Improving
Health Through Nutrition: No Quick Fix
Michael Wagner, BA, LMT, CFT
This
is a very important article in understanding glyconutrients.
When recommending dietary supplements to persons with health
deficiencies, one of the most common questions we'll hear is, "How
fast will this stuff work?" If we can help steer people
away from the "quick fix" mentality and, instead,
adapt realistic expectations for realizing improved health
through nutrition, I believe we've performed a great service.
That's because the restoration of genuine optimal health takes
time and patience the quick fix mind set will never allow.
True, there are exceptional cases, especially with exceptional
supplements or unique circumstances. Some people begin a dietary
supplement regime and realize amazing results. But they are
exceptions. And although certain symptoms may have subsided,
the body very often has a lot more healing to accomplish over
the long term.
To assist consumers of dietary supplements to "stay the
course" and not quit their program prematurely because
they "weren't seeing anything" we need to educate
them. Not only about the supplements in their regime, but about
their own body and how nutrition supports the body to effect
improvements in overall health.
To this end, I've found seven principles worth remembering
and passing on to those people we wish to see benefit from
nutritional supplements and programs.
1. With nutrition, we are not suppressing or manipulating symptoms
as with pharmaceuticals. We are not treating conditions as
with herbology. We are simply giving the body what it needs
to heal itself and rebuild itself anew and this takes time.
When correcting nutritional deficiencies, while we won't see
instant improvements in most cases, we will be promoting true
and lasting healing. Pharmaceuticals may sometimes "work" instantly,
yet never address underlying causes and possess unwanted side
effects. Contrary to popular thinking, drugs don't heal anything:
only the body can do that - when it gets what it needs.
In Optimum Sports Nutrition, Dr. Michael Colgan explains why
patience is the key:
"
A principle of nutrition you need to know is physiological
dynamics. Unlike drugs, nutrients do not have rapid effects.
No quick fix. The business of nutrition is to build a better
body. That has to wait on Nature to turn over body cells. A
blood cell lasts 60-120 days. In 3-4 months your whole blood
supply is completely replaced. In 6 months almost all the proteins
in your body die and are replaced, even the DNA of your genes.
In a year all your bones and even the enamel of your teeth
are replaced, constructed entirely out of the nutrients you
eat."
This time course is well illustrated by the course of deficiency
diseases. If I remove all the vitamin C from your diet within
4 weeks blood vitamin C will drop to zero. But, you will see
no symptoms of disease at 4 weeks. You will have to wait until
enough of the healthy cells have been replaced with unhealthy
cells. It is another 12 weeks before the symptoms of scurvy
start to ravage your body.
“
So when you implement an optimum nutrition program, don't expect
to see rapid results. In one of our studies at the Colgan Institute,
runners were supplemented to try to improve their hemoglobin,
hematrocit, and red blood cell count. But after one month of
supplementation, there was no improvement at all. After 6 months,
however, all three indices were significantly increased."
"
Think of it this way: If you take a neglected houseplant and
start feeding and watering it, the leaves may perk up a bit
from the improved nutrition. But you have to wait for the old
leaves to die off and new leaves to grow before you get a really
healthy plant. It is the same with a human body. When you start
feeding it better, you have to wait on physiological dynamics
of the body to grow new, improved cells in the improved medium.
After 18 years in sports nutrition, the shortest program we
will give any athlete is six months". With patience, nature
can do its work and produce its miracles.
2. We are all unique. Individual biochemistry's are affected
by diet, lifestyle, drug usage, stress, fitness level, genetics,
toxins, etc. It's inevitable; therefore, that some persons
will respond more rapidly than others to improved nutrition.
If you're not experiencing results as fast as you'd like, it
could be a factor of any number of things. It might be that
the body has priorities other than the one upon which you're
focusing. For example, you may want to lose body fat while
your body may want to lose a tumor you don't even know you
have. Give your body permission to have its own priorities
and timetable.
3. Positive health changes can be occurring without your "feeling
something". Research studies utilizing blood tests, bone
density and body fat measurements, etc. confirm this. Improved
health begins on the molecular and cellular levels. Latter,
this may translate into the alleviation or disappearance of
specific symptoms and conditions.
(The already healthy or symptom-free person, especially persons
with abundant energy, might take note: Your health benefits
from optimal nutrition tend to come in the form of your body's
correcting sub-clinical problems-depletions, imbalances and
toxic build-ups that haven't yet become clinical conditions
or "felt" diseases. In other words, in optimizing
and maintaining health, remember "feeling healthy" really
only means "feeling symptom free". Actor Michael
Landon was "feeling great" on National TV: three
months later he died of cancer. Virtually everyone can benefit
from improved nutrition since, simply by living, toxins accumulate
within our bodies, the body wears out and chronic degeneration
slowly settles in. Giving the body what it needs to stay healthy
can minimize the ravages of modern living and optimize health.)
4. The Greatest health benefits of improved nutrition may well
come in the latter years of life. Regardless of the rate your
current health challenge is improving, continued optimum nutrition
just makes good sense, since the greatest benefits may be experienced
in your senior years. While others are painfully shuffling
around nursing homes and tending to medicine schedules, you
might be enjoying your summers on the Colorado River and winters
in Hawaii. Is this the benefit you want? Learn what your dietary
supplements can do for you. Then make an educated choice.
5. If you experience a "correcting crisis" while
on an optimal nutritional program, stay the course - its working!
When your body begins cleaning out toxins, metabolic wastes,
parasites, Candida die-off and the like, you may experience
uncomfortable symptoms. Because you may feel worse before you
feel better, it's important to read the articles and books,
which address this phenomenon so you can better understand
this process. The correcting crisis, when understood, is a
clear indication that your improved nutrition program is truly
working and leading you to improved health.
6. Licensed health care practitioners still make educated guesses
as to how long it might take to see a specific health improvement
using nutrition. Admittedly an imprecise science, but as a
starting point, a holistic medical doctor uses the following
formula: For a specific health improvements, figure three months,
then add one additional month for each year the chronic condition
has existed. For example, a chronic condition of 5 years might
be expected to see a good improvement within 8 months, provided
the body, mind and spirit of the patient gets everything it
needs. Experience with nutraceuticals largely indicated the
longer the
consumption, the greater the benefit.
7. As one very prestigious medical doctor has well stated,
dietary supplements ought to carry the warning: "Not to
be taken on an empty spirit". The human mind and spirit
are powerful beyond measure. They can easily override any optimal
health plan. They must therefore be in alignment with the healing
process. Sometimes the non-physical causes of ill health are
poorly understood by the individual dealing with it. If long
term attempts to achieve better health bring minimal or no
results, there may be a deeper reasons that need exploration.
Caroline Myss' works, including Why People Don't Heal, or the
works of Bernie Siegel, M.D. might be a good starting point.
Tend to your thinking; nurture your spirit.
Staying mindful of these seven principles of nutrition and
healing will hopefully keep all of us out of the trap of quick
fix thinking and help allow us to create the time and patience
to achieve true healing and enjoy lasting optimal health.
> Return
to Articles
> Return Home