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Eliminate
Toxins andDisease
with a Healthy Colon
by Michael Dye
By now, most of us
know the nutrition we take into our body is an extremely vital factor in
determining our health... how we feel, how effectively our body heals itself
and how long we live.
On the flip side of
that coin there is a factor of equal -- if not greater -- importance that
is sometimes completely overlooked and nearly always underestimated. This
often undiscussed area of health maintenance concerns the elimination of
waste and toxins from our body.
While it is practically
impossible to overestimate the importance of putting good things into our
body, it is more likely that we will underestimate the importance of getting
the bad things out of our body.
It was Henry Wheeler
Shaw who said, "A good reliable set of bowels is worth more to a man
than any quantity of brains."
All cells must take
in nutrients to maintain their metabolism and their life. As an end result
of this metabolism, every one of our approximately 100 trillion cells
also must produce waste material. To maintain optimal health, we must eliminate
this waste efficiently.
Every cell and every
organ in our body eliminates waste and is effected by waste elimination
from the body as a whole. It is up to our colon to eliminate the bulk of
the most toxic and putrid waste in our body.
When we obtain energy
from the food we eat, we create a waste product (feces) that should be
eliminated within 24 hours or less. But with a meat-based, high-fat, low-fiber
diet, the average American has a transit time of 72 to 96 hours, meaning
this waste begins a toxic build-up that creates numerous problems for the
colon and every other part of the body.
If it is not quickly
eliminated, fecal matter in the colon turns into a toxic and putrid waste
that is absorbed into the rest of our system. Over the course of time,
this effects the functioning of every cell and organ in our body. It poisons
the blood, lymphatic system, nervous system and brain, while clogging up
the heart, vascular system, lungs and sinuses.
A proper diet is one
that provides necessary nourishment for the body, and facilitates proper
waste removal and cleansing... from the cellular level to the colon. But
the typical American diet featuring an abundance of meat, dairy, fried
and over-cooked foods, sugar, starches, salt and artificial chemicals is
hard to digest, very little of it can be assimilated as nutrition into
our cells, it is high in toxic waste, fat and cholesterol, and slow to
move though the colon because it is low in fiber.
We know the body of
a dead animal in hot weather creates quite a stench after a couple days.
This stench gives us a good idea of what meat does inside the 98.6-degree
temperature of the body.
The comparison of
a human colon with the colon of a true carnivore, such as a dog, provides
strong evidence that humans were not designed to eat meat. The colon of
a dog is smooth and straight, like a stove pipe, and takes a short, direct
route. In contrast, the human colon turns back and forth along a convoluted
pathway with many puckers, pouches, twists and turns. The dog's colon is
designed to allow a short transit time for even hard-to-digest meat, cholesterol
and fat, without much need for fiber to move things along.
In Diet for
a New America, John Robbins, points out, "Dogs, cats and the
other natural carnivores do not get colon cancer from high-fat, low-fiber,
flesh-based diets. But we do... The toxins from putrefying flesh are not
the problem for them that they are for us because everything passes through
them so much more quickly." He notes that colon cancer is a killer
that affects more than 20 percent of American families, and his book provides
an incredible number of statistics and medical studies proving that the
more meat, the more fat, the more cholesterol and the less fiber we eat,
the more likely we are to die of colon cancer.
Fiber acts as an intestinal
broom to sweep things along in the colon while fat clogs up the intestines.
It is vital to remember that all animal products -- meat, dairy and eggs
-- have zero fiber, while most are high in fat.
In addition to constipation
and increased risk of colon cancer, a meat-based, high-fat, low-fiber diet
can cause a host of other colon-related problems, including diverticulosis,
hemorrhoids, irritable bowel syndrome, spastic colon and appendicitis.
These are all problems that can be caused by slow-moving, hard, dry feces,
and can be cured by something as simple as a predominately raw foods, vegetarian
diet, which is high in fiber, low in fat, and produces soft, moist feces
that are easily eliminated.
Our colons were designed
to act as a smoothly-flowing sewer system to rid our body of waste products
shortly after the waste has been separated from usable nutrients. But instead,
most colons have become stagnant cesspools, collecting layers and pockets
of toxic and putrid feces and mucus that poisons the blood stream and every
cell and organ in the body.
It has been estimated
that the average American colon carries five pounds of putrid, partially-digested
meat, and another five to ten pounds of toxic fecal matter that has been
packed with mucus for years to form a hard lining in deformed folds of
the colon.
The colon (also known
as the large intestine) is about five feet long, and is the final stop-over
for the bulk of the waste from food after it has passed through the stomach
and small intestine. The colon begins at the ileo cecal valve (which separates
the small and large intestines), and ends at the rectum. The colon is lined
with nerves, blood vessels and muscles. These muscles create wave-like
motions known as peristaltic waves that propel waste through the colon
and out the rectum.
In Colon Health:
the Key to a Vibrant Life, Dr. Norman Walker notes that in addition
to forming these peristaltic waves, the first half of the colon performs
two other vital functions. First, blood vessels lining the colon extract
from the waste any available nutrients the small intestine did not pick
up. Dr. Walker writes: "Obviously, if the feces in the colon have
putrefied and fermented, any nutritional elements present in it would pass
into the blood steam as polluted products. What would otherwise be nutritional
becomes, in fact, the generation of toxemia... a condition
in which the blood contains poisonous products which are produced by the
growth of pathogenic, or disease-producing, bacteria."
The other function
performed by the first half of the colon is gathering from glands lining
its walls the intestinal flora necessary to lubricate the colon. But in
a typical American unhealthy colon, Dr. Walker notes that hard, densely-packed
layers of fecal encrustation interferes with all three vital functions
of the colon -- the formation of peristaltic waves that move waste matter
through the colon, absorption of nutrients into the blood stream and the
infusion of intestinal flora for lubrication of the colon.
In an effort to minimize
toxins absorbed into the blood stream from the colon, mucus is created
to encapsulate the waste of certain foods, such as meat, dairy, white flour
and other processed foods. This mucus build-up is a natural defense mechanism,
and could be efficiently eliminated through the colon if it occurred only
rarely. But people who eat mucus-producing foods every day create a toxic
build-up of layers and pockets of mucus and decayed fecal matter, remnants
of which can stay in the colon for 20 to 30 years or longer.
Dr. Walker's book
also explains another way in which the colon has a direct effect on the
health of every part of the body. Similar to a foot reflexology chart that
shows how certain points on the feet are correlated to specific parts of
the body, Colon Health: the Key to a Vibrant Life contains a colon
chart showing locations on the colon that are correlated to specific organs
and glands. "Every time waste matter accumulates in the colon, which
results in fermentation and putrefaction, a disturbance takes place both
in the afflicted area of the colon and in its corresponding part of the
anatomy," Dr. Walker writes.
Examples he provides
of short-term afflictions resulting from the absorption of mucus and toxic
waste from the colon into the rest of the body include pimples, sore throats,
colds, hay fever, sinus, eye and ear problems. Afflictions of a more long-term
nature caused by a constant influx of toxemia into the body from the colon
include degeneration or cancer in vital organs. In addition to physical
ailments, he writes: "It is almost impossible to maintain a clear
mind and proper mental and spiritual equilibrium when we allow the colon
to go unattended for too long a time."
Dr. Walker refers
to constipation as "the number one affliction underlying nearly every
ailment; it can be imputed to be the initial, primary cause of nearly every
disturbance of the human system. The most prevalent ailment afflicting
civilized people is constipation." He writes "to be constipated
means the packed accumulation of feces in the bowel makes its evacuation
difficult." He adds, "constipation can also exist when movements
of the bowel may seem to be normal, in spite of an accumulation of feces
somewhere along the line of the colon."
Over a period of time,
constipation interferes with the functioning of every cell, organ and gland,
causes the blood stream and lymph system to become overloaded with toxins,
sends poisons throughout the entire body, and clogs much of the system
with disease-causing mucus. This pathogenic mucus, which results from eating
and drinking the wrong foods, "is the ideal media for propagating
germs, microbes, and bacteria," Dr. Walker writes.
If our colon and the
rest of our body is free from excessive pathogenic mucus and other putrefactive
waste matter, harmful germs, bacteria and parasites will not flourish and
cause problems, because there will be insufficient food these scavengers
need to survive.
The book, Cleansing
the Body and the Colon for a Happier and Healthier You, by Teresa Schumacher
and Toni Schumacher Lund, states a clogged-up colon and its parasitic infection
is often the undiagnosed root of many physical problems. But, Schumacher
writes, the medical profession "does not even agree with the notion
of filthy and impacted colons contributing to much American ill health.
This may be because there are no patented drugs for quick relief of impacted
colons. The only way to cleanse intestines is with natural ingredients,
and via a persistent personal hygiene program."
She estimated there
are "about 300 different types of parasites thriving in America today,"
and that more than 80 percent of people in the world are infested. Schumacher
quotes parasite expert June Wiles, Ph.D., as saying, "Parasites are
vermin that steal your food, drink your blood and leave their excrement
in your body to be reabsorbed back into the bloodstream as nourishment."
Schumacher's book
lists several types of parasites and a variety of ways in which they are
caught. As for parasites in food, Schumacher notes the parasite incubation
period is 36 hours. She says once we have eaten a meal we should be able
to eliminate the waste from that food within 16 to 24 hours. But, she notes,
"it is startling to learn that the average elimination time in America
today is 96 hours."
If waste is not eliminated
within 24 hours, it begins a toxic buildup that provides a breeding ground
for parasitic infection. She writes that a clogged intestine with putrid
fecal matter and plenty of sugar provides the ideal environment for parasites
to thrive.
So, it is easy to
see how a vegetarian, high-fiber, low-fat diet can affect the health of
our colon, and how the health of our colon affects our whole body. Adding
fiber to our diet and eliminating animal products and processed foods will
greatly assist the movement of waste through the colon, and this will have
a major impact on the health of the entire body. Some benefit may be obtained
by adding fiber to a diet that continues to include fiber-deficient animal
products, but this benefit will not be as great as can be found by making
a complete dietary change.
At Hallelujah
Acres, we recommend a vegetarian diet of at least 75 percent raw
fruits and vegetables. In addition to providing an excellent source of
easy-to-assimilate protein, vitamins, minerals, and live enzymes, this
high-fiber, low-fat diet will create an improved waste-elimination process,
from the cellular level to the colon. Dr. Walker's book recommends the
regular use of colonic irrigations to keep the colon clean, but we feel
a better approach is to first attempt to cleanse the colon through diet.
Dietary changes are a less intrusive approach than colonic irrigations,
and we are finding that people are receiving excellent results.
For additional fiber,
preventative maintenance of the colon and insurance against parasitic infestations,
we recommend Herbal Fiberblend, which is described in the book Cleansing
the Body and the Colon for a Happier and Healthier You. For more information
on Herbal Fiberblend, click
here. Or to order a jar, click here.
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