Archive for December, 2005

Food for thought for 2006

December 28th, 2005

Dear Readers: Shall we talk about food? Now that we’re stuffed from the holidays, resolved to go to the gym and start that diet?

In classes I teach for teens, I explain that humans actually have four bodies. No, not four stomachs! (Despite the obesity crisis, we are not cows!) I’m talking about the four bodies of the human—which the teens figure correctly to be the physical body, the mental body, the emotional body, and the spiritual body.

What has happened to these bodies in the last 50 years? Why is obesity an epidemic? Why is mental illness the largest world-wide human disability (surpassing cancer)? What has happened to emotional commitment, with over a third of all babies in the US born to unmarried women? And what is the meaning of life? (It’s not really designer jeans, is it?)

Like a crumbling pyramid, all four “bodies” of the human need repair and I want to share with you some ideas to take into the New Year.

Since foundations are crucial, let’s start with the physical body, the base of the pyramid. Not only are we obese, but our children are plagued with allergies, asthma, diabetes and high blood pressure. (Can you imagine being a kid with high blood pressure!?)

So, yes, let’s talk about food….. because what we eat is easily responsible for 90% of our problems.

Does anyone have a clue what the ideal human diet is? We are so without a compass that half the population recently bought into the idea of eliminating carbohydrates! I hope that means you’ll have an open mind to what I’m going to say….

I want to share with you the work of Dr. Weston A. Price. Price was a retired dentist, who, in the early 1900s searched the globe for clans of people with perfect teeth. He figured if he could find perfect teeth, he would find perfect health. His idea of perfection was strict. Tooth decay had to be absolutely unheard of, including baby teeth and wisdom teeth. Crowded or crooked teeth had to be equally nonexistent and the slightest overlap or overbite eliminated the group from study.

Price discovered 14 groups of people with perfect teeth. They were of different races and from different environments. As he expected, the groups enjoyed perfect health, mentally and physically. Price studied their eating habits and found that the diets of these groups were equivalent. Some lived in the mountains and some at the sea, but the proportions and food groups were the same. The people even looked the same.

To quote from the Weston A. Price Foundation website at www.westonaprice.org: “Dr. Price’s research demonstrated that humans achieve perfect physical form and perfect health generation after generation only when they consume nutrient-dense whole foods and the vital fat-soluble activators found exclusively in animal fats.”

What I like about Price’s work is that the diet wasn’t fabricated out of “logic” or as an excuse to sell products. It was based on actual observations of real groups of people who enjoyed perfect health. The ideal human diet was a discovery, not an invention.

For nineteen years I’ve raised four kids on this organic whole foods, fat-generous diet and witnesses can attest that none of us have been sick (knock wood), and there exists no surplus fat among us. It’s economical, too, because there aren’t the cravings for expensive junk food and there is little need for medicine.

The book I recommend is “Nourishing Traditions” by Sally Fallon, published by the Weston Price Foundation. It contains an overview of Price’s research plus recipes on how to prepare delicious food in these traditional ways.

Of course, the body needs exercise, too. It’s been proven that a smoker who works-out regularly and strenuously has better health than a non-smoker who sits on his duff all day. That tells you something about the power of smoking. Oops, I mean exercise!

I’m going to throw out an idea to chew on: Why not make exercise one of the pillars of public education? How about four “R’s” instead than three? Readin’, Ritin’, ‘Rithmatic, and Runnin’. If intense, age-appropriate physical education started in kindergarten and continued through high school, not only would everyone think better, but we’d have conditioned a generation of life-long athletes. (I hear the groans of teenagers…. that’s because they haven’t been conditioned.)

Learning and discipline would be so much easier, I wager you could replace two hours of academics with two hours of athletic/dietary education and get higher academic test scores. (Now I hear adults groaning…..) There are charter schools for music, for the arts. I humbly dare a charter school to form based on food and athletics.

In next week’s column, I’ll continue with the rest of the human pyramid: the brain, the emotions, and our connection with mystery.

Happy New Year!

The best gifts of all are gifts of service

December 21st, 2005

Dear Straight Talk: I read your column religiously and wanted to share what some teenagers did for me last Christmas. I live in a small neighborhood and my husband died three years ago, leaving me on my own. I’m retired and don’t get around well due to a knee injury. On Christmas morning, there was a knock on the door, and what to my wondering eyes did appear, but two dads and eight strapping teenagers, bearing rakes, ladders, sundry tools, and toothy grins. Lauren, these kind people raked my leaves, trimmed the hedges, cleaned the gutters, fixed a gutter that was broken, swept the walks, changed light bulbs, changed the filters in my heating system, and made minor repairs inside the house. They even washed and vacuumed my car. After they left, I sat down and cried. Later, the two youngest girls returned with a steaming platter of Christmas dinner.—Grateful

Dear Grateful: I sat down and cried when I read your letter! Thank you for sharing this beautiful story. I hope teens and parents reading this today will consider spending an hour or two bringing holiday joy to someone less fortunate who is perhaps living just a few doors down.

I also hope it inspires teens to give grandparents and other special seniors “gift certificates” for yard work, housework, or cooking—and don’t forget Mom and Dad, they could use it, too. Even if you’ve already purchased the chocolates, the cologne, the necktie, consider adding an envelope under the tree with their name on it. Gifts of service are always hugely appreciated. Make sure to keep a record of what you promised and make good on it promptly.

Lovesick friend not only blind, but deaf, too

December 21st, 2005

Dear Straight Talk: I’m in eighth grade and my friend, “Trent”, has had the same girlfriend since fifth grade. Recently, “Amy” broke up with Trent and started going out with me, then while she was going out with me, she started flirting again with Trent, telling him to wait a week while she decided between us. I saw her game and broke up with her on the spot. Now she and Trent are back together, however, she likes this boy from another school better, but she’s not sure if he likes her, so she stays with Trent in case things don’t work out. Amy tells me all this in confidence and says she doesn’t really like Trent but she’s afraid to break his heart. I’ve tried to tell Trent what’s going on, but he won’t hear it. How do I convince Trent that being second is bad news?—Friend to the blind

Dear Friend: Love is not only blind, it is deaf as well. Even with a megaphone you’re not likely to get through to his grey matter. Fortunately, this is one of those problems that “auto-solves” because when “bad news behavior” persists, even the most deaf and blind read the headlines eventually.

While Trent takes his sweet time—or his crash course—toward “eventually”, individuals such as yourself who send out the warning cries are often mistaken for the enemy. Many a friend has been lost for bad-mouthing a wayward girlfriend or boyfriend only to discover the couple has reconciled and now you’re on the outs for the things you said. Your advice is especially suspect since Trent initially lost Amy to you—and she continues to confide in you…. (which I must admit, makes my mind travel a bit, too).

Rule of thumb: friends don’t criticize, they sympathize. If Trent is your friend, now that you’ve enlightened him to the situation, shut up, roll your eyes, and accept that he’s lovesick. If Trent doesn’t think he has to fend off your criticisms, or compete with you, he will regain his senses more quickly.

lauren forcella and co.

Lauren Forcella