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Do Grains, Breads and Cereals Have a Place in the Natural Human Diet?
By Tera Warner
Unfortunately,
humans have been so far removed from their natural environment and
living conditions for such a long time, that most people have a hard
time determining what the natural human diet would include.
We know that humans can survive on all kinds of different foods, but the valuable thing to consider is to what degree
are humans surviving and with what quality of life? The rates of
cancer, heart disease, arthritis and blood sugar disease are clear
indicators that something has gone awry where human nutrition is
considered. The Kleenex box has become a standard household item, but
it doesn’t mean it's supposed to be this way.
Taking a stroll through the local
“natural health food” store doesn’t bring us much
closer to understanding either, because you’ll quickly realize
that the majority of the foods are no different than the kinds of
things you find in your average grocery store. They’ve just come
up with more “wholesome” or “organic” versions
of standard fare, but the aisles are as littered with packaged foods as
any supermarket.
An astounding proportion of the foods that
pack these shelves are breads, crackers, cereals, granola bars and
other grain products. But do these foods have a place in the
natural human diet?
Whether we’re talking about grains or
any other element of the human diet, it serves us to ask these three
very important questions to determine whether a food is
“natural” for human consumption.
1. Does it make sense?
2. Is it enjoyable in its natural state?
3. Does it bring positive results when we apply it as a diet?
Put
yourself in a field of wheat and just try and make a meal out of what
you find around you. Chances are you’ve never actually seen wheat
in its unrefined state, but unless you’ve got a gizzard, it's
going to be an awfully hard thing to eat! It would take you hours to
produce a handful of grains, and then once you had them, what would you
do with them? They’re not naturally very tasty. Nor would
you, surrounded by wheat plants, be naturally drawn to chomping on the
stalks and spitting out the hulls.
Grains in their natural state are
completely indigestible to humans, and while we have managed to do all
manner of magnificent works of art with grains, it doesn’t make
it any more naturally a part of the human diet.
1. Does it make sense? No!
2. Is it enjoyable in its natural state?
Well, if the above mentioned chewing on
stalks got you salivating, then you may be in luck. For the rest of us
however, chances are good that grains and cereals in their natural
state leave MUCH to be desired.
Even when grains have been stripped of the
hulls and stalks we find them with in nature, most grain meals are
drenched in salted and spiced sauces to make them more palatable.
So again, a resounding “No!” to question number two!
Which brings us to question number three:
3. Does it bring positive results when we apply it as a diet?
"Grain
Damage", by Dr. Doug Graham, is a helpful booklet on the subject of
grains and the human diet. In it, he identifies over 12 chemicals
in grains that behave similar to opiates in the human body. These
chemicals are undoubtedly the cause for the very addictive quality of
breads and cereals. Further proof lies in the fact that many
people experience relief from chronic irritability and mood
“disorders” when grains and breads are eliminated from the
diet.
Could it be worse?
Well, YES!
Phytic acid is found in grains and is known
to bind with existing calcium in the body during the digestive process.
It does this as a means of reducing the acidity that is caused by
consuming grains in the body. To what degree the consumption of grains
can contribute to conditions like osteoporosis would be very hard to
determine because of the fact that there have never been any long term
nutritional studies that have eliminated grains and cereals as a
variable.
We know that they’re not particularly
high in nutritional value, being very low in Vitamins A, B and C. They
are a solid source of carbohydrate, and we need carbohydrates, but we
can get them in sufficient quantity and much greater quality in fresh,
ripe fruits! 
Though we’ve been taught that whole
grains are a great source of fiber, the fact is that the fiber found in
grains is very irritating to the intestines. Many sufferers of
Irritable Bowel Syndrome know this intimately, and the prevalence of
grain consumption in our society is likely one of the major
contributing causes of IBS.
Many children who suffer from concentration
difficulties and irritability have experienced tremendous relief by
eliminating these foods from their diet. Tonya Kay is a perfect example
of someone who suffered with severe forms of “bipolar
disorder” for 7 years and simply by switching to a raw food diet
completely “cured” herself of the need to continue
consuming toxic medications.
Are Sprouted Grains Any Better?
Well, as far as I’m concerned, NO!
First of all, I could never imagine myself foraging for sprouted grains
to make my daily meals.
While some people claim that the release of
enzymes and digestion of natural sugars and vitamins makes grains more
digestible, I don’t believe it makes them any more naturally
adapted to the human diet.
We see the effects that these foods can
have on people with eating disorders, emotional instability and
obesity. I don’t believe it serves us to keep them in the diet.
In fact, I believe it’s one of the very first things that should
be eliminated from the diet of a person who wishes to improve their
health, energy and general mood and outlook on life.
“What?! No Breads, Cereals or Pasta!!! What Am I Going To DO?!!”
Naturally, for people who are used to
eating cereal for breakfast, a sandwich for lunch and pasta for supper,
the idea of eliminating grains from the diet can seem nearly impossible
and definitely a bit frightening!
Relax. No ones going to make you give up
your noodles until you’re ready. But in the meantime, here is a
valuable Step-By-Step approach to helping you made that happen:
A Step-by-Step Approach To Eliminating Grains from Your Diet
In order to start yourself on a progressive gradient of eliminating these foods from your diet, consider the following steps.
1. Start by eliminating the glutinous grains.
If
you’re not ready to make the jump to a full fledged raw food diet
that is high in fresh, ripe fruits and vegetables, then at least start
to move toward the grains that do not contain gluten. Because of the
prevalence of gluten-intolerance in our society now (Celiac’s
Disease) it is quite easy to find rice pasta in most food stores.
Gluten contains a chemical that behaves
much like morphine, and frankly PMS will become a mysterious thing of
the past when you get these nasty little niblets out of your diet for
once and for all!
Eliminating glutinous grains from the diet
does wonders for that “little rounded belly” most women
tend to develop after a while. That lump of indigestible guck in the
intestines virtually disappears after 3 days of eliminating grains and
cereals from the diet!
2. Eat more sweet potatoes, and cooked starchy vegetables.
Fall
in love with different kinds of starchy vegetables that have far fewer
negative consequences to their consumption. The chances of finding a
finding some potatoes in nature and sparking up a primitive fire are
not impossible for me to imagine. While it’s certainly not as
easy, practical or nearly as tasty as plucking a fresh mango from a
tree and losing myself in its sweetness, I can still imagine the
possibility. Cauliflower and celery root make wonderfully creamy soups
(without the cream, of course)!
So if you’re not quite ready to
eliminate cooked foods and go for the juicy trail of fruits and
veggies, well, at least get off the grain train by transitioning
yourself to more cooked, starchy vegetables.
3. Continue to increase the quantity of fresh fruits and veg in your diet.
It’s not hard to substitute a
breakfast of cereal or toast for a fruit smoothie packed with bananas.
Instead of pasta at supper, go for a baked potato with a BIG salad!
Continue with this gradient and you will immediately start to
experience the benefits of a diet that is higher in fresh fruits and
veg. That little bread belly will disappear, your moods will stabilize
and you’ll just start feeling better and better all the time!
Who knows, before long you’ll be signing yourself up for the 30 Day Body Enlightenment System and declaring yourself a Raw Foodist for LIFE!

It can be overwhelming to make sense of it all when you're just starting out. (Unless you've got a system!)


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