It’s been a couple of months since my last blog. In that
time, my wife and I have been blessed with a beautiful baby boy and he is just
perfect.
After being away from work for 6 weeks to enjoy with our new
boy and using that time for an extended break from training, I am hoping to get
back into some regular blogging aimed at helping everyone understand more about
the real and vital effects that food has on our health and longevity. I will
provide some reviews on books I have read as part of my ongoing research which
I hope will entice you to go and grab a copy of them to get deeper into the
details of why we should be getting rid of sugar, the majority of carbohydrate
rich foods and ‘vegetable’ oils, from our diets. Also, I want to continue
explaining why we need to eat much more saturated fat and fat in general, from
quality animal and some plant sources to ensure the life long quality of our
body’s cells and, importantly, our brain.
I would like to give a brief review of an amazing book
written by Dr Robert Lustig, who I have mentioned before in previous blogs for
his YouTube video lecture ‘Sugar:
The Bitter Truth’. His book is titled, ‘Fat
Chance: The Bitter Truth About Sugar’. Here is the description of the book
as found on Amazon.com –
Sugar
is addictive, toxic and everywhere. Find out how your sweet tooth might be
nibbling you to death in this straight-talking exposé.
‘Fat
Chance’, documents the science and the politics that has led to the pandemic of
metabolic syndrome – which results in conditions like obesity, diabetes and
heart disease. Dr Robert Lustig exposes how changes in the food industry and in
our wider environment have affected our collective metabolisms and our waistlines,
and he shows how industry and political forces, motivated by greed, don’t want
things to change.
To help us lose weight and recover our
health, Lustig presents personal strategies to readjust the key hormones that
regulate hunger and reward and suggests societal strategies to improve the
health of the next generation. Discover how every calorie is different and that
cutting out sugar is not just about making us thin – it’s about making us
healthier, happier and smarter.
Dr Robert Lustig is a professor of Paediatric Endocrinology
at the University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine. For quite
some time, he has been treating children who suffer from obesity, Type 2
Diabetes (formerly known as Adult-onset Diabetes until more and more children
started getting it), Hypertension, metabolic syndrome (which covers an array of
symptoms) and even cardiovascular disease.
Prior to beginning his time at the University of California,
San Francisco, he had been working at St. Judes Children’s Research Hospital,
in Memphis, Tennessee, treating kids who had received damage to the part of the
brain which controls weight and appetite resulting in the same conditions
mentioned above. The damage came from brain tumours, surgery and cancer
treatments and he explains in his book how he found ways to treat various
individuals in relation to a variety of hormones which also play pivotal roles
in weight control and appetite.
However, he was astounded when he began seeing an influx of
children, at his clinic in San Francisco, who were suffering the same symptoms
and conditions but these kids didn’t have brain tumours and hadn’t had surgery
or cancer. Instead, there was an even bigger problem making these kids horribly
sick. Dr Lustig shows how the prevalence of sugar and refined carbohydrates in
the diets of these children are basically killing them. They have such bad
health that, without intervention, they would be on the road to a very early
death and the years they do have on earth will most certainly be laden with
doctors and hospital visits, medication and likely mental illness adding up to
a very poor quality of life.
Although, it is somewhat easy to point out that the foods
being consumed by these sicks kids are the problem and simply changing the way
they eat will almost certainly cure their ailments, Dr Lustig continually asks
the question, are the kids, or even their parents, the ones to blame?
For me, the overwhelming theme of this book is the necessary
blame placed on all of the big players in the world who make foods that contain
many different types of sugar – for Americans, that is usually High-Fructose
Corn Syrup and in Australia we have sugar from the sugar cane – refined
carbohydrates and, not forgetting those cheap, pro-inflammatory ‘vegetable
oils’. Along with the manufacturers, there are the people, governments, lobby
groups and other organisations who promote and/or allow these foods to be the
cheapest and most abundant and accessible ‘food’ sources on the planet.
When you take into account how all of these cheap, highly
processed foods have filled our supermarkets, convenience stores, food courts
and now grace every corner in the form of a vending machine, food stand or fast
food outlet, combined with the bogus information about the need to eat a low
fat diet which started in the 1950’s, and gained huge momentum through the 70’s
and 80’s, and still infects the minds of many people today, can we really blame
anyone for eating those foods and getting overweight and/or sick? After all,
these foods are as addictive as some drugs and nicotine because they work the
same through the reward pathways of the brain and the big players know this.
They prey on this human function and they make big money from it. That’s right,
the health of the human race is put aside in preference of making big money for
a tiny percentage of the population.
Dr Lustig provides many anecdotes about how he has helped
changed the lives of sick children and their families through his treatments
but, in many of these stories, some of which involve sickness caused by diet
and lifestyle, he points out some of the regular foods that these families
consume. Some of these families believe their food choices to be fine to eat
based on information (or propaganda) they have grown up with. Others simply eat
what they can afford and in most low socioeconomic areas – a considerable
portion of the American population – all that is available are the foods found
in convenience stores and fast food restaurants. Many of these businesses
flourish in these areas because they know it’s all that the locals can afford
or they simply have no other choice because supermarkets with fresh produce
don’t survive due to the food being far more expensive than the fast food.
Again, can all of these people be blamed for their foods
choices? Dr Lustig makes a compelling case to suggest that big food, drink and
pharmaceutical businesses, governments and a bunch of other people and
organisations make these situations possible and are to blame and I very much
agree. Particularly, in such a powerful country like America, supposedly the
lucky country, it seems this shouldn’t be possible.
However, agreeing with this didn’t come easy for me. Before
I began learning about what really goes on inside the body and brain with food,
I genuinely thought people consciously made the choice to eat bad foods and be
lazy, and it was a matter of simply choosing the healthy option. I now know
better. There are so many factors out there which effect the decision making
for everyone in relation to their health and I firmly believe that the number
one detrimental factor, currently, is the fact that the people who are supposed
to give us the best possible advice to achieve optimal health – doctors and
various other medical and health industry professionals, along with governments
and government supported health agencies – are not doing so.
Along with this, the ability for big food and drink
companies to play on the vulnerable minds of the vast majority of the
population, who are not familiar with the true effects of food in the body and
brain, is not regulated sufficiently. Again, money talks and when there is a
possibility of increasing regulation around what these companies are allowed to
do or changing the advice given to the public, which may negatively affect the
bottom line of these companies, they throw money at the problem. This may
include threatening to withdraw research funding from those organisations who
they ‘support’ in researching for better health practices because what they
want to promote doesn’t fit in with these companies’ ability to make more
money. The morals of these companies and other big players are flawed and your
health doesn’t matter to them. These situations have also occurred in relation
to tobacco products and pharmaceuticals. The tobacco industry has changed
significantly and smoking rates have decreased dramatically in the past few
decades. I am sure things will change for the food, drink and pharmaceutical
industries in the next 50 years too but, you don’t have to wait for that. You
can change now and get ahead of the pack.
Over the past 6 decades, the views on health have become
extremely hazy. However, the most haze comes from the interference of money.
Money which concerns big food, drink and pharmaceutical companies, then
concerns the government and, ultimately, influences what information the
general public get about what is healthy practice. This information is filtered
out to the public in many different forms but despite the huge amount of
evidence, from independent research, to prove much of this information is not
accurate, money wins out and you can only get the right information from doing
your own research or getting it from someone who has done it already.
I believe, we are at a point in time now that is the same as
when the harmful effects of smoking were first getting real attention in the
general knowledge of the public and it went on to becoming completely known and
proven that smoking causes massive problems to our health. There was a time
when smoking was considered healthy, then some questions were raised about the
possible harmful effects, manufacturers then needed new marketing strategies
and started paying medical professionals to endorse cigarettes, then they
couldn’t claim health benefits anymore and now we have plain cigarette
packaging with warnings, advertising campaigns about the dangers and the understanding
that previous beliefs were absolutely wrong. Well, it’s now starting to happen
with sugar, carbohydrate rich foods (mainly the refined kind) and cheap
vegetable oils which contain high amounts of pro-inflammatory polyunsaturated
omega-6 fats.
In this day and age, I believe most non-smoking people feel
that anyone who smokes at all is absolutely crazy. I can’t blame them for that
and I once felt exactly the same. I definitely hate the act of smoking and will
avoid being around anyone smoking at all costs. However, I now feel that anyone
who takes up smoking, for the first time, in this era, is absolutely crazy.
Why? Well, my wife stated that to me and it made sense because it’s the same
issues that we have with food. There are a lot of measures put in place to
prevent or stop people from smoking but, as it was with smoking in the first
half or so of last century, the real risks of consumption of sugar, refined
carbohydrates, excessive carbohydrates and vegetable oils are not properly
recognised in the information presented to the general public.
My previous views about people and poor food choices were
that it was entirely their choice and the individual was to blame for their
poor health. I thought it was pretty obvious what was bad for you but I have
learned, in a big way, that it isn’t that simple because of how our brains are
being played from all angles. I know now that I was harming myself with the way
I used to eat and the changes I have experienced over the past 8 months prove
that what I am now doing is unbelievably better. Instead, I see the health
problems of today as the fault of governments, big food, drink and
pharmaceutical companies and anyone else who chooses money over the genuine
health of each and every person on this earth.
Therefore, if you suffer from – now or in the future – any
number of illnesses including; cardiovascular disease, stroke,
obesity/overweight, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or even
an array of brain diseases not limited too; dementia, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s
disease, multiple sclerosis, ADHD and Tourette’s syndrome – I will discuss
brain diseases more in the future – and you have not had the real effects of
the foods we eat explained to you, then getting sick is not your fault. I
sincerely hope that anyone who may encounter any of these illnesses at any
point in their lives will be shown how to treat it with the right foods because
food truly is medicine. Preferably, none of you will ever have these issues
because, either, I have gone some way to helping you change your ways to
properly nourish your body with the most healthful foods or the advice to the
population catches up with the best independent scientific evidence in the very
near future.
When the world catches up with the truth about our foods,
those who continue to choose the wrong foods will be the minority, just like
smokers. Things are slowly changing with small indications from such agencies
as the WHO (World Health Organisation), the American Heart Association and even
in the US dietary guidelines. From these sources, in just the past 6 – 12
months, we have seen the recommended daily added sugar consumption reduced to
just 6 teaspoons (approximately 25 grams), saturated fat and dietary
cholesterol have been removed from the nutrients of concern list and eggs (the
whole egg because the yolk is the most nutritious bit) have been praised for
being so packed with nutrients and highly recommended for consumption. These
small changes will continue towards showing that a diet consisting of fatty
meats and fish, eggs, full fat dairy, lots of non-starchy vegetables, some nuts
and fruit, olive and coconut oil but very little to no sugar, grains, starches
or ‘vegetable oils’, is the way we need to eat to achieve optimal health.
I see it as my personal responsibility to use my passion for
health and do what I can to help as many people as possible to learn the truth
about food. I will do this in the hope that providing the right information
will give you the tools to make the best choices for your health and go on to
encourage others to do the same. A part of that will be for you to gain an understanding
of what is really going on inside your body so that it may help you find the
strength to overcome the addiction that these harmful foods cause and successfully
ditch those foods from your diet.
I absolutely recommend the book, ‘Fat Chance: The Bitter
Truth About Sugar’. It is an eye opener to the horrible greed amongst high
rollers in this world and appropriately questions their integrity and
practises.
Cheers,
Lincoln.
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