How To Use Dietary Supplements. Part 1
Even a goat wouldn't eat what you eat. It is said that goats will eat anything. At various
times their owners have reported that the animals had consumed such things as items of
laundry from the clothesline, old shoes, paper (including banknotes), and in one case a
horse's tail. With an appetite like that, you would think that Billy or Nanny would gladly
accept an invitation to have dinner with us. But such, apparently, is not the case. Not
long ago, partly as a joke and partly out of curiosity, a man I know offered the same food
that had been prepared for his dinner to a neighbor's goat. He reported that the animal
turned aside in disgust from the dishes offered it. Of course, man's dietary requirements
differ somewhat from those of a goat. But in meeting those requirements, we have not shown
any better sense in choosing our food. You are overfed but undernourished. Health
authorities, nutritional experts, and practicing physicians are agreed that although
Americans can afford to buy more and better food than any other peoples in the world,
their diet is sadly deficient in certain important nutritional elements. We are a nation
that is overfed but undernourished. The reason for this is that very often nutritional
deficiency can and does occur without any outstanding clinical signs. Also, upper income
groups are no more immune than those of a lower economic level. Dr. Norman Jolliffe,
Director of the Bureau of Nutrition, New York City Health Department, and one of the
country's outstanding authorities on nutrition, recently warned:
It is well
established that deficiency disease, even without obvious clinical signs, may impair
growth, mental development, resistance to many infections, ability to attain the maximum
rate of wound healing, and decrease working ability.
In fact, inadequate
nutrition, and incorrect nutrition, comprise a "hidden disease" in the United States - a
disease costly in terms both of dollars and lives.
What is wrong with our diet and our eating habits? Many things are wrong with our
diet and eating habits. Nowhere in the world is food treated so badly before it is eaten
as in the United States. Here it is raised by the use of artificial chemicals. In an
all-out effort aimed at quantity, rather than quality, we do everything humanly possible
to destroy the original character that the Creator provided and intended for the yield of
the earth. Moreover, by the time most of our food reaches the consumer, it is too highly
processed, refined, and improperly preserved. To add to this inadequacy, we destroy what
nutrient value remains by flame, fire, by watering it down with tap water, and by
overloading it with salt, sugar, or seasoning. Then we sit down during hurried and harried
business hours and bolt it down. And the result? Some 50 million or more Americans, adults
and children, suffer from constipation, bad teeth, skin troubles, digestive disorders,
fatigue, nervousness, and a multitude of other complaints. Most of them are caused
directly by poor nutrition and sub-clinical vitamin deficiencies. To add to these
digestive troubles, modern man has cut his oxygen intake by living indoors, often in
artificially heated cells or rooms, and has lost contact with both sunshine and fresh air.
This unnatural way of life is undoubtedly responsible for important metabolic changes that
have occurred in civilized man. He has brought certain evils upon himself by losing those
"catalysts" or "stokers of the body furnace." As a crowning insult to nature, we
frequently sit scrunched in a chair most of our days, living in a constant state of
tension and apprehension at our work. Man was originally very energetic, physically active
and almost constantly engaged in some exercise or other. Today, thanks to our mechanical
genius, we tend to depend upon a push-button instead of a muscle. All these factors make
it necessary for us to seek "outside help" to make up for our nutritional and hygienic
shortcomings.
How to supplement your diet with essential nutrients. One way science has found of
helping us accomplish this is to supplement our diet with vitamins and other essential
nutrients. Dr. Jolliffe, noted nutritionist whom we quoted earlier in this chapter, not
long ago pointed out that the improved nutritional status of our population since 1940 is,
in fact, largely due to enrichment of foods and vitamin supplements. States Dr.
Jolliffe:
The agricultural scientist and the scientific farmer alike, know that it
is not practical nor economic to raise hogs or chickens from purely agricultural products
alone. They supplement the diet of their animals with a variety of vitamins, minerals, and
other nutritionals. Although man does not like to think of himself as governed by similar
nutritional rules as farm animals, we could learn and profit much by following what the
scientific farmer practices.
For a number of years, the author has studied the
effects of the following food and nutritional supplement programs, recommended to a large
number of patients. They produced a striking and gratifying improvement in health levels
and well-being. Also of greatest importance was the fact that they were found to be
instrumental in lowering the cholesterol content of the blood and in reducing the amount
of harmful blood fats. There was a corresponding decrease in the number of colds and
infections that patients usually had. They also reported less constipation, nervousness,
fatigue, and the like.
The five-step program. Here are the five steps that patients were asked to follow: 1.
Include daily as a food supplement at breakfast two to four tablespoonfuls of Lecithin
extracted from soya beans. 2. Add to your diet each day B Complex vitamins in the most
potent form. Avoid the cheaper preparations which provide only small and ineffectual
quantities of the vitamins, and have little or no effect on the body. Your doctor or
druggist can advise you which brands provide potent quantities of the vitamins. 3. Also
add to your daily diet at least 25,000 units of Vitamin A, and 150 mg. of vitamin C. 4.
Take two tablespoonfuls of soya bean oil, corn oil orsafflower oil daily to provide the
essential fatty acids necessary to proper nutrition. The oil may be used as a salad
dressing, taken with tomato or fruit juice, or in any way you prefer. 5. Include in
your diet two to four tablespoonfuls of whole wheat germ each day. This may be eaten as a
breakfast cereal with fruit, or sprinkled in your salad. Now a word about the nature of
these health-giving nutrients, and the reason for their use.
How to use
Lecithin. Now I'm going to tell you about one of the most important nutritional
supplements developed in the last 50 years. Make a careful note of it and of how it is to
be used, as described in these pages. The least it can do for you is to improve your
health and give you added vitality. And it may even help save your life. The substance is
Lecithin - a bland, water-soluble, granular powder made from de-fatted soya beans. Soya
beans have been an important staple in the diets of people in China and the Far East for
centuries. But it was only recently that the health-giving properties of one of the beans'
constituents - Lecithin - have been studied. Lecithin is what biochemists call a
phosphatide. That means it is an essential constituent of all living cells, both animal
and vegetable. As such, it plays a vital role in various phases of body chemistry and
function. After more than 10 years of intense experimentation, not only with Lecithin, but
with a large number of other cholesterol-reducing preparations used in the treatment of
heart disease, atherosclerosis, and allied conditions, we found Lecithin to give the most
rewarding result. It was, in fact, not only useful in treatment of heart and blood vessel
disease, but also in their prevention.
Lecithin has very recently been shown to have the power of removing atherosclerosis from
the arteries of experimental animals. Dr. Meyer Friedman, Dr. Sanford Byers, Dr. Ray
Rosenman and their research associates in San Francisco have demonstrated in a most
convincing and dramatic manner how injections of Lecithin remove the cholesterol plaques
that were deposited in arteries. These fatty plaques were produced in the arteries by
feeding large amounts of cholesterol and fats to the animals. They were characteristic of
the atherosclerosis found in humans. Dr. Friedman and his co-workers believe that in
atherosclerosis, as the fats and cholesterol are removed from the artery walls and flood
the bloodstream, the atherosclerotic plaques are dissolved and removed by the Lecithin.
The excess cholesterol and fats are thought to be converted by the liver into the bile and
then excreted from the body. Although there is no known method of using Lecithin by
injection in humans, the very high concentrations in the blood of Lecithin that are
desirable for treatment can be achieved by feeding Lecithin and incorporating it into the
daily diet.
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