Home Guide to Herbs - davies


google search for Home Guide to Herbs - davies

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
78 79 80 81 82

Quick Jump
1 79 159 238 317

7
0
The Complete Home GfuoidoedtoanHderbnsu, tNraittuioranl Healing, and Nutrition  
70  
major organs, and other natural regimes will help. Allergy treatments can  
initially be useful, but they can eventually exhaust the patient because they  
achieve their results through avoidance. A body that has become weak and  
poisoned can cope with only a few foods, but this does not mean that one  
will be so limited for the rest of one’s life. A balance has to be struck in  
which a very broad range of foods comes to be tolerated as digestive  
strength is built up, giving greater diversity and, with it, good health.  
(
Refer to sections on digestion throughout the book.)  
Food Separation  
One of the most noteworthy exponents of food separation has to be Dr.  
William Howard Hay who, more than sixty years ago, devised a “nature-  
cure” food approach based on separating out certain food  
combinationsa process he called “food combining.” He ate many  
vegetables, fruits, nuts, and unrefined grains, and small quantities of meat  
and milk. He said that surplus acids are neutralized by the alkaline salts,  
namely sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium (all found in fruits  
and vegetables), and he suggested that acid wastes pile up in the body  
tissue when our alkaline reserves are grossly depleted, creating many  
problems. He suggested eating one totally alkaline meal a day. For some  
people, a closer look at food combinations can be very useful and, in some  
cases, vital. Perhaps one of the simplest ways to aid successful digestion is  
to separate foods completely, perhaps by eating fruits at breakfast,  
vegetables at lunch, and either protein or carbohydrates at dinner.  
Cooked and Raw Foods  
Cooking foods can be viewed on two levels. On the one hand, cooking  
destroys many vitamins, enzymes, minerals, nucleic acids, and chlorophyll.  
After a cooked meal, white blood cells increase in the stomach, thereby  
decreasing the body’s immunity and leaving it more open to infection. In  
addition, cooked food is more likely to ferment or decompose in the  
intestines, resulting in toxicity. The stomach works at a temperature of  
105°F, and food that is cooler or hotter can slow down the stomach’s  
ability to function.  
On the other hand, cooking adds certain energies into food, which  
creates a feeling of nourishment and warmth. Cooking is vital for foods  
that would ordinarily be indigestible or even toxic if left raw (including  
meat and some grains and beans). It is also useful for people with  
decreased stomach energy, which results in a lower metabolic rate and a  
reduced ability to digest their food. Anyone with a compromised spleen  
should take care that raw foods do not further weaken their spleen and  
pancreas. However, many people will thrive on raw food, which often  


Page
78 79 80 81 82

Quick Jump
1 79 159 238 317