Running to Catch Up: Health in Our Times

Anne Dunev, PhD CN
At a holiday party a friend of mine told me that he is now working three times harder for half the pay. Welcome to 2009.

Just as greed in the corporate financial world devastated so many people when the bottom fell out of the markets, greed in the pharmaceutical, food and agricultural businesses has devastated the health of Americans. The statistics on chronic disease, obesity and mental health diagnoses tell the sad tale of health bankruptcy. People need affordable health insurance. But even more desperately they need good health.

In 1908, Dr. Harvey Wiley was head of the Bureau of Food Chemistry. His stated mission was to prevent any adulterated food substances into the American food supply because he felt that the future of the nation was dependent on the health of its citizens—and health was directly related to the purity of American foodstuffs.

Saccharin was invented in 1879 when a chemist named Constantin Fahlberg spilled a substance on his hands while doing research at Johns Hopkins University. It tasted sweet and the first artificial sweetener was born. A coal tar derivative, saccharin is 300 times sweeter than sugar. President Teddy Roosevelt grew up eating saccharin and was convinced it had helped him become the President of the United States, instead of being the sickly child he once was. Saccharin gained popularity during the sugar shortages of World War I. Teddy Roosevelt may have led the charge up San Juan Hill, but the nutrient value and integrity of the American food supply has been going downhill ever since.

Soil contains living organisms, as well as minerals. Plants use the minerals for food. If the minerals are not replaced, the plants won’t grow—right? Not unless you pump artificial fertilizers into them, as we do. And genetically modify the DNA of the plant so that it looks oh-so-pretty in the supermarket, but is still devoid of the vitamins and minerals needed to sustain human and animal life. Yes, people die when denied real nutrition. They do it slowly—when they consume enough calories—and they do it painfully, as their physical and mental condition deteriorates.

Compound this with the fact that most of what is sold in grocery stores would have been illegal in 1908, when the health of Americans was a top priority for a visionary like Harvey Wiley, and you have the appalling state of health and obesity we face in 2009.

Given the low standards we have for organic foods in the U.S., compared to Europe and the United Kingdom, even eating organic isn’t enough. It is more than a start. Eschewing junk and processed food is the first step. But, to rebuild health, to stave off aging and avoid Alzheimer’s, dementia and generally drooling in a wheelchair when you reach your dotage, you have to be very, very smart about how you feed your body.

Does that mean that you have to eat vegetables, or gag down slimy green drinks? Give up the pleasures of crème brulee or chocolate fudge brownies? No, but it does mean that, if your tongue alone is in charge of your diet, you are going to need more than a government bail out to handle the bankruptcy of your health.

In other cultures that practice herbal medicine, children are given bitter foods from infancy to accustom them to taking their medicine straight. In the U.S. children are given ice cream and candy from an early age to accustom them to a lifetime of good-tasting foods that lead to learning problems and adult diseases in childhood. This often develops a dependency on “kids’ foods” that are even more anemic and devoid of nutrition than the typical dinner table fare. We call this “marketing.”

In the war over consumer dollars, all is fair. But the long-term cost of the cheap and abundant food we consume in health-dollars may be higher than we can calculate. And the cost in human suffering is enormous. No one ever seems to get addicted to broccoli. But ask someone to give up their diet soda or donuts or chips.

Just as my friend has to work three times harder, our food has to be three times healthier. The only answer is super foods—super concentrated foods that offer a surplus of nutrients and a minimum of preparation time. After all, if we were all cooking complete organic meals three times a day, there would be no need for this post.

When you ingest super foods, the body will give up toxins, repair cells and “turn off” genes that cause disease. Like a garden, where plentiful nutrients and healthy soil make disease and pest resistant plants, the human body blooms with energy, beauty and strength when fed properly.

Why Do We Eat Plants?

Anne Dunev, PhD CN
If you look around your kitchen, you can find lots of different things to eat. Many things we eat come in boxes and packages. A lot of these things taste good. They are bright colors, many are very sweet and there are lots of flavors to choose from.

So, with all this prepared, packaged food around, why do we eat plants?

People say that eating plants are good for us. But plants don’t always taste as good as the food that comes in boxes. So, what is the big deal with eating plants?

Some plants do taste good. Strawberries and apples and watermelons are plants. So are oranges and carrots and peas.  Then there is broccoli and celery. And who can forget cauliflower and Brussels sprouts? Those are the ones that smell funny when you cook them. Why eat something that smells like that?

People have been eating plants for thousands and thousands of years.  Before they had farms, people gathered green plants and fruits from the forests. People have always eaten plants. So, does that mean we need to eat them today, when we have so many other things to eat?

What is it about plants?

It starts with dirt. Really.

Our bodies have something in common with dirt. Minerals. Dirt is made up of rocks that are broken down into small bits. The rocks are made of minerals.

Human bodies are about 70% minerals. Teeth and bones are mostly made of a mineral called calcium. But there are dozens of other minerals in the body, in all parts of the body. Some of these are magnesium, zinc and copper. There are even tiny amounts of silver and gold in our bodies.

We can’t eat dirt. And even if we do eat dirt, we can’t use the minerals in ground up rocks. These minerals are called “inorganic”. That means the minerals are good for rocks, but not usable for living bodies.

Here is where the plants come in. Plants make their own food in their leaves, and they love minerals. Plants are little factories that suck up the inorganic minerals through their roots. They use the ground up rocks in the dirt, or soil. Then they change the minerals into the “organic” form, the form of minerals that can be used by our living bodies to make strong bones and teeth.

If your bones could talk to you, they would say, “More spinach, please. And how about some nice Kale.” Dark, green leafy vegetables have the most calcium.

Just think. All the food that our bodies actually need to be healthy exists in Nature. All the food we need grows, either from the ground, or in animals. There is nothing in factory-produced food, made of artificial colors and flavors and chemicals, which our body needs. Most factory food is not healthy at all because there are hardly any vitamins or minerals in it. Factory-made food, also known as “junk” food can make us fat, and feel tired and bad.

If our bodies could vote, they would vote for foods from Nature. It is a natural choice if you want to feel great and be great. You have it in you. Feed it with plants.

Starring: Your Body!!

Anne Dunev, PhD CN – Burbank CA Nutritionist and Holistic Doctor
Most people know more about the their favorite sports team or the latest celebrity news than they do about how their own body works.  The word “doctor” comes from the Latin “docere”, which means to teach. But how many doctors have the time or inclination to teach us what we need to know to keep our body healthy?

Here are some astounding facts about your body.

There are approximately 60 to 100 trillion cells in the adult body.

Every hour approximately 1 billion cells must be replaced.

Where do dead cells go? To the kidney, to be excreted.

A human body has 60,000 miles of blood vessels.

3 million red blood cells are made in the human body every second.

One million white blood cells are made every second.

The heart pumps about 2,000 gallons of blood through those vessels every day.

The average heart beats 100,000 times per day.

The average human heart will beat 3,000 million times in its lifetime and pump 48 million gallons of blood.

There are 100,000 miles of blood vessels in the human body.

There is about 6 quarts of blood in the adult body. The blood circulates through the body three times every minute.

400 gallons of blood are pumped (and filtered) through the kidneys every day.

Each red blood cell lives an average of 120 days. The spleen is a recycling plant for red blood cells.

Laid out, all the blood vessels in the body would cover 60,000 miles.

The human heart creates enough pressure to squirt blood 30 feet.

The human body is comprised of about 75% water.

The lining of the digestive system is shed every 3 days.

The average surface of the human intestine is 656 square feet.

The heart is the strongest muscle. There are 650 muscles in the body.

It takes 30 muscles to smile and 200 muscles to take one step.

The eye blinks over 10,000,000 a year.

Your skin weighs twice as much as your brain.

The skin is about 1/20 of an inch thick.

Every square inch of the skin contains about 19,000,000 skin cells.

There are 450 hairs in the average eyebrow.

Each human tooth has about 55 canals in it.

The surface of the human skin is 25 square feet.

There are 45 miles of nerves in the human skin.

You lose enough dead skin in your lifetime to fill 8 five pound flour bags. That is 600,000 cells of skin every hour!

The human nose can remember 50,000 different scents.

During a 24-hour period, the average human will breathe 23,040 times.

Adults lungs have over 600 million tiny air sacs called aveoli.

20% of the oxygen we breathe goes to the brain.

The air from a human sneeze can travel at speeds of 100 miles per hour or more.

In a lifetime, the average person produces about 25,000 quarts of saliva — enough to fill two swimming pools!

The small intestine is 22 feet long.

Stomach acid (hydrochloric acid) is strong enough to corrode steel, but the stomach protects itself by making a new mucosa lining every three to four days.

The liver performs 500 functions in the body, including detoxifying chemicals and otherr toxins that enter through the mouth or nose.

Pound for pound a human baby is as strong as an ox.

A pair of feet have 500,000 sweat glands and can produce more than a pint of sweat a day.

There are 54 bones in each hand and wrist.

The hardest substance in the human body is tooth enamel.

The femur (thigh bone) is the strongest and longest bone in the body, and the bone itself is harder than concrete, but the femur is hollow so that it is light enough to be lifted.

The average adolescent girl has approximately 34,000 egg follicles in the ovaries.

The smallest cell in the body is the sperm cell.

Each cell in the body has its own energy plant, called the mitochondria.

It is through the circulation of the blood that each cell receives nutrients to perform its job, and to remove waste products.

Now that you know more about the body, can you see why you need a lot of nutrition for fuel, maintenance, and repair? You are the mayor of an amazing biological city, and each cell looks to you to provide it with life-giving nutrients.

If your cells could vote, would you be re-elected?

Detox & Jump Start Weight Loss Program

Anne Dunev, PhD CN – Los Angeles Nutritionist and Naturopathic Practitioner
One of the biggest roadblocks to weight loss is toxic, congested organs like the liver and kidneys. Over-burdened by chemical additives, white flour and sugar, and environmental toxins, the organs cause the body to retain water and fat making you bloated, tired and immune to diets. Even when you cut back on food and calories, the body will just not let go.

A healthy body will lose weight. So the key to getting your body to let go is to give it all the nutrition it needs to shed those unwanted pounds.

Standard Process TM, the Gold Standard in Whole Food Nutritional supplementation, now offers a purification and weight management program. The program is a supervised month of herbs, whole food supplements, and fiber that will allow the body to let go of toxins, bloat and weight. Because of the infusion of super nutrition, and balanced blood sugar, this is a program you can stick to, and achieve lasting results.

Good-bye to cravings, water retention and toxic over-load and hello to a slimmer, healthier more energetic you. And when the inner organs are detoxed, the outer organ—the skin—is greatly benefited, also.

So, just in time for graduation, weddings and bikini weather, we offer the 1 month DETOX AND JUMP START WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM. First you will get a personalized health analysis to identify specific body problems. Then you will start the 4 week program. The price includes a complete kit of Detox and super nutrition products, plus weekly seminars with Dr. Anne Dunev to teach you more about the body, answer your questions and keep you motivated and winning. At the end of the 4 weeks you will get another personalized analysis to mark your progress and improvement. Only $250 for the full program.

You will be able to continue on a maintenance program for further weight loss and/or to address any specific health issues.

Do you want to spend the rest of the year dieting? Or do you want to kick start your body into a fat burning machine?