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AN EXPERT:
Wheatgrass and Raw Food Questions Answered
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We thought it would be helpful to our readers to see the questions
and answers to many related raw food diet and wheatgrass
questions. Below is an email conversation between two wheatgrass
& raw food enthusiasts.
Hi Charles,
My name is Gabrielle. In a conversation I had earlier today with
KK she spoke so highly about your knowledge and the health project
you are working on. She suggested asking you in reference to some
scientific studies proving the benefits of raw food dieting on
people. I would love to know also about your business and how you
are running.
Best,
Gabrielle
Hello Gabrielle -
Thank you for your note. KK and I have been colleagues for many
years, I appreciate her faith in me.
I am not sure exactly what information I might have that would be
of use to you. My work is related to the simple but profound
relationship we have with what we individually, and collectively,
choose to put into our mouths. That fact has changed our planet
and we are now at real risk. The repercussions of this are
affecting us in every category of activity, from health, to
agriculture, to environment, to social and economic justice, and
so on.
We cannot forget to mention the terrible difficulties we have
created for all fellow species, plant and animal, that inhabit
this fragile droplet whirling in space. Where will it end? it
appears we have a few decades at most to reorganize our lifestyles
to bring about a 'soft landing', or experience a hard one should
we not change our ways of consumption in all areas. Only then will
we see whether humans will be allowed to assume their proper role
as 'stewards' of the earth, rather than despoilers.
For me, diet is a focal point, which from there spirals out to
touch many current issues we face from a medical structure out of
control and invalid in many ways, to how we rearrange our personal
carbon footprint, to redressing the terrible suffering we inflict
on other species. I also believe that fundamentally, whether we
are overweight 'westerners' or underweight 'third worlders', we
are all malnourished - and this is a primary problem to address,
as so many other issues stem from it. Our physical and mental
abilities have been seriously eroded by an improper diet. This
will defeat us in the final analysis.
To those ends my work is directed in practical and utilitarian
ways that hopefully others can assess and adopt should they find
them useful and valid in addressing problems we individually and
collectively face.
Not sure what else to say on this matter, other than that now is
an important time for like minded people of all persuasions to
come together. I wish you the best of luck in moving forward with
your visions and dreams, hopefully realized in practical ways for
people who suffer.
The raw / living foods movement is one very basic and simple way
we can change a behavior, i.e., eating, that will bring about
change somewhat the same way millions of blades of grass growing
under concrete roads can actually lift and break them!
Again, best of luck in your efforts. Please feel free to contact
me should you wish further discussion.
Charles
Hi Charles!
Nice to be in
touch with you!
Do you advocate wheat grass juice? Do you think it is digestible
for people! Or why do you think is necessary? Isn't fruit and
greens enough when they are organically grown?
What else do you feel brings the solution to the problem in your
view?
I like to keep things simple if possible! I feel very comfortable
with a natural hygienic approach.
I am looking for scientific documents proving the benefits of
fruits and greens on individuals health! Which ones do you find
most important? Do you have access to any e-docs I could read?
Thanks for your response.
Gabrielle
Hello Gabrielle -
Thank you for
your return note. since you like to 'keep it simple', I suggest
that all the answers to your questions are really contained in Dr.
Wigmore's several books. specifically, though, I would answer your
questions as follows:
1) I advocate wheatgrass juice or barleygrass juice strongly. It
is one of the most nutritious substances available to us in these
times. If one cannot tolerate wheatgrass (too sweet for many) then
barleygrass is a great alternative. Also, wheatgrass seems to be
an excellent 'medicament' for soft tissue and organ problems,
while barleygrass seems to work very well for 'arthritic' and bone
type issues in my experience.
2) The juice is very digestible for people, and provides many many
benefits in juice form whether used as a drink, or implant. The
effect implants have on helping the liver to cleanse cannot be
underestimated. It is important to grow the grass in soil if you
do indoor gardening, and it is best if you add 'azomite' or other
mineral supplement to the soil until you get your composting
system going. This is because the food we eat is no better than
the soil it is grown in, and since the 1950's we have seen a
spectacular fall in the nutritional content and value of all
commercially grown foods, even organic in many cases. This is due
to fertility issues with the soil. Wheatgrass juice is the best
way to get elements, known and unknown as yet, that we need for
healthy living, especially if you use enriched composted soils
that have been carefully nurtured. Wigmore really addressed this
problem very well in her Hippocrates Diet book.
3) I do not think just organically grown fruits and greens are
enough in this day and age. A close reading of Dr. Wigmore's
system clearly shows her inclusion of living (i.e., fermented,
sprouted, blended) foods of many types, and sea vegetables, in
addition to fruits and vegetables. she also strongly encourages
eating 'wild' foods because they struggle to make their
livelihoods in ways 'domesticated' plants do not. in this struggle
their nutritional value is much improved. Read the book 'The
Secret Life of Plants' for information of interest.
5) I believe all the above are critical additions to the diet,
especially as it relates to getting sufficient oils and other
enzymes in the diet. Avocados may not be quite enough, so we may
need to look to flax seed and fats made available from nuts and
seeds such as sunflower, and as enhanced by the making of 'seed
cheese' or almond yoghurt, in her system. When we eat this way, we
shift our pH to a more appropriate level, and we enhance the flora
systems in our gut - really the key to our survival. As Edgar
Cayce once mentioned in one of his readings, 'The Peyer's Patches'
in the small intestines are a critical enzyme factory in the body
we must protect'. We do this with a proper way of building a
composting system in our own bodies through foods judiciously
selected and combined properly, while holding a respectful
attitude for the gifts we receive from this beautiful earth. I
think Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce had profound things to say in
this regard.
I believe that we absolutely MUST eliminate processed foods from
our diets, as it is having further disastrous impact on us, and
all following generations. Read Dr. Weston Price (Price -
Pottenger Foundation) for the background on this. you can check
out their website.
Authors I recommend include E. Howell - Enzyme Nutrition (info
about enzymes), M. Fukuoka - One Straw Revolution (info about
healthy gardening/farming) and Dr. M. Gerson - The Gerson Therapy
(info about nutritional treatment of disease from a medical
doctor's experience). They each give real information from real
world experience and insight. From these masters you can find many
further avenues of study.
Best of luck in your research!
Charles
Thanks Charles,
I appreciate our point of view. Could you explain your point of
view further and why organic produce isn´t enough!?
What do you think about fasting on water! do you have any direct
experience with it?
What type of testing do you use for the client? Also, is there any
regulating body for juice therapies or can anyone just cure people
with juices in the US?
Thanks again.
Gabrielle
Hello Gabrielle -
In receipt of
your note to me I would answer your questions in the following
manner, based on my reading and experience:
1) You asked me to explain my point of view further. Pretty open
ended question, but I will add this to try to put my previous
brief comments in perspective. We in the west have lost control
over our food supply. The way the food chain is now organized is
very very very very precarious, to say the least. Read 'The
Omnivore's Dilemma' or 'Fast Food Nation' for extremely useful
information. This industrial (and even the 'new organic') model is
providing us low quality nutrition at tremendous environmental and
spiritual cost worldwide, though at the register it seems 'cheap'.
It is unsustainable.
I believe that we can turn it around by every individual growing
food in gardens, on decks, in pots indoors, on roof tops, or in
community gardens, or, if so lucky, a small mixed farm somewhere.
Remember, during WWII in the US 2/3 of our fruits and vegetables
came from so called 'victory gardens'. We all need to make the
connection between the food we eat, and where it comes from.
Currently, if you are in the US, you will not like the answer to
that question. At the least, support your local farmer's markets
when you can.
2)You ask why I think 'organic produce' isn’t enough. Well, this
is a pretty broad category as well, so I will take the liberty to
say that I think 'organic produce' trucked in from the San
Fernando valley or Mexico is not a good trade off, if you live
somewhere other than California or Mexico where the food
originates. But you are asking, I think, about food value. If you
do not know the source of the food you eat, you are simply
gambling. If you are eating 'organic produce' that is grown from
hybrid seed, on soil worked with machinery, you are probably not
getting full value food. Food then shipped in is picked green,
handled, and 'refreshed' at the grocery store or supermarket over
the period of several weeks. That food is constantly deteriorating
in nutritional value, from a deficit to begin with. That is why I
so strongly recommend that people include freshly made wheatgrass
or barley grass juice grown from locally grown organic seed of
known variety in their own home under their own control. At least
in this way you will be getting a complete food in its freshest
and most nutritious form.
3) Fasting on water - I have fasted for as much as 7 days on
water, and 23 days on water, rejuvelac, and barley grass juice. I
am not a fan of water fasts. I found them very tough on my system,
and I found that the best results for me were short 3 day juice
fasts, as recommended by Dr. Wigmore among many. Ideally, for me,
juice fasting one day per week, four 3 day fasts in a year, and
one week in a year is the best hygienic regime. Calculate it out:
in this way you 'fast' about 70 days in a year, or over 2 months!
I think this method is like shaking a jar in which there is
sediment. You shake the sediment into solution, and in our case
the body hopefully will eliminate it as it rejuvenates, cleanses,
and strengthens itself. For me this is a very very beneficial
routine that allows me to continue working at my usual tasks in
life, while carrying on internal work as well.
4) Testing for clients - well, I suggest some very basic ones over
time. I weigh people ONLY ONCE per week. I test some flexibility /
bending, body mass index, and pH of saliva and urine. I also
monitor blood pressure. That’s about it, but I would recommend
stool samples if there is a laboratory that can really do good
testing for parasites. I also have a 'subjective feelings' set of
questions I ask.
5) Juice therapy in the US - this is and has been a very
contentious issue. Morris Fishbein, one of the early founders and
'bigshots' in the American Medical Association, actively attacked
therapies outside the allopathic model. The book 'The Gerson
Therapy' is very good, along with books about Hoxey, Naessens, and
Caisse. There are a few medical doctors that have really stuck
their necks out lately, such as Dr. Lorraine Day. You might want
to review her website in particular, as she ultimately recommends
a diet that is quite similar to Wigmore's. Still, what Fishbein
pushed so long ago is still deeply ingrained in the established
medical model of the US today. To this day, in the US, this is an
area of real disagreement, and legal pitfall. One can have juice
therapies, but how one promotes, explains, or employs them is
somewhat less than straightforward. I believe in Europe it is much
easier to go an alternative route, and even have it covered by
insurance.
I hope the above helps answer some of the questions you posed to
me.
Best wishes
Charles
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