Current information about the state of our world's health, by a licensed Naturopathic Doctor. With a special emphasis on natural treatments for healing childhood trauma, social anxiety, and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Type II Diabetes Can Be Reversed with Diet
In a recent article I read in the BBC, it was pointed out that Diabetes type II can be reversed in people, who have only had the disease for a short amount of time, if they go on a restricted diet of 600Kcals a day.
While this may be good news for many people, I have found that similar benefits can be attained by putting people on a whole food based diet (80 percent vegan 20 percent lean animal protein), on a restricted diet of between 1400 and 1700 calories a day with moderate exercise,
I do not feel that treating obesity, or type II diabetes, is very complicated.
What I find is difficult for people, is learning to change the patterns of diet and lifestyle that they have established for years that lead to the disease itself.
One of the things that I learned when I received my Anthropology degree is the importance of community and ritual in peoples lives. These rituals become patterns that comfort us and give us a sense of who we are in the world.
For a person with a drinking problem, for example, the ritual might be sitting on a bar stool talking to the same group of people and having the same drinks over the course of several years. The bar, and the people, become the community and environment that the person has come to feel safe in, even if the activity they have chosen is ultimately unhealthy, the familiarity of the environment has made it both a safe zone and a source of comfort and community. The ritual of drinking may be comforting for its own sake, but it is also an addiction that is harmful to ones health.
I do not think that we can address real change in a person's life if we do not address the fact that we are asking a person to find a new set of rituals and give up old ones that are not longer healthy for them.
In the case of the alcoholic, we are also asking a person to give up the only community they may have. However, once we are able to help a person see the extent to which they may have to change their life's patterns and habits in order to heal it. People become far more realistic about what they need to do in order to change their lives. And begin to seek out new rituals and a new community that better mirrors the type of life they wish to live.
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