|
The following will help balance blood sugar and hormone
levels, help with Adrenal Fatigue, prevent ups and downs
in energy and mood, and promote weight loss. It is also an
extremely heart-healthy diet plan.
HOW TO EAT:
-
Eat every two hours. This relieves the
stress handling glands from the job of maintaining
normal blood sugar levels between meals (via epinephrine
and cortisol).
-
Do not eat carbohydrates alone; always
add protein to your meals and snacks. It is especially
important not to eat a carbohydrate-only breakfast.
-
Avoid stimulants--caffeine, sugar,
alcohol, etc. Stimulants work by provoking the stress
handling glands into releasing epinephrine and cortisol
to raise blood sugar and release energy.
-
Avoid dead, devitalized and junk food.
These foods cannot re-build a healthy body. They are
also anti-nutrients--they rob any remaining nutrient
stores from your body.
-
Avoid trans-fats and rancid fats. Cell
membranes, nerve tissue, and steroid hormones (vitality
hormones) all require healthy fats.
-
Eat real, whole, fresh food. Minimize
fruits and fruit juices. Most people will do well on a
Mediterranean-type diet, combining some carbohydrates,
protein and fat at each meal.
-
Salt your food liberally with sea salt.
Stress handling glands need plenty of salt for normal
function. research has proven that eating salt does
not cause high blood pressure or heart
disease. Only people with organ damage, like kidney
disease, need to be concerned with keeping a low salt
diet. In fact, low salt diets contribute to adrenal
fatigue.
-
Sea salt can be obtained from a health
food store. It looks and tastes like "regular" salt, but
contains the trace minerals that have been refined out
of "regular" salt. For a good source of salt, there is
Celtic Sea Salt. I carry this wonderful product.
Contact me for information.
-
Drink plenty of water (filtered, or a
reliable source of spring water, NOT tap water).
WHAT TO EAT:
-
Eat foods rich in Omega 3 fatty acids such
as fatty coldwater (not farm grown) fish, including
salmon, tuna, trout, herring and mackerel. Eat walnuts,
flaxseeds and green leafy vegetables. Or, if you prefer,
take an Omega 3 supplement such as Tuna Omega-3 Oil
(2 perles 2x/day).
-
Use monounsaturated oils, especially
virgin or extra virgin olive oil as your primary oil/fat
source. Note: Canola oil, although a monounsaturate, is
a highly refined, genetically-engineered oil with none of
the benefits of olive oil.
-
Eat seven or more servings of vegetables
and fruits every day. Fruits are minimized during the
first few months. Vegetables and fruits should be fresh or
frozen (not canned). Vegetables can be slightly cooked,
steamed or eaten raw.
-
Eat natural sources of good protein, (not
man-made deli meats), and preferably organic meats (raised
without estrogenic hormones and antibiotics).
-
Eat more vegetable protein including peas,
beans, lentils and nuts.
-
Eat only organic whole grains
(non-commercial). No refined carbohydrates (like white
flour, white rice, white pasta, or white sugar).
-
The best breads are found in the frozen
section of the health food store. Look for organic
sprouted grain breads (sprouted grains have a higher
protein and lower carbohydrate content than regular
flour). These must be kept refrigerated.
-
Minimize oils that are high in Omega 6
fatty acids, including corn, safflower, sunflower,
soybean, and cottonseed oils.
-
Reduce or eliminate intake of trans-fatty
acids (all hydrogenated oils), which are prevalent in
margarine, vegetable shortening, and almost all
commercially prepared packaged foods.
-
Make complex carbohydrates (such as
breads, pasta and grains) your smallest food group.
* Most bookstores carry a variety of
books on versions of the Mediterranean Diet, with
suggestions for recipes.
The Mediterranean-Type Diet, also known as
the Crete Diet and Omega Diet, was compared to the
Standard American Heart Association Diet in the Lyon Diet
Heart Study in 1994.
"Compared to those on the AHA diet,
patients on the Mediterranean-Type Diet had an
unprecedented 76% lower risk of dying from cardiovascular
disease or suffering heart failure, heart attack or
stroke! Remarkably, the new diet had proven more effective
at saving lives than any other heart diet, drugs,
lifestyle program or any combination of these elements."*
THIS IS YOUR PLATE. THESE ARE
APPROXIMATE RECOMMENDED PORTIONS OF THE FOOD GROUPS
DISCUSSED ABOVE.

* Simopoulos, Artemis, P., M.D.,
and Jo Robinson, The Omega Diet: The Lifesaving
Nutritional Program Bas3ed on the Diet of the Island of
Crete, Harper Collins Publishers, Inc., (1999) p9
|