would suggest that just about anything on a raw vegan diet could probably be classed as a "paleo" food but I've not read any evidence of veganism during the paleolithic period.Len wrote:
After thinking about this for a while.... I have come up with what I would define as a paleo diet...
...I would suggest starches would be the one big thing not in the diet (well sugar too), but the diet would vary greatly from place to place, from vegan (in places with a lot of easy to reach vegetation) to carnivore (as in the arctic where there is only meat).
Jack Spirko,
The Survival Podcast
www.thehappypermaculturalist.wordpress.com
Suzy Bean wrote:
Anyone read up on the blood type diets? Peter D'Adamo did a lot of research on lectins and wrote "Eat Right For Your Type," and "Live Right for Your Type" (which includes blood type's relationship with lifestyle, personality type, exercise type, etc). I don't follow it 100% but it has helped me a lot, and seems to resonate with how my body feels best. I don't know much about B and AB blood types, but I know O's do very well on the paleo diet, and A's can do better with a potentially vegetarian diet as they theoretically evolved with agriculture. Apparently they do better staying away from (too much) red meat as it can make them sluggish, but still greatly benefit from other anmal proteins. I am an O and red meat totally energizes me.
Suzy Bean wrote:
Anyone read up on the blood type diets? Peter D'Adamo did a lot of research on lectins and wrote "Eat Right For Your Type," and "Live Right for Your Type" (which includes blood type's relationship with lifestyle, personality type, exercise type, etc). I don't follow it 100% but it has helped me a lot, and seems to resonate with how my body feels best. I don't know much about B and AB blood types, but I know O's do very well on the paleo diet, and A's can do better with a potentially vegetarian diet as they theoretically evolved with agriculture. Apparently they do better staying away from (too much) red meat as it can make them sluggish, but still greatly benefit from other anmal proteins. I am an O and red meat totally energizes me.
Brice Moss wrote:
I think assuming that our distant ancestors did not eat starchy plant roots or any other given thing is a bit silly, but dodging any food that could not be produced with natural inputs and simple tools is probably wise.
www.thehappypermaculturalist.wordpress.com
Suzy Bean wrote:
I support eating those roots! It's been a while since I read the food lists in the blood type books, but I'm pretty sure turnips and sweet potatoes are on the "beneficial" list for O's, for example. (The book looks at each type and gives lists of things that are beneficial, neutral, to be avoided.) Here is the main website: http://www.dadamo.com/
Jack Spirko,
The Survival Podcast
Leila Rich wrote:
Brice, I'm pretty sure the 'whole wheat' flour I buy has the germ included.
I'm paying enough for it, it better be all there
Is it a terminology/national thing? My flour's biodynamically grown and the farmer's very particular about its freshness. Considering the germ speeds up rancidity, I should be ok. I might need to email them...
I limit starch consumption to around 30 grams per day. Some days I don't eat any. It depends upon what I feel like eating. I know it is in the vegetables I eat but I don't eat them every day. Some days I only have animal protein and fat. I agree with you that we don't really need it in our diet. In the winter my diet is almost exclusively animal protein and fat and no starch. We get long lasting energy from fats, especially medium chain fatty acids. In my opinion starches are only good for spiking your blood glucose levels which is bad for your pancreas.Warren David wrote:
We don't actually "need" starch. It's more to do with how your body has got used to using starch for energy. I havn't eaten any starch in years and never feel the need for it even though my work is very physical.
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
Raw sweet potatoes contain an inhibitor that prevents protein digestion. Heat destroys that enzyme. I suppose that not eating them with a protein wouldn't hurt though. On my vegetable eating days I eat sweet potatoes but I roast them at a low temperature (275 F) for about 1 1/2 hours. Yummmmmm.jack spirko wrote:
See to me turnips and sweet potatoes are quite paleo, both can be eaten raw. Ever slice up and eat a raw white potato though
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
marinajade wrote:
I'd say that WPF eaters DO eat grains, but they are properly prepared grains that have been fermented or soaked for a significant amount of time, or sprouted and re-dried. They eat far fewer servings of grains than the standard american diet, and they are always whole and preferably freshly-ground. Proper (long term) fermentation eliminates the toxins that are in all pulses.
Lots of meat consumption is not an intrinsic part of the diet WPF promotes. In cultures with little access to meat, eggs and milk are frequently the sources of the very important fat-soluble vitamins (A and D, the human body cannot manufacture them, and they are not available (in an absorbable form or in large enough quantity) in plant foods). They are only found in the products of animals who eat green growing grass. Free range chicken eggs are good sources of A and D, caged eggs are not.
Sea foods are extremely important in many traditional diets, with some cultures going great lengths to obtain them - even far inland. Prices speaks of Peruvians who dried fish eggs and carried them up 15,000 ft mountains for their children and pregnant mothers.
WPF really emphasizes the importance of of growing children (and both sexes of partners actively engaged in creating children) eating lots and lots of animal foods containing fat-soluble vitamins. Price had a child who died at a young age of an infected root canal, and his deep concern for the health of children was a huge motivating factor in his research. Most of the photos in his book are of children.
Price investigated the vitamin content of different kinds of milk and found butter made from the milk of cows who eat quickly growing grass to contain significantly more A and D vitamins than other milk. Milk from cows eating low quality hay is actually a poor source of these vitamins. He encouraged people to clarify the butter from the best time of year and to use it as a vitamin supplement the rest of the year.
Honestly, reading Price's work has re-enforced everything I've ever read about food in Nourishing Traditions. The photos in Nutrition and Physical Degeneration speak volumes even without the written testament behind them. They clearly show the drastic differences between the mouths and health of children with parents eating traditional foods and the mouths of children with parents eating the western diet.
He was determined to prove that crooked teeth, narrow jaws, TB, and clubbed feet were not hereditary - he has many photos of families with children born before and after the road or port came to their village and gave them access to western foods. The children born before the road are very different looking than the children born after - and presumably they both have similar genes to their parents, it's just the diet of the parents and children that has changed dramatically, with dramatic physical results in the offspring.
I quite literally was moved to tears while looking at the photos of Seminole people in Florida. They were so beautiful for so many generations, and ONE GENERATION of eating a vitamin depleted diet completely changed their facial structure and sent their health into a steep downward spiral.
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
Dave Bennett wrote:
If you catch colds often. Stop washing you hands so often. Excessive sterilization weakens the immune system and that is especially true in the food chain.
george101 wrote:
I've read most of the books and authors cited here, and imo the guy that has it right is doug graham (fruitarianism). i'm too weak willed to do it, but it's one of my long term life goals. i was sold on carnivorous paleo for a very long time but doug's arguments sold me.
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
Len wrote:
And according to some Drs don't blow the nose... shallow it instead. It is better than an immunisation shot as it goes directly to the gut where a lot of the immunisation gets set up. So the kids that pick their nose and eat it are onto something... (yuck) Just a built in response that happens to be correct.
For another yuck see below:
http://www.rense.com/general4/bac.htm
It makes me wonder what other non-diet things man used to put in their mouth that where needed for health in pre-western food times. (Paleo seems to have turned into this)
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
Dave Bennett wrote:
After reading through the entire thread I only noticed minimal discussion of a point that in my opinion is extremely important. As Dr. Price pointed out in his book. Geography matters. The comment suggesting that in the "paleo" era adults did not consume milk (dairy). I would point out that just isn't even true and even of northern Europeans.
Idle dreamer
www.thehappypermaculturalist.wordpress.com
"You may never know what results come of your action, but if you do nothing there will be no result”
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Leila Rich wrote:I've come across quite a few references on these forums and have a couple of questions.
Over here, Weston A. Price and Sally Fallon are the names you hear in the permaculture world regarding diet.
To me, it seems that while Paleo/Price have many similarities, they differ in some pretty major ways, especially around eating animal fat and dairy products.
Are people referring to 'Paleo' as a sort of shorthand for 'what I eat', or to 'The Paleo Diet'?
Are people taking things that suit them from various ways of eating? For example, I don't like eating the amount of animal products most Weston A Price people seem to consume, but I love dairy products.
I've always presumed that Weston A Price and permaculture were kind of intertwined, but maybe it's a New Zealand thing...
I hope this post isn't too garbled, and please feel free to go 'off topic', since there really isn't one in the end!
Lolly Knowles wrote:Something I read recently tied the current "low fat" movement to the idea that chemicals found in fertilizers are retained in the fatty tissue of animals who are fed grains.
soloenespana.wordpress.com
soloenespana.wordpress.com
He was determined to prove that crooked teeth, narrow jaws, TB, and clubbed feet were not hereditary - he has many photos of families with children born before and after the road or port came to their village and gave them access to western foods. The children born before the road are very different looking than the children born after - and presumably they both have similar genes to their parents, just the diet of the parents and children that has changed dramatically, with dramatic physical results in the offspring.
I quite literally was moved to tears while looking at the photos of Seminole people in Florida. They were so beautiful for so many generations, and ONE GENERATION of eating a vitamin depleted diet completely changed their facial structure and sent their health into a steep downward spiral.
If you open the box, you will find Heisenberg strangling Shrodenger's cat. And waving this tiny ad:
rocket mass heater risers: materials and design eBook
https://permies.com/w/risers-ebook
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