This month I have gotten a huge number of questions from facebook friends and likers of the page, as well as from coaching clients.  It seems as though many are confused about my stance on particular health topics, so I want to clear up any of the confusion here in case you also had some of the same questions about previous blog entries or anything I’ve said via social media.

Question #1: Why don’t I advocate vitamin D supplementation?
Answer: I do advocate vitamin D supplementation through natural food sources such as cod liver oil, organ meats, and grass-fed dairy products (unpasteurized if available).  In the summertime, your body may produce adequate amounts of vitamin D if you spend quite a lot of time in the sun without sunscreen, but most people still need to supplement natural vitamin production with vitamin-D rich foods.  Instead of blocking healthy sunlight with toxic sunscreens that can lead to skin cancer and other types of cancer, taking 4 – 8 mg of astaxanthin daily can also help protect your skin from sun damage without blocking vitamin D production.  Vitamin D pills are typically synthetic vitamin D, and no one really knows how your body may react to long-term usages of synthetic hormone precursors such as synthetic vitamin D.

Question #2: Why don’t I advocate folic acid supplementation even for pregnant women?
Answer: Similar to my stance on vitamin D, I do not advocate folic acid supplementation because folic acid is a synthetic ingredient that may raise your risk of developing various types of cancer.  However, I do advocate supplementation with folate, which is a natural vitamin found in foods such as leafy greens, eggs, and liver.  While most nutritional supplements are still formulated with synthetic folic acid because it is cheaper and easier to obtain, the Designs for Health line of products including PaleoMeal and PaleoCleanse are formulated with natural food-based folate, which is known to prevent cancer rather than cause it.

Question #3: Aren’t I aware that a high protein diet can cause osteoporosis and kidney damage, and that meat (especially meats high in saturated fat) causes cancer and heart disease?

Answer: First of all, I do not advocate a high protein diet, Atkins Diet, or Dukane Diet.  These are dangerous fad diets that cannot be sustained over the long term or else you may run into problems from a lack of antioxidant-rich vegetables and fiber in your diet.  However, there is plenty of evidence that suggests that animal protein does not leech calcium from bones or contribute to osteoporosis.  In fact, animal protein may prevent osteoporosis, while plant-based protein can contribute to reduced bone density.  Saturated fat coming from animal sources such as butter, tallow, and lard has never been found to contribute to heart disease or cancer.  Dairy fat is even known to be protective against metabolic syndrome.  Numerous studies have found an association between high intake of red meat and increased incidence of disease and premature death, but this is because people who eat a large amount of red meat typically also eat too much food in general and are overweight, sedentary, and smokers and/or alcoholics.  People who lead a healthy lifestyle tend to avoid red meat simply because they’ve been told by the TV and by the doctor that it’s unhealthy.  Therefore, people who eat less red meat tend to live longer, happier lives than those who eat several servings of red meat per day.

That’s it for now.  I don’t want to bore you!  If you do have any questions for me to answer here, just leave a comment below.  Thanks!

P.S. Don’t forget the 21-Day PaleoCleanse starts April 1!  Will you be joining me and the rest of the group in a bi-annual cleanse of all the toxic pollution that we breath in everyday from car exhaust, jet fuel, smog, herbicides, VOCs, PCBs, and whatever else they’re spraying in the sky?

Get 10% off all the PaleoCleanseproducts with discount code 10 when you place your order BEFORE April 1.

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21-Day Detox

by Jamie on March 9, 2012

Let’s face it.  We’re living in a toxic world.  Every day we take in PCBs, insecticides, VOCs, ozone particles, car exhaust, and other pollutants in through our lungs, skin, and in our food and water.  Our bodies have built-in detoxification mechanisms, but they aren’t meant to deal with the large amount of toxins we encounter in our modern world on a daily basis.  We can do our best to minimize toxins such as eating organic foods, drinking reverse osmosis or distilled water (and then adding the minerals and electrolytes back in before drinking it), using non-toxic cleaning products, avoiding cosmetics and shampoos that are made with petroleum and other chemicals, using a water filter in the shower, or pretty much just living in a bubble! Obviously we can’t avoid all the toxins if we are to live a halfway normal and sane life!

When our natural detoxification methods become overwhelmed with too many toxins, we can experience ill health — everything from sluggish thyroid function to skin problems, lack of energy, weight loss resistance, post-nasal drip, headaches, and muscle soreness to mental fatigue, brain fog, and moodiness.  I recommend doing a full body detox at least every 6 months (every 4 months if you live in a heavily polluted area or suffer from some kind of chronic health problem) to assist your body in getting rid of toxins.  One of the best detox regimens I have found so far is the PaleoCleanse made by a company called Designs for Health.

I’m going to do a 21-day detox with PaleoCleanse starting April 1st and I would love to have you join me.  There will be a private facebook support group specifically for people who are doing the cleanse.  Being able to participate in an online forum helps keep you accountable and motivated to complete the entire 21-day cleanse.

Please note that this is not a fad diet such as Master Cleanse, which can be dangerous and doesn’t really even support your body’s detoxification mechanisms.  Making yourself have violent diarrhea (drinking cayenne pepper lemonade on an empty stomach tends to do that) and starving yourself is NOT a method of detoxification!  It’s called an eating disorder!

The PaleoCleanse is jam-packed with vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and important co-factors needed for detoxification.  You will be able to work, play, exercise, and carry out your usual daily activities without feeling like poo.  You might even experience A LOT more energy than you normally do, especially during weeks 2 and 3 as well as AFTER you complete the 21 days.

For more details on PaleoCleanse, read this post.

Do it!

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Spring Detox for a Better Mind & Body

by Jamie on March 8, 2012

Our bodies detox continuously as a natural function. It’s only when our detox mechanisms become overloaded that the process becomes less efficient and symptoms may occur.  Some of the first symptoms of an overwhelmed detoxification system can include sore muscles, tiredness or sluggishness, weight gain, difficulty sleeping, constipation, post-nasal drip, or skin problems.

Toxins may be internal (endogenous) or external (exogenous) in origin. Pollution or pesticides in our food source put undue stress on our detox organs, the kidneys and liver. Improper digestion and imbalanced gut ecology provide internal forms of toxins in the way of metabolic by-products stemming from certain bacteria which have toxic side effects and therefore impact negatively on overall health by compromising detox pathways.

It has been suggested that toxic overload contributes to more serious conditions such as autoimmune diseases, inflammatory/rheumatoid arthritis and neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. The goal of an effective detoxification method is to gently and slowly cleanse your body of toxins that add an extra burden so serious diseases like these can be avoided. This program should turn your liver into a healthy, cleansing machine.

Symptoms which may be relieved by following an effective detox program include:

Digestive problems

Bad breath
Fatigue

Irritability
General malaise

Constipation
Headaches

Itchy skin
Skin rashes

Joint pain
Weight loss resistance

Poor concentration

What a carefully planned detoxification program can offer you:

Anti-aging effects

Clearer skin and eyes
Increased productivity

Greater motivation
Weight loss and creativity
Reduction of allergic symptoms

Mental Detoxification:
The cleansing of our mind of negative thought patterns is essential to health and physical detoxification and can aid in this process. Emotionally, detoxification helps us uncover and express hidden frustrations, anger, resentments and fear and replace them with forgiveness, love, joy and hope.

Nutritional Supplements for Gentle Cleansing/Detox
To stimulate an effective detoxification process that will leave you feeling vibrant and energized instead of deprived and depleted, I recommend the use of the following nutritional supplements:

Detoxification Support Packets
We are being inundated with toxins on a daily basis. Our ability to handle these toxins is dependent on our body’s ability to detoxify them. Cleaning up our diet is a great first step. Less toxins going in means less toxins that have to come out. The following supplements are crucial for preventing toxins from getting partially detoxified into more harmful compounds and then being dumped back into the bloodstream. Therefore, these packets are just as important to the success of this cleanse as is the dietary changes. Each packet contains:
Detox Antiox (1) (antioxidants to protect the cells from toxins)
LV-GB Complex (1) (liver/gallbladder support)
Amino-D-Tox (3) (prevents toxins from getting stuck in the body)
Dose: Take 2 packets daily (1 am packet and 1 pm packet).

PaleoCleanse
A comprehensive functional food powder that is the backbone of support for the detoxification program. PaleoCleanse is available in either a plant derived base of pea protein isolate, or in a whey protein base for those who can tolerate dairy. Its nutrients and herbs fuel detoxification pathways and promote liver function. PaleoCleanse also contains a full multivitamin/mineral and antioxidant complex.
Dose: Titrated up and down to a maximum of 2 scoops 3 times a day.


PaleoMeal

A complete protein powder used as a meal replacement. The nutrient combination in PaleoMeal is ideal for use within a detoxification program. It provides protein and minerals that are in greater demand while one is detoxifying, and helps to prevent muscle loss. It comes as either a whey (dairy) or or a dairy free version made with Peatein,TM a natural food-grade pea protein concentrate.
Dose: 1 scoop per meal, as desired for meal replacement.
Dairy-free PaleoMeal dose is 2 scoops per serving.

PaleoFiber
This blend of soluble and insoluble fibers from nature will aid regularity as well as move toxins out of the gastrointestinal tract quickly.
Dose: 1 Tbs per day in water or with PaleoCleanse.

PaleoGreens & PaleoReds
  PaleoGreens and PaleoReds are combination of vegetable, fruit and berries high in antioxidants and polyphenols to help prevent disease processes caused by oxidation and inflammation.

5 Fun & Easy Tips for Enhancing the Detox

Drink 1 liter of hot water with apple cider vinegar (about 2 teaspoonfuls), lemon juice (from one whole lemon), and stevia (to taste) first thing upon waking (on an empty stomach).  You will be amazed by how much this one simple strategy will improve your day and your overall well-being.

Use a ‘skin brush‘ to massage your entire body before getting into the shower. Use a circular motion and work towards the heart. Then shower or bathe. This facilitates circulation and toxic elimination through the skin.
Take a warm bath with Epsom salt added to soothe, relax and detox. Additionally you may rub on the salt with a warm, wet washcloth in bath or shower-very invigorating.

Jump on a rebounder (mini trampoline) for 3-5 minutes at a time. This shakes up your whole body and is particularly useful for stimulating your lymph drainage system, thereby moving those toxins OUT!
Try your own ‘hydrotherapy’ in the shower by alternating hot/cold. This stimulates circulation and your immune system. You can also do a sauna/cold shower/sauna etc., if you belong to a gym. This is not for the faint of heart! You’ll feel like a million bucks when you’re done. Of course, just a sauna and a shower are beneficial as well.

Detox Program Guidelines

Follow these guidelines THROUGHOUT the 21 Day Detoxification Program (including precleanse week):

  •   Drink one ounce per pound of body weight of purified water each and every day for the entire 21 day program.  Remember to not use tap water that has been chlorinated or medicated with fluoride.
  •   Take two Detoxification Support Packets each day, one first thing in the morning and one before bed at night.
  • Eliminate sugars, desserts & artificial sweeteners. Natural low-impact sweeteners, such as stevia & polyols

xylitol & erythritol) are allowed.  Remember to avoid agave nectar.

  •   Eliminate dairy products such as milk, cheese and ice cream. If you feel healthier when you consume some dairy, you may use organic, unsweetened, live culture yogurt and low-heat-processed whey protein products.  If you have access to raw dairy, this is recommended over pasteurized dairy.
  •   Eliminate gluten by avoiding foods which contain wheat, oats, rye, spelt, kamut, bulgur, couscous, and barley, as well as seitan and other “faux” meat products.  Just one bite of gluten is enough to off-set the detoxification process and provoke symptoms.

  Remember to avoid pastas, bread, crackers, cereals, and other products made from grains.  Quinoa, buckwheat, and rice are okay to consume on a limited basis.

  •   Choose lean, clean quality protein. Organic/grass fed meat & poultry are allowed. Cold water fish (preferably wild instead of farm-raised) is acceptable.
  •   Eliminate all alcohol and caffeine-containing beverages including coffee, tea and soda.

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About nine years ago when I was in graduate school, I came across some information that completely changed my life and the state of my health.  After having dealt with asthma, allergies, headaches, tiredness, poor athletic abilities and inability to build lean muscle, dry skin, and other seemingly “minor” problems that I thought were just “normal,” I discovered the underlying cause of all these problems and was able to completely eliminate them.  Without all the encumbrances, I literally feel like a different person in a different body.  Oftentimes when I recommend that somebody make the simple change that I made so they can release their chronic health problems, enhance their athletic and cognitive performance, feel happier, look better, and prevent diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and osteoporosis, they look at me like I’m a 3-headed purple unicorn.

Why?  Because the solution involves a specific dietary change that you have to adhere to for the rest of your life.  This might seem like an impossible task, but once you get started and begin feeling better you realize there is so much more to life than eating the foods that make you sick.  Through this one simple change, you discover HUNDREDS of great-tasting foods that enhance your health rather than deplete it.  And you meet new people and make new friends who share a similar healing path as yours.  To learn more about this entirely new way of living, eating, and feeling absolutely amazing 24/7/365, check this out.

Some of my favorite herbs for people who love to work hard and play harder:

Ashwagandha (for balancing adrenal and thyroid hormones)

Shilajit(the conqueror of mountains and destroyer of all weakness)

Curing Formula (antidote for food poisoning, travel woes, and cruise ship pandemics)

Coffeeberry(keeps the fat goblins away when you’ve overindulged in the chocolate cake)

Focus Fizz (for producing laser focus to get stuff done fast and efficiently)

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A few years ago, folic acid was in the news for potentially increasing your risk of breast cancer as well as a variety of others cancers.  And most recently, multivitamins were linked to an increase in mortality from all causes.  While correlation doesn’t equal causation, these findings do present some concerns over vitamin supplementation.  My goal in this post is not to present you with a doctoral dissertation about the usage of vitamin supplements, but rather to give you a brief explanation about how folic acid (and any mutlivitamins or fortified foods containing it) can raise your risk of developing some serious health problems.

I want to cut right to the chase here and tell you that your body has no requirement for folic acid, nor does it even recognize what to do with it.  This is because folic acid is a synthetic compound that was first isolated in 1943; its use in food fortification and vitamin supplementation began in 1998.  Folate, on the other hand, is an essential B vitamin found in moderate amounts in dark green leafy vegetables, liver, dairy products, eggs, and orange juice.  Deficiencies in folate can cause high levels of homocysteine, which is associated with heart disease.  During pregnancy, a lack of adequate amounts of folate in the diet can lead to neural tube defects and cleft palate in the developing fetus.

Because folic acid (the synthetic compound pteroylmonoglutamic acid) is cheap in comparison to actual folate (tetrahydrofolate) derived from food sources, nearly all supplement and food manufacturers use synthetic folic acid in their products instead of the natural foods-based folate.  This is a problem because the human body often fails to metabolize synthetic folic acid, causing a buildup of folic acid in the circulatory system, even at dosages less than 400 mcg (100% of the RDA).  This is a huge science experiment because we don’t quite know what all the repercussions of this include, but we are fairly certain that a buildup of unmetabolized folic acid does promote the growth of cancers.

Since you definitely do need adequate amounts of folate in your diet to prevent problems such as birth defects, cognitive decline, periodontal disease, heart disease, depression, sleep disorders, and cancer, it would be a great idea to include folate-rich foods in your diet on a daily basis.  You can obtain the RDA of folate by consuming 7 cups of romaine lettuce, 2 cups of cooked spinach, 4 ounces of calf’s liver, just over a cup of lentils, ten medium-sized oranges, or about 3.5 cups of beets each day.  Unless you are regularly juicing abundant amounts of leafy greens, beets, and/or oranges each day, or consuming either a cup of lentils or 4 ounces of liver on non-juicing days, you’re probably running low on folate.

Because of a mild to moderate folate deficiency, you might have elevated homocysteine (which doesn’t produce any symptoms but can raise your risk of developing heart disease), low energy levels, a failing memory, or an increased susceptibility to cancer.  These are things that can largely go unnoticed for months or even years, until you’re suddenly diagnoses with a disease.  For this reason, supplementation with natural folate might be a smart idea.  By supplementing with the natural form of folate found in food, you can avoid the problems that can occur when you supplement with synthetic folic acid.

There are only a few companies that use natural foods-based folate in their formularies, mainly because synthetic folic acid is cheaper and partly because few consumers really know the difference between folic acid (synthetic) and folate (natural).  One foods-based multivitamin that I really like and find to be a safe, effective, high quality formulation is the Designs for Health Multi with Copper (see below).  Besides the fact that the nutrients in this supplement are foods based, rather than synthetic, the company also includes both vitamin K1 and vitamin K2 in this multi, which is rare to find.  (I have written about the benefits of vitamin K2 in the past, and how it serves a different purpose in the body than vitamin K1.  Namely, it prevents calcification of the arteries and joints, while halting loss of calcium from bones.)  Scroll down to the bottom of this post for more information on the Designs For Health Multi.

Another good supplement that provides a variety of B vitamins, including folate, is a grass-fed whey protein powder called PaleoMeal.  It comes in several flavors that taste really good, and I like to use PaleoMeal when I can’t always obtain raw milk for breakfast.  I just mix it with ice, frozen berries, a raw egg, sea salt, and about a tablespoon of coconut oil, and then make it into a smoothie using a cheap blender from Target.

Click Here to Purchase Yours Today!

DFH Complete Multi with Copper 180 vcaps
Dietary Supplement
Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 6 Capsules
Servings per Container: 30
Amount per Serving
Vitamin A (as mixed carotenoids from palm tree fruit) 7142 IU
Alpha Carotene 24 mg
Beta Carotene 70 mg
Vitamin C (as ascorbic acid) 600 mg
Vitamin D (as cholecalciferol) 1000 IU
Vitamin E (total natural tocopherols) 300 mg
as d-gamma 205 mg
as d-delta 60 mg
as d-alpha 25 mg/37.5 IU
as d-beta 10 mg
Vitamin K 550 mcg
(as vitamin K1-phytonadione 500 mcg; vitamin k2-menaquinone-7 50 mcg)
Thiamin (Vitamin B-1)(as thiamine HCl) 75 mg
Riboflavin (Vitamin B-2) 75 mg
Niacin (Vitamin B-3)(as niacinamide) 75 mg
Vitamin B-6 (as pyridoxine HCl) 50 mg
Folate (NatureFolate blend) 400 mcg
Vitamin B-12 (as methylcobalamin) 500 mcg
Biotin (as d-biotin) 500 mcg
Pantothenic Acid (as d-calcium pantothenate) 250 mg
Calcium (TRAACS calcium glycinate chelate) 100 mg
Iodine (as potassium iodide) 200 mcg
Magnesium 200 mg
(TRAACS magnesium glycinate chelate buffered)
Zinc 25 mg
(TRAACS zinc glycinate chelate)
Selenium (as selenium glycinate complex) 250 mcg
Copper (as TRAACS copper glycinate chelate) 2 mg
Manganese 1 mg
(as TRAACS manganese glycinate chelate)
Chromium 200 mcg
(as TRAACS chromium nicotinate glycinate chelate)
Molybdenum 100 mcg
(as TRAACS molybenum glycinate complex)
Potassium 100 mg
(as potassium glycinate complex)
Trimethylglycine 200 mg
Choline (as citrate) 100 mg
Inositol 100 mg
Quercetin DiHydrate 25 mg
Rutin 25 mg
Alpha Lipoic Acid 10 mg
Hesperidin 10 mg
Boron (as boroganic glycine) 2 mg
Vanadium 100 mcg
(as TRAACS vanadium nicotinate glycinate chelate)
Other Ingredients: Vegetable stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, silicon dioxide.
Recommended Use: As a dietary supplement, take six capsules daily, two with each meal, or as directed by your healthcare practitioner.

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