It is startling how often
widespread popular belief is not only wrong but, surprisingly,
the complete opposite of what the truth really is. Nowhere is
this truer than in the snobbery that pervades the weight-loss
industry.
Popular belief is that being
overweight is a sign of self indulgence and lack of
willpower. Sometimes we hear, particularly from the
overweight group, the comforting pronouncement that obesity is
genetic and thus not really anyone’s fault. These are
traditional beliefs that are carryovers from the days when our
food supply was intact and self-indulgence adequately
explained the incidence of obesity. Today, our food chain is
so dominated by the warped views of nutrition promoted and
enshrined by government agencies, the medical associations,
and those companies heavily influenced by them that good,
clean natural food is more difficult to find and overweight
and diabetic problems, not coincidentally, are rampant.
Certainly a population
remains of self-indulgent people who so lack willpower that
they cannot, or will not, stop overeating. We have always had
this minority. This association of overweight with weak will,
however, does not explain why two-thirds of the American
population is overweight and half of these are grossly obese.
Our
Energy Environment
When we eat more calories
than we burn, the body stores the difference either as
glycogen in the liver or as fat in our fat cells. Thus, we
must keep the number of calories we eat relatively close to
the number of calories that we burn.
The appestat is an automatic
control function performed by our hypothalamus that
automatically does this. It warns us to eat when we need food
by making us hungry. It produces a sense of satiation when we
have eaten what we need. As long as this appestat works
properly, our body weight will remain stable in the normal
range. The function of the appestat is to, indirectly but
quite accurately, regulate body weight.
Although the function of the
appestat is automatic and does not depend upon the exercise of
willpower, we can overrule it and make conscious decisions to
overeat. We can even allow these decisions to become habits.
This is how the self-indulgent become fat. This phenomenon
has, traditionally, been known to be associated with poorer
people who depended upon poorer quality food. It is also
associated with various psychological stress pathologies that
induce both overeating and a poor choice of food. These
pathologies are often reinforced by sales practices amongst
our food purveyors. A classic example of this is the
marketing slogan “You deserve a break today” being used to
promote the sale of food.
Today, we all consume a
poorer quality of food because there is often no other.
Calories are not only abundant in our food supply but huge
amounts of calories are added by the doping of virtually all
of our food with sugar, corn syrup, and the like. This is
done in order to appeal to our sweet tooth and sell product.
It is also part of the subliminal promotion of brand loyalty.
Good nutrition is rare.
Essential minerals, vitamins, enzymes, amino acids, fatty
acids, phytonutrients, complex sugars, and many more important
nutritional factors are simply missing from the foods we eat.
Our appestat, noticing this, keeps us hungry until the
missing nutrition magically appears in the digestive tract.
Of course, with today’s calorie-rich, adulterated food
supply, it never does.
While we are overeating and
looking for the essential nutrition that isn’t there, the body
is prudently saving all the extra calories as fat and
glycogen. The burden of storing and metabolizing all these
extra calories distorts the endocrine system. We soon develop
elevated levels of insulin, cortisol, glucocorticoids,
depressed levels of T4, and many distortions in the entire
metabolic process. Then we get diagnosed as overweight,
obese, insulin resistant, or diabetic. This is usually after
most of our endocrine system has been trashed.
Thus, the malnutrition caused
by a poorly-engineered food supply keeps many of us eating far
beyond what we need. These extra calories that we consume as
a direct consequence are at the very root of both the obesity
and diabetes epidemics into which the nation has descended.
The typical American reacts by (a) dieting, (b) using
nutritional supplements, (c) exercising and consuming
nutritious food, and/or (d) seeing a physician.
The
Effect of Diet
Although dieting rarely works
to reduce body weight for long, it is by far the most popular
recourse for many. For generations, dieting has been promoted
as a primary means to reduce body weight.
Dieting dates back to at
least 1864. A diet book published then advised a daily
alcohol intake. Actually, our body systems are now known to
convert some of our alcohol intake to body fat. Not only was
this an ineffective weight-control technique but it actually
promoted the storage of body fat.
“Outsmarting the female fat
cell,” another more recent pseudo-scientific weight-loss
guide, asserts that calories do not count. The only thing
that counts is how you eat them, not how many you eat.
In the 1930s, an insecticide
called Dinitrophenol was widely promoted as a weight-loss
medication. Before it was ordered off the market, it caused a
number of dieters to lose their eyesight. Another high-risk
theory was promoted in the Cambridge Diet. This one killed a
number of people before it, too, was ordered off the market.
We have all lived through
the more recent era that saw the Jack LaLanne program,
Stillman’s quick weight-loss program, the Beverly Hills diet,
the Phen-Fen program, the low-carbohydrate diet, the Atkins
diet, and many, many others. Each of them took a guess at the
cause of being overweight and each of them in turn failed
miserably to resolve the weight-loss problem.
The reason that all diets all
fail is that when we diet the body perceives itself to be
undergoing a famine. All of its self-protective responses
kick in. The body’s metabolism slows down, we become
ravenously hungry, and we become sluggish with lowered energy
levels. Our digestive efficiency increases and we extract
more calories from our food and excrete fewer calories. We
then increase the storage of fat in our adipose cells until
the diet is severe enough to limit this process. Eventually,
we abandon the diet at the increasingly intense urging of our
appestat. However, when we do, the increased digestive
efficiency remains and we gain back the weight even more
quickly than we lost it.
Nutritional Supplements
These are sometimes called
isolates. They are either manufactured in synthetic form or
else isolated from their original food sources by advanced
chemical synthesis and/or separation processes. Although the
use of supplements can be very helpful, indeed
almost mandatory in today’s nutrition-poor environment, there
are numerous problems with their use.
In nutritious food, all of
the vitamins, minerals, amino acids, etc., both known and yet
to be discovered, appear in an easy-to-assimilate synergistic
form. In this form, they interact with each other, just like
drugs do, to produce effects that are difficult to predict or
to replicate. Vitamin C, for example, requires a host of
bioflavonoids to be effective. Vitamin E, in nature, is really
a complex mix of a variety of tocopherols; in an isolate, this
is reduced to a few of the most prominent tocopherols. The
same is true for all vitamins. Minerals in natural food are
always complexed with protein to make them assimilable.
Frequently in isolates, the protein is missing or the one
used is the very cheapest and least useful one available.
This is one of the reasons why many supplements are far less
effective than they should be.
Generally, with most
supplements, the manufacturer specifies the daily dose at a
level that will cause no problem for even their most sensitive
consumer. The truth is that for many supplements, we need
much more than the label specifies. This is another of the
important reasons why supplements are much less helpful than
they could be.
A good example of this is
iodine. This essential mineral is required to keep our basal
metabolism running right. The daily dose is usually specified
as about 150 micrograms and the assumption is that we get this
from iodized table salt. We actually need about 10 to 12
milligrams daily. By painting a patch of iodine on our
forearm we can determine if we are deficient. If the patch
disappears in a few hours we are deficient; if it lasts until
the next day we are not deficient.
Exercise and Nutritious Food
Exercise is an important step
we can take to preserve our health. Exercise opens up a
non-insulin-dependent cellular pathway through which we
transport glucose from the bloodstream to the cell interior.
Insulin is required to prepare fat for storage and to store
it in our fat cells. With lowered insulin levels due to
exercise, we become skinny. About twenty minutes of exercise
to the point of perspiration after a meal will lower our blood
sugar 30 to 50%, with a corresponding lowering of insulin.
Unlike dieting, this will slow down the fat-storage mechanism
without causing the body to perceive a famine. If our “war on
fat” has progressed to the point of diabetes, this will often
allow us to reduce or discontinue diabetic drugs.
Thus, a program of regular
exercise and nutritious, organic food causes our appestat to
again function in an automatic way without constant conscious
intervention. When the program is done right, we do not have
to be concerned about being a statistic in one of our national
epidemics.
See
the Physician
When all else fails, we see
the doctor. In the early stages of obesity and diabetes, he
or she will prescribe drugs to (a) interfere with carbohydrate
digestion, (b) block glycogen release from the liver, or (c)
stimulate insulin production.
When these fail to control
blood sugar, our pancreas soon becomes exhausted and fails to
produce adequate insulin. This is evidenced by an abrupt
decrease in our body weight. At this point, the doctor
prescribes injectable insulin.
None of these drug
interventions actually cure anything. They all attempt to
distort one or more body systems in a direction that will
compensate for the distortions produced by years of consuming
nutrition-less food.
Fooling Mother Nature
Alien chemistry, deliberately
placed in our food for commercial purposes, is known to
specifically interrupt and distort the normal functioning of
our appestat and to damage cellular functioning. Both
genetically- and chemically-altered food is widely used to
extend shelf life, to improve tolerance to pests, to reduce
the cost of raw materials, to reduce the need for
refrigeration, to encourage brand loyalty by creating
addictions, to modify texture, color, taste and aroma, and for
many other commercial reasons. The scope of this assault on
the nation’s health is breathtaking.
Much of the overweight and
diabetic problems in America can be traced back to the war on
fat of the early 1970s. Coconut oil was removed from the
diet; and soy, cottonseed, and rape seed (canola) oils were
substituted. These cheap, worthless oils now appear in all of
our processed food. They are known to precipitate diabetes.
If you want to win the war on fat, refuse to eat anything
that contains any of these three oils.
MSG, with over 100-different
aliases, now appears in all of our food. The effect is to
create addiction to the food with obesity to follow. The
fattening addiction is so powerful that the line of lab rats
that scientists use to study obesity is called MSG rats. They
are made obese by feeding them MSG.
What
to Do
The war on fat, like the war
on poverty, the war on disease, the war on drugs, the war on
crime, and the other mind-numbing phony wars that America has
been fighting, was never intended to be won. It was intended
to misdirect and cloak a new and massive assault on the health
of a nation by those who profit greatly by doing so.
The effective way to man the
trenches and restore our faltering health is to refuse to be
misled by popular mysticism and learn how things really work.
Refuse to buy cheap and corrupt fats and oils and the
processed food that contains them. Use supplements to provide
minimum essential needs and set up a plan to burn off the
excess calories that you cannot avoid consuming if you buy
your food in an American supermarket. And exercise.
Thomas Smith is a
reluctant medical investigator, having been forced into curing
his own diabetes because it was obvious that his doctor would
not or could not cure it. He has published the results of his
successful diabetes investigation in his special report
entitled Insulin: Our Silent Killer (written for the
layman but also used by medical practitioners and available by
sending US$29.00 to the author at P.O. Box 7685, Loveland,
Colorado 80537). He has also posted a great deal of useful
information about this disease on his web page
www.Healingmatters.com. He can be reached by telephone at 1
(970) 669-9176.