Tag Archives: candida diet

How Bacteria Impacts Your Appetite

Let’s talk about hunger and bacteria. I’ve read so many studies now on this topic, and it’s so exciting to see that many bacteria are involved in stimulating appetite or decreasing appetite.

Research using DNA sequencing of bacteria has begun to reveal the connection between the microbiome, appetite, and satiety (or lack thereof).

Common bacteria like Escherichia coli (E. coli) can produce proteins that increase or decrease appetite.

I’ve always maintained that the human gut is a lot like a garden. If you disrupt the balance in the garden, problems will surface.

Further readings:

I keep my whole garden as an ecosystem. When people visit my garden, they’re astounded at all the insects. I’m creating an ecologically balanced system.

Balance is just as essential in the human gut. When we achieve gut health, you won’t have the gas, bloating, or problems with appetite and satiety. Next thing you know, you will have lost ten pounds without much effort. It’s because you are living according to the laws of nature.

When you work with Mother Nature, she’ll take care of you. If you flaunt those laws and pump chemicals and antibiotics into your body, you’re going to run into problems.

Modern science needs to take a long, hard look at nature. It’s hard to ignore the importance of protecting your body’s beneficial bacteria when you take in the lessons from a garden.

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A Cautionary Tale: Hospitals And Your Gut Flora

Just three days in the hospital can change the bacteria in your gut.

People who end up in the intensive care unit (ICU) can have a massive shift in the gut microbiota within 72 hours. Hundreds of species of bugs can be wiped out in a snap, and it can take months to years to recover.

I have clients who were on antibiotics for years. It’s hard to see the destruction of beneficial bacteria that goes on day after day.

Dr. Mark Pallen, a British microbial genomics researcher at the Quadram Institute, lead the research on the impact of an ICU admission on gut flora. I suspected that there would be an impact of hospitalization, but I was taken back at the scale of the change to the flora.

To assess the impact of intensive care treatment on the gut microbiome, the team tracked 24 people admitted to a hospital in Birmingham, UK, for trauma, heart attacks, cancer, and other emergencies. The tracking was done over 10 months and included people ages 25 to 85. Many of the patients were unconscious or sedated.

Further readings:

After getting permission from family members, the research team looked at stool samples. They conducted DNA sequencing on the samples and found that over 75% of the patients experienced a significant reduction in microbial diversity during their ICU stay.

The most significant changes to the microbiome were associated with IV use.
The gut is normally an ecosystem in its own right. The gut is the foundation, the root, of our health. This part of the body determines overall health. Science has allowed us to understand just how important the human microbiota is to well-being.

Unfortunately, the conventional medical system has contributed to a great deal of destruction of the gut ecosystem. Is it any wonder why people end up sicker coming out of the hospital than when they went in the first place?

That’s why I’m so healthy. I don’t go to the hospital. Try and keep out of these places if you can, okay?

If you get pumped full of IV antibiotics, you may suffer it for years.

Another researcher, Joost Wiersinga from the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam, has this to say, “Medics should do more to minimize the disruption to gut bacteria.”
I agree 100%.

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Body Weight In Asia Versus The USA: Why The Difference?

Why are people in Asia slimmer on average than people in the USA?

I spent a lot of time in India. I did postgraduate training as a homeopath way back. The interesting thing was, the obese people I noticed were usually wealthy people. I could not believe the disparity I saw between the rick and the poor.

We see some of the same differences in the Western world. It’s incredible the difference in size between people in Texas or Louisianna and people in Tokyo.

However, more recently, we are starting to see an increase in obesity in Japan. This increase can be explained by the influx of junk food coming into Japan.

Further readings:

When I was a young guy a long time ago, the average life expectancy of the Japanese male was 77.9 years of age, which is the highest on earth. It’s not hard to see why. Rice, fish, seaweed, and vegetables are the cornerstones of the Japanese diet. When you eat like this, you end up lean and mean.

Traditionally in South Korea and Japan, people ate lots of seafood and rice and fresh and pickled vegetables. They didn’t have the burger joints and the home-delivered pizza.
In Asian culture, it is also more polite to have smaller portion sizes. Eating was more of a ritual than something you do while sitting in front of your computer.

I noticed the same in India. I saw people walk vast distances and eat small amounts of food. Some families I saw were just living basically on lentils and rice with a few tomatoes and onions thrown in, and that was about it.

What I’ve learned from my Asian experience is that the healthiest people usually have the smallest portion sizes and the highest quality food.

We don’t see that in the United States. We don’t see people with small portion sizes. Every time I eat in L.A., they put enough food on my plate to feed me and my wife and my child. There’s enough for three or four people there. So I usually am amazed at the mountains of food. Quantity, too much. Quality, not good.

When you add high stress to the low quality and overabundance of food in the U.S., you’re going to get massive problems with obesity.

You don’t need to be overweight if you live in the U.S. I’ve met many very slim people in the States as well. Often these people are more knowledgeable about health and make better dietary and lifestyle choices.

You can also choose to eat and live like someone in Asia, even if you’re living in the U.S.

Sources:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28642059
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26458564

Why You Need To Fix Your Gut To Lose Weight

In my years of practice, I noticed that overweight people often also had gut problems.

It was my job to talk to people about their diet, their bowel habits, and their lifestyle. Based on my observations, there is a 100% correlation between poor gut function and being significantly overweight.

Bigger people have gut bacteria that help trigger cravings for junk food. Of course, there are some larger people who eat very healthy foods, but they are in the minority.

I often suggested to my overweight clients that they start using smaller plates and gradually reduce their portion size.

Most larger people have large stomachs and large appetites that have been built up over time. Once that situation has arrived, the gut bacteria start behaving very badly. The harmful bacteria can contribute to mood problems, fatigue, and anxiety.

Further readings:

I always urge people, larger people, if they want to lose weight to assess their gut and clean it up as needed.

I don’t encourage cold turkey diets. I believe in slowly transitioning from a junk diet to a gut-healthy one. I you try and start a new diet overnight, it’s easy to fall off the wagon and return to eating junk food like crazy.

Take it slow – just as you would if you were returning to the gym for the first time in ages.
The older you are, the slower you need to go back into it, all right. I’ve never met a large person that can’t, if their mind is set to it, lose a significant amount of weight and keep it off.

If you’ve got bloating, burping, farting, constipation, and diarrhea, the gut needs to be fixed up. If you ignore the gut problem and just focus on making diet changes, it’s significantly harder to turn the ship around.

You can read more about losing weight in my free report.

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Gut Healthy Salad Dressings

Let’s talk about salad dressings.

I make a variety of salad dressing that smell great, look great, and taste amazing.
Some of my favorite ingredients for salad dressing are Bragg’s apple cider vinegar, various olive oils, balsamic oil, and spices. I don’t recommend using white vinegar in salad dressing. Save that type of vinegar for cleaning.

I have about ten different olive oils in my pantry. Some are stronger and have a real “bite.” Others are more floral or citrusy. I even have some that are quite bland. Olive oil is wonderful and anti-inflammatory for the gut.

When it comes to spices, I use raw turmeric grated or shaved. Turmeric and ginger are from the same family of plants, and both are anti-inflammatory. I particularly like ginger if I’m making an Asian-fusion salad dressing.

Garlic goes into every salad dressing I make. I chope up one or two cloves very finely and throw them into the mix.

Further readings:

A classic salad dressing I make is a combination of lemon juice, olive oil, Celtic sea salt, freshly ground pepper, and then a herb or two.

If you have a significant Candida problem, I strongly recommend that you grow oregano, marjoram, thyme, basil, and rosemary. All of those are key, gut-healthy herbs.

I grow a very strong, spicy oregano as well as a normal one. The spicy one is very powerful because it contains several healthy compounds that have a strong cleansing effect on the gut.

If you go to your local plant nursery, you can usually find pungent oregano to grow. You can even steep a handful of this oregano in a small jar of olive oil. Leave it there for about six or eight weeks, squeeze it out. What you’ve done is leech the active oregano metabolites into the oil. It’s an extraction process, and it gives the oil a delicious flavor. You can do that with any herb, but oregano oil is particularly tasty.

Other great salad dressings are yogurt-based. You can also make an aioli with ample garlic. Sometimes I add sauerkraut juice to my salad dressing. Another one of my favorite recipes is some kind of sprout mixed up with a bit of lime juice, salt, and pepper, a drizzle of olive oil, again, on top of that. Very simple. Keep it simple.

I usually never store salad dressings. I make them fresh on the spot, put them in the salad. Whatever’s leftover, I throw away. I never keep salad dressing for the next day. Everything has to be fresh.

It’s not hard to make a salad dressing, and it gives your salad a lot of zing and flavor. When something tastes great and looks great, you’re going to want to have it again and again and again.

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