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AugSep02:
Children's Health
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A Simple Nutrition for Healthy Kids
Brenda Cobb teaches how to nurture your children with raw
and living foods and clean water.
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According to the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), childhood cancer increased 10.8% between 1973 and
1990. Cancer now kills more children between ages 2 and 15 than
any other disease. That’s astonishing! Or is it? Children
eat more food and drink more water relative to their size than
adults. Every time they eat food that is not organic, they are
eating pesticides, contaminants, and pollutants! Dr. James Balch
and Phyllis Balch (in Prescription for Nutritional Healing) attribute
many of the problems children have today -- including attention
deficit disorder -- to pesticides, sugar, and food additives.
Our food processing, preserving, and packaging uses thousands
of chemicals that are foreign to our biological systems. These
toxins are felt to cause allergies, asthma, hyperactivity, and
hypersensitivity, conditions that we “correct” by
giving our children drugs. Isn’t that adding insult to injury?
Every toxin, pollutant, pesticide, and drug that we take from
the time we are tiny babies is stored in our tissues, our cells,
and our fat. Our kidney, liver, skin, and lungs are working non-stop
to filter out all this garbage. We have become toxic waste dumps!
There is hope if we will change our habits. It is up to each of
us to become informed and make necessary changes. We can begin
with the following:
1. Eat organic. Conventional fruits and vegetables are sprayed
regularly, making them contaminated and dangerous to eat. For
example, corn is soaked in sulfur, which then finds its way into
hundreds of foods like corn chips, corn syrup, etc. Paraffin,
a petrochemical, is used to polish green peppers, apples, and
cucumbers. Organic fruits and vegetables are chemical- and pesticide-free
and well worth the extra money!
2. Eat raw and living foods. It is a scientific fact that when
we destroy many of the enzymes and much of the nutritional value
when we heat food to over 105 degrees Fahrenheit. This includes
foods that are pasteurized.1 Raw foods are those fruits and vegetables
that we pick off the tree or vine and eat. Living foods are soaked
and sprouted, like beans, peas, nuts, seeds, and grains. Living
foods have increased nutritional value because they are creating
new life when the sprout emerges. These foods energize, detoxify,
and restore the body to a healthy state. Worried the kids won’t
like it? Children love fresh vegetables with our zesty raw dip.
(See recipe.)
3. Stop eating junk and processed food. Eat fresh produce, not
pre-packaged, food. Read the labels on packages, even in health
food stores.
4. Drink water from a source you know is pure. Drink less of processed
drinks and read the label-- sodas, many sports drinks, and many
fruity drinks are loaded with sugar, dyes, caffeine, or sugar
substitutes that are toxic! Only pure, filtered water can adequately
hydrate and support the body. If you don’t have your own
spring or well, then purchase reverse osmosis water or another
good filtered water. If you must use distilled water, put a few
sprigs of wheat grass in the water and swish around for a few
minutes to bring the “life” back into the water. What
kind of water are you using for showers and baths? The skin absorbs
toxins from unfiltered water. It’s just as unhealthy to
bathe in tap water as it is to drink it.
These are a few things that can make a difference in your children’s
health if you are willing to make the necessary changes. The choice
is yours. Will you take responsibility for your family and yourself
and practice good health by making good choices? Start with just
one of these, and then add others as you can. Feed yourself and
your family organic, raw and living food and feel great. You deserve
it!
Quick & Easy: Smokey Dip With Veggies
Always use organic ingredients!
3 Tbsp. Nama Shoyu Raw Soy Sauce
5 Tbsp. Tahini
3 Tbsp. Lemon Juice
1 Tbsp. Honey
Choose any veggies that you like and cut them into strips about
3 to 4 inches long. We suggest celery, carrots, and zucchini,
but any that you like will be fine.
Make a dip by combining the Nama Shoyu, raw tahini, lemon juice,
and honey. If this is too salty for you, just cut back on the
Nama Shoyu until you reach the desired flavor that you like. If
you increase the honey you will have a sweeter dip. Experiment
to find your favorite.
Dip the veggies and enjoy! This dip has a wonderful smoky taste
and you may even like to dilute it with a little water to make
a dressing for other salads if you like.
Brenda Cobb is the author of The Living Foods Lifestyle, in which
she tells remarkable stories of healing with the Living Foods
Lifestyle. For more information, or to attend a free Living Foods
Seminar, including a free meal, call 404-524-4488 or visit them
on the web at www.Livingfoodsinstitute.com.
References
1 Wolfe, David, The Sunfood Diet Success System, pages 81 and
82, Maul Brothers
Publishing of San Diego, CA, 1999.
Resources
Balch, James, F, M.D. and Phyllis Balch, “Prescription for
Nutritional Healing,” second edition, 1977, Garden City
Park, NY: Avery Group Publishers, pp. 310-311.
The Burton Goldberg Group, “Alternative
Medicine, The Definitive Guide,” 1999, Tiburon, CA: Future
Medicine Publishing , Inc., pp. 610-611
Back
to New Life Journal..
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August/September
2002
Issue
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Business Listings
Your guide to health practitioners
and sustainable businesses in Asheville, NC, Atlanta and Athens,GA, Greenville,
SC and the Southeast
NATURAL HEALING
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MIND & SPIRIT
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BUSINESSES
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