|
AugSep02:
Children's Health
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
SQUATTY-TRAINING OUR CHILDREN (AND
OURSELVES)
by Jonathan Isbit
|
Back when you were an infant you knew instinctively
how to answer the call of nature. While still in diapers, you
used the squatting position, the method human beings have always
used—and still do in most parts of the world. (1)
Then one day Mommy or Daddy taught you the “proper, civilized”
way to perform your bodily functions. It seemed strange and inefficient
at first, but eventually you got used to it.
Or did you? Western societies have quite a poor record when it
comes to intestinal health, and in all probability you will eventually
be counted in one of the following statistics (collected from
authoritative medical web sites.):
Appendicitis: Occurs in 7% of the US population.
Hemorrhoids: Affects half the population over 50 years of age.
Irritable bowel syndrome: Affects 10-20% of the population.
Diverticulosis: Affects half of all Americans age 60 to 80, and
almost everyone over age 80.
Colorectal Cancer: 148,300 new cases and 56,600 deaths are expected
in 2002 in the U.S.
Bladder Incontinence: 50% or more of elderly persons are incontinent.
$16.4 billion is spent every year on incontinence related care.
Prostate Cancer: 190,000 new cases and 30,200 deaths each year
in the U.S.
The cause of these mysterious epidemics has
baffled modern medicine for decades. It may sound unbelievable,
but a major contributing factor in all of them may well be the
humble ³porcelain throne.² The following is a brief
summary of the evidence, based on published research.
How does the commode contribute to prostate and bladder disorders?
The perineum contains nerves that control the bladder, prostate
and other organs. Bearing down to evacuate while sitting causes
the perineum to bulge out. Over time, this stretches and damages
the pelvic nerves, resulting in loss of bladder control and loss
of communication between the prostate and the brain. The phenomenon
is called “pelvic floor nerve stretch injury” and
is well known to modern medicine (2), although the connection
to seated evacuation has only recently been discovered, by an
Australian researcher named Wallace Bowles. (3)
Mr. Bowles tested his theory in ³an ongoing informal study,²
converting over 3000 Australians to the squatting position for
elimination. Squatting protects the pelvic nerves by keeping the
perineum rigid. Surveys of the participants produced a large body
of anecdotal evidence showing reversal of bladder incontinence
(including children’s bedwetting.) In addition, men with
prostate disorders ³consistently reported² shrinkage
of enlarged prostates and reduction of high PSA levels. (3)
How does the commode contribute to hemorrhoids?
The rectum has a built-in “kink” designed to maintain
continence. It only straightens out when squatting. (7) Sitting
on the toilet, one has to strain against the kink, which damages
the delicate tissues and causes the veins to become distended.
Clinical research published in the Israel Journal of Medical Science
in 1987 showed a 90% cure rate achieved by switching to the squatting
position. (4)
How does the commode contribute to colon cancer?
80% of colon cancers develop in the cecum and the sigmoid, the
lower sections of the colon. In the sitting position, it is physically
impossible to squeeze these regions empty. The trapped contents
stagnate and harden, exposing the walls of the colon to toxic
carcinogens. An article in the journal Epidemiology reported that
fecal stagnation is a major risk factor for colon cancer. (5)
How does the commode increase the likelihood of appendicitis?
When fecal matter is trapped in the cecum it can block the opening
to the appendix, which then becomes inflamed, requiring emergency
surgery to prevent a fatality. Appendicitis was unknown before
sitting toilets were introduced 150 years ago, but became the
most commonly diagnosed complaint in western society by 1900.
(6) Cultures that use squat toilets do not fall prey to this disease,
since the cecum is completely evacuated in the natural squatting
position. (8)
Teaching Children
Considering this evidence, perhaps the time has come to reacquaint
Western Man with his natural habits starting with our children.
Squatty-training a baby is child¹s play. You just need two
footpads and a receptacle. Your baby will love it! And be out
of diapers in no time. The footpads can be wood or bricks or Sociology
textbooks anything to keep baby¹s bottom clear of the
receptacle. When children get a little older they can squat on
the toilet seat. Put a chair or a walker in front of the toilet
for them to hold onto until they get the hang of it.
And try squatting yourself! It¹s never too late to adopt
a healthy lifestyle (and avoid becoming an unhappy statistic.)
REFERENCES
1. Kira A. The Bathroom. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1976, revised
edition, pp.115,116.
2. Henry, Dr. M.M. and Swash, Dr.M., Coloproctology and the Pelvic
Floor, Butterworths London, 1985, p. 145,147,301.
3. Tobin, Andrew. Prostate Disorder - Causes and Cure, National
Direct Publishing, Bowden, Australia, 1996, p.123-148.)
4. Sikirov BA. Management of Hemorrhoids: A New Approach, Israel
Journal of Medical Sciences, 1987: 23, 284-286.
5. Jacobs E J, White E., Constipation, laxative use, and colon
cancer among middle-aged adults. Epidemiology, 1998 Jul, 9 (4):
385-91.
6. Bowles, Wallace, Improving on the World’s Greatest Invention,
Macksville, Australia, Dale Print, 1999, p.5.
7. Tagart REB. The Anal Canal and Rectum: Their Varying Relationship
and Its Effect on Anal Continence, Diseases of the Colon and Rectum
1966: 9, 449-452.
8. www.webhealthcentre.com
© Copyright 2002, Jonathan Isbit.
Jonathan Isbit of Boone, North Carolina, began squatting 32 years
ago after reading a book on yoga. He holds a patent on Nature’s
Platform, a product to facilitate squatting and avoid the risk
of breaking the toilet. Four years ago he founded www.NaturesPlatform.com,
which contains ten more pages of research on the health benefits
of squatting. (Phone: 828-297-7561)
Back
to New Life Journal..
|
| |
August/September
2002
Issue
|
| |
| |
| |
Business Listings
Your guide to health practitioners
and sustainable businesses in Asheville, NC, Atlanta and Athens,GA, Greenville,
SC and the Southeast
NATURAL HEALING
massage, acupuncturists, energy medicine, herbalists, yoga centers,
natural medicine, healers, alternative therapies, healing workshops
NATURAL FOODS
health food stores, restaurants, nutritionists, whole foods chefs,
natural foods lectures & programs, organic farmers, caterers
MIND & SPIRIT
therapists, churches, workshops, retreat centers, support groups
BUSINESSES
sustainable businesses in the Southeast |
|
| |
|