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Posts Tagged ‘weston a price’

Low Fat Diet May Have Killed Danny Gans

Posted by Kevin Brown on June 20, 2011

Las Vegas entertainer Danny Gans, an impressionist who sold more tickets on the Strip than the Rat Pack or Elvis Presley, died early Friday, his manager said. He was 52.

Las Vegas entertainer Danny Gans, an impressionist who sold more tickets on the Strip than the Rat Pack or Elvis Presley,died early Friday, his manager said. He was 52.

Gans, best known for his touching impersonation of entertainer George Burns, began a five-year headline gig at tycoon Steve Wynn’s Wynn Las Vegas hotel in February. Prior to that, he spent 11 years at the Mirage.

Gans earned Las Vegas Entertainer of the Year honors 11 years in a row in the reader poll conducted by the Las Vegas Review-Journal but was not well known beyond Las Vegas.

The cause of death was unknown. Gans’s manager Chip Lightman expressed his shock at the impressionist’s passing.

“The guy was healthy as an ox,” Lightman said. “I spoke to Steve Wynn several times this morning and both of us were shocked. I was with Danny the day before yesterday. Healthy as an ox. I mean, all he ate was egg whites and spinach and worked out religiously.”

Gans was a former minor league baseball player who turned to performing after a career-ending injury.

He appeared as a player in the film “Bull Durham” and found success in his 1995 one-man show in New York before moving the next year to Las Vegas.

He is survived by a wife and three children.

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George Burns, often imitated by Danny Gans, lives to 100 years, eating eggs, regular fasting, smoking cigars, and occasional drinks.

Mr Burns reported that he ate eggs and fasted 1 day a week- sounds like the Liberation Diet-

According to George BurnsI like eggs because they’re so versatile. They can be poached, fried, scrambled, boiled-soft-boiled, hard-boiled, medium-boiled-shirred, and Benedicted. It’s amazing how many things you can do with an egg after a chicken gets through with it.

Also he said – Sunday I eat nothing. I may have a martini or two… or three… but NO food…

 

 

Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.
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Posted in liberation wellness, Nutrition | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

The Tide Is Turning

Posted by John Chisholm on February 8, 2011

My impression has been that when Reader’s Digest starts carrying articles about a topic, it’s no longer of interest to just a few people on the fringe.  When I ran across the February 2011 article on Gary Taube’s book, Why We Get Fat—and What to Do About It, I saw that the cogent and traditional way of eating is really gaining traction against the low-fat and high-carb conventions.

Parts of the messages of Kevin Brown and the Weston A. Price Foundation are starting to penetrate mainstream awareness.  It’s encouraging, even though awareness by the mainstream press is still incomplete and still lags behind the more knowledgeable champions of healthy eating.  Jimmy Moore posted an article on Gary Taube’s book months ago.  (Jimmy  also provided a convenient link to a podcast of his interesting interview of Gary Taube— good stuff.)

Conventional Wisdom Is Not Holding Up
Taube’s book echoes what Kevin Brown has been saying for years, in Kevin’s own book, in his lectures, and on his website: the standard American diet has been making the population overweight, obese and prone to disease.  These observations challenge the simplistic thinking that says calories are calories no matter where they come from.  In fact, the body responds to different types of dietary calories in different ways, and the low-fat, high-carb diet upsets the body’s ability to regulate fat tissue properly.  Eating fat doesn’t lead to more fat storage in the body; eating high amounts of carbs leads to the insulin resistance that increases fat storage.  The high-carb diet also correlates to increased incidence in a multitude of diseases, from heart disease, cancers, diabetes, and even gum disease.

The mounting evidence of researchers and mainstream publications who report on the failure of the standard American diet is like the proverbial handwriting on the wall.  Animal-produced foods are eventually going to lose their demonization.  So now what?  Do we turn to the supermarket aisles for the cheapest and most readily available animal-produced foods?  Not unless we want to trade in one set of health problems (obesity, diabetes) with another set (degenerative diseases such as arthritis and cancers).

Bad food Affects Us.  Bad Food Also Affects Our Animals
We humans do get all kinds of health problems from eating foods that our ancestors never ate and that we weren’t designed for, such as highly-refined grains, sugars and fake oils (care for cottonseed, anyone?).  Similarly, the livestock animals that produce our meat, eggs and milk get all kinds of health problems if forced to eat feeds that they weren’t designed for.  In agribusiness’s factory farms, the food that the animals were designed for, such as natural pasture grass, is replaced by commercial feeds that are both cheaper and cause quicker weight gain, for bigger profits.  The only thing that suffers is the health of the animals, and of the people who eat the unhealthful animals.

A mainstay of feeds for rapid weight gain is GMO corn, which has been shown to cause organ failure in animals, mostly in the kidneys and liver, but also in the heart, adrenal glands, spleen and blood.  Another important constituent of feed is cheap protein in the form of animal renderings, which is all the animal byproducts scraped up and thrown out by the factory slaughterhouses, such as bone, feathers, eyeballs, offal, hair, hooves, diseased organs and the occasional bits of metal (from animal-ID-tags), plastic, and some restaurant grease.  Many rendering factories also accept roadkills  and carcasses from animal shelters, and add them to the mix.  To replace the mineral and chlorophyll of natural grass, the feeds for cows usually incorporate ground-up corn stalks and corn plant leaves that are left over after the crop of corn has been harvested; they can make up more than half the feed.

The feeds’ formulas are then topped off with hormones, to force rapid weight gain, and antibiotics, to combat the pathogenic infections that are bound to assail the animals.  The animals on factory farms are kept in pens whose floors (of dirt or concrete) are covered with the animals’ feces and urine, which become an ideal breeding ground for pathogenic bacteria.

It’s Not Smart to Subvert Nature
Grazing animals that are designed to eat grass (e.g., with multiple stomachs) and that were never meat eaters have been forced to eat feed that their systems can’t handle, including bits of animals of their own species.  Mad cow disease is just the most severe outcome so far of these unnatural farming practices.  Other more common diseases and organ failures are inevitable for the animals subjected to modern factory farming.  But agribusiness has figured out how to adjust feeds and hormones so skillfully that they can bring the animals up to harvest weight quickly enough to be killed just weeks before organ failure would debilitate the animals.

The result of all this tinkering with Mother Nature is to produce the most meat (or eggs or milk) for the cheapest cost.  But it’s not really a healthful practice to keep eating food produced by animals pumped up on hormones and antibiotics and on the verge of disease.

The Right Food Raised Right
The truly healthful alternative to an ineffectual diet that’s low-fat and high-carb is to get our food from traditional farming, that raises livestock by having them graze (literally eat living grass).  The animals are healthy because they’ve spent their whole lives feeding on their traditional diet in their natural environment: sunlit pastures where they absorb vitamin-D and the living enzymes and minerals from the grass.  As a bonus, grazing in pastures is much better for the environment than force-feeding artificial diets in confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs).  The grazing keeps alive the native species of grasses as well as the food chain of animals that dwell there, from insects to small mammals to top predators.   Grazing also does not lead to the concentrations of fecal and urine waste that typically pollute the land around the CAFOs.

Cheap, fake foods that look the same as real are not “just as good” as traditional foods.  People are starting to question whether they’re eating the right things.  Let’s keep going to make sure we’ll all have access to the right food raised in the right way.  Let’s support our natural farmers and buy real food that’s been raised by them.

John Chisholm is co-owner of a small company that makes Good-Gums, a toothpaste-replacement that supports the body’s ability to heal its gums. When WAPF Chapter Leaders started carrying Good-Gums, John started learning and practicing Weston A. Price dietary principles, as lucidly explained by Kevin Brown’s Liberation Wellness. Already a regular exerciser and feeling pretty healthy, John didn’t anticipate how well his body would further respond to unprocessed, full-fat, pasture-raised foods.

Posted in Big Agriculture, diabetes, Food Safety, gmo, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, insulin, jimmy moore, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation wellness, obesity, Vitamin D, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

How I Lose Weight, or Not

Posted by Maureen Diaz on January 7, 2011

Mixing up the Thanksgiving Stuffing-*not* something helpful for me to eat!

Lately this is something which I have been contemplating a lot, as back in November and early December I very rapidly gained ten pounds-Ugh! As I squeezed into what had just a few weeks prior been an appealing dress, it occurred to me that I had better step back and take a look at what I was doing to cause this dramatic-and scary!-set back. Why, oh why, is it so easy to gain weight, but so hard to lose or keep it off?! There are several things which I identified as problems and needed to change.

First, way back in August I had a mishap which made it impossible to follow my preferred methods of exercise. In fact, for quite some time it was very difficult to perform any significant type of physical exertion, as it was simply far too painful and detrimental to healing! Because of the level of physical activity prior to this, my body had reset to a fairly high metabolism which I was able to sustain for a period of time. But after awhile everything slowed down again. By mid November nearly 3 months had passed, I was still having a great deal of trouble with my shoulder, and returning to running and dancing was still out of the question as the bouncing and jolting was simply too much. But I still needed to do something, as gaining more weight was not an option!

Another thing that had changed was my eating habits, to some extent anyway. I no longer strictly quit eating in the afternoon, but would often have a meal in the early evening. Experience had taught me that this was never a good thing!

Bread making was going on full blast about the middle of November as I prepared for the Weston A Price conference, for which I was providing sourdough bread cubes for stuffing. While I did not eat much bread, I did eat more than I had become accustomed to, which certainly upped my carbohydrate intake. The body loves to store those carbs as fat, and that seems to be just what happened-especially with the lack of good, physical exertion! I believe gluten is also a factor in my hypothyroidism, and so this was likely another contributing factor.

In addition to these things, I had often been enjoying a glass of wine or ale in the evening. While I never over-indulge and am against drunkenness-period!, I do not believe that enjoying a glass with dinner or at home while relaxing is wrong; it can even be good for you. But due to the high carb content of these beverages they are not our friend when we have a weight problem and as such need to be  limited.

One other “little” thing: I was drinking coffee fairly often again, something I had given up quite some time ago. My preference is for strong, dark coffee with heavy cream and Sucanat. The sugar certainly gave me a carb-start to the day, and the caffein is hard on the adrenal glands, suppressing the thyroid (along with the gluten in that bread), and here we go again…

The dark chocolate truffles which my children were making as gifts didn’t always make it into the gift boxes either :)

So here I am now, early January, 4 1/2 months after my little accident and still with a very painful shoulder, but determined to turn things back around. And I am! Recently I was able to start exercising again, albeit carefully. I can again run and perform my dancercize routine, and have added some abdominal and gluteous maximus exercises. Tea, much lower in caffein and acid, is again my beverage of choice and coffee is relegated to the occasional treat (with xylitol instead of Sucanat). I am not having the wine or ale (it can wait for a “treat”, once in awhile). While bread making is something I find very enjoyable, I feel no need to eat it. Coconut oil is again added daily as a supplement. And late night eating? A thing of the past!

And so the new year begins, and a “new” me! The pounds are not coming off as quickly as I would like, but they are coming off again! By this time next month I expect to be to a new low and even nearer to my goal.

Having problems losing the weight you need to lose? Perhaps you can benefit from my experience and join me in this most beneficial of endeavors: to arrive at the weight that is best for you and in the process look good, feel great, and have fun in the process!

Posted in balance, exercise, fitness, Food Addiction, Goal Setting, grains, health, Journey with Liberation Diet, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, Maureen Diaz, New Year's resolutions, Nutrition, obesity, Total Wellness, wapf, Weight Loss, wellness | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

An Inheritance Squandered

Posted by Lauren Snyder Grosz on December 29, 2010

gwyneth paltrow Pictures, Images and PhotosRecently Raine Irving Saudners invited me to do a guest post on her blog Agriculturesociety.  It was such a thrill for me because I admire Raine’s work; she does an excellent job of making complicated topics very readable without sacrificing the details.

I admire the Guests the way some people admire the Kennedys.  My daughter is named Charlotte Catherine because I wanted to be able to call her C.C. as a way of paying homage to C.Z. Guest; horsewoman, fashion icon, and gardener.  In the Spring of 2002, I had a chance to attend a lecture she was giving at The Chicago Botanic Garden.  She was 83 at the time and appeared to be in excellent health.  A year and a half later C.Z. Guest died of ovarian cancer.

In the November issue of Harper’s Bazaar, I was saddened to learn that C.Z.’s daughter Cornelia is a vegan.  A quick Google search revealed that she has made this decision for health reasons.  Congestive Heart Failure turned my father, who had been an exceptional high school and collegiate athlete into the equivalent of an invalid when I was 16 years old.  Two years later, I became a vegetarian as a way of steering clear of my dad’s fate.  Occasionally, I’d lapse, but it wasn’t until I became pregnant that I permanently ditched vegetarianism.  Cornelia is almost 47, so it’s not likely that pregnancy will rescue her from her vegan wasteland.  Discipline will also make it harder to turn away from something she perceives as providing a payoff.  As a young socialite in 80′s, the article emphasizes how her equestrian habit saved her from the other popular habits of the era.  Even if she was out late, there were horses to ride the next morning.

Once, I made the acquaintance of a pro football player, who had started drinking soy and was a vegetarian during the week.  When I began inquiring as to why he was doing this, what I learned was interesting, disturbing really.  He felt this way of eating required discipline, hard work, and persistence, all of the things that helped him to be a starter in the NFL.  He was a physical specimen to behold, but was unable to credit his grandmother’s  and mother’s love of traditional southern food for his stature and strength.  This inability to give credit where credit is due is also what led Cornelia Guest to ban all animal products from her life.  The saying in their house was, “a pound of butter a day keeps the doctor away” and still she banishes the food!  It isn’t enough that her mother enjoyed robust health until she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Surly butter, cream, eggs, and meat must be to blame.

Certainly, this is what I thought because butter was king in our house and from my vantage point it had caused nothing but trouble.  My mom died at the ripe old age of 64.  Yes.  She smoked, but everybody knows food plays a part.  I’ve already mentioned that my dad lived like an invalid, who survived until he was 72 because he slept about fifteen hours a day, and swallowed prescription pills that could only be held by a giant shoe box.  Somehow, it never occurred to me that my family’s health woes could have anything to do with the bank of cabinets devoted to snack foods or that my mom liked to start her day with dessert and a glass of Folgers  Crystals.  She was very particular and always insisted on Heinemann’s Coffee Cakes.  A cursory glance at their ingredient list fails to turn up anything that belongs in a Bavarian coffee cake or any other food for that matter.  Now blaming sugar even seems far fetched because unless we were making sugar cookies from scratch, it seems highly unlikely that any of our favorite companies used anything other than High Fructose Corn Syrup and soybean oil.  My dietary choices were also hampered by my mom’s fabulous figure, never weighing more than 125 pounds, she was of the opinion that only peasants couldn’t wear their normal clothes home from the hospital after giving birth!  How could sugar, even if it was fake, be to blame?  She was thin, strong, and enjoyed incredibly robust health, until diagnosed with cancer.  Within a year, we had lost her.

That very same year, I serendipitously came across the life changing work of Sally Fallon Morrell, President of The Weston A Price Foundation.  While I hadn’t been a vegetarian for many years, it wasn’t until then that I understood the importance of having animal fat in my diet.  Fortunately, there was enough real food in our house; my mom frequently cooked from Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking, that I instantly knew which foods were the culprits of disease in my family.  The drive to be healthy seems incredibly strong in children who’ve lost a parent at a young age.  Gwyneth Paltrow provides a window into the extremes someone, with means, will go to in order to avoid getting cancer.  She was very close to her father and to have lost him when she was only 30 obviously took a toll.  In her new cookbook she reminisces about cooking with him and notes that health food was not the priority, hence her obsession with Veganese, a concoction made entirely from fake vegetable oils.  In addition, the starlet avoids dairy and only eats animals with two legs.  I can’t help but wonder how on earth her mother  Blythe Danner allows her lovely daughter to carry on with this warped destructive food philosophy.  Not surprisingly , Gwyneth announced that she has osteopenia a precursor to osteoporosis.  She is unable to connect the dots between her diet that is devoid of Vitamin A and D and having a disease commonly reserved for old women.  Her remedy for this which was urged by her doctors is to take prescription strength Vitamin D.  What is most disturbing is that she has enormous influence, just as Cornelia Guest has in her circle, and hordes of young girls will blindly follow their advice!

Lastly, it’s important to add that many people already understand the importance of eliminating junk food, such as sugar laden cereals and soda.  Dr. Price showed that this is only part of what is responsible for radiant health and wholeness.  Unless the all important fat soluble activators are given their due people will still experience compromised health.  Madonna’s daughter Lola is proof of this: the Material Girl’s family is on a strict organic, vegetarian, macrobiotic diet and yet the poor girl still was not spared orthodontics and additionally required a back brace for scoliosis.

Living long and living well depends on eating high-fat high-cholesterol foods. Yes.  We all have to die sometime, but that doesn’t mean it has to be via a massive heart attack, cancer,  or spending the winter of one’s life in an Alzheimer’s facility.  Traditional diets provide the antidote to these grim scenarios.  The second arrow in our quiver is that an infrastructure for excellent sanitization exists – hot water, stainless steel tanks, electrification – that should allow us to all live to a ripe old age (barring accidents).  Yet,  instead of flourishing, the diseases of civilization have never had a stronger hold on us.  It’s simply not enough to know something is bad.  While we do not need to turn our children into small nutritionists, they must be able to discern between what is true and false, and why certain principles must not be abandoned in the kitchen.

Lauren Snyder Grosz is a Certified Nutrition and Wellness Educator. She writes for LiberationWellnessBlog.com. As a student on a lifelong quest for exceptional health and happiness, her mission is to empower people to take complete responsibility for their own health by rethinking everything we’ve assumed to be true and rediscovering what truly works based on accurate science.

Posted in Butter, fitness, Nutrition | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

The Politics of Food – Sally Fallon Morell – Wise Traditions Conference

Posted by Kevin Brown on October 16, 2010

This Week on the Liberation Wellness Hour -

Sally Fallon Morell – The Politics of Food

Monday 2PM EST on Blog Talk Radio – The Politics of Food

Who Should Attend Wise Traditions?

Doctors, nurses, nutritionists, dietitians, parents, students, food writers, food providers, farmers, public servants, teachers, patients, activists, agriculture professionals, people interested in nutrition, people with no interest in nutrition, people who love to cook, people who hate to cook, people who like to eat, Baby Boomers concerned about their health, grandparents concerned about their grandchildren, couples who want healthy babies, people who want answers, people who love controversy. . . and You!  Wise Traditions 2010

Sally Fallon Morell, MA (President and Treasurer), is a journalist, chef, nutrition researcher, homemaker, and community activist. She is the author of Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats. This well-researched, thought-provoking guide to traditional foods contains a startling message: Animal fats and cholesterol are not villains but vital factors in the diet, necessary for normal growth, proper function of the brain and nervous system, protection from disease and optimum energy levels

Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Butter, cancer, Cholesterol, Congress, FDA, government, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, lobbying, raw milk, real food, sally fallon, Sally Fallon Morell, saturated fat | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Don’t Hate Me Because I Don’t Like to Cook

Posted by Lauren Snyder Grosz on October 13, 2010

Is it possible to something decadent and practical at the same time? It seems unlikely, but I feel as if that’s what I’ve done. I’ve hired an in home chef and I’m absolutely over the moon about the decision.

My nine year old daughter’s appointment with the dentist signaled it was time to take things more seriously. Charlotte didn’t have any cavities and he said everything looked really good. Though two issues really got my attention. 1) She has a slight overbite and 2) her x-rays showed her lateral incisors are coming in a bit sideways indicating the teeth might not have enough room to enter straight. People who are familiar with traditional diets know it is bunk to think these issues are genetic, when in fact, they are due to lack of proper nourishment. Having only found out about this 5 years ago, my daughter was already at a disadvantage have not benefited from these principles from conception.

As a foodie, turning our kitchen into a haven of nutrient dense eating was a delight for me. Often it puts a smile on my face to imagine how happy my mom would be to watch as I stir raw heavy cream into a glass of real whole milk. The problem was that our refrigerator and freezer contained only ingredients or potential, which is how I prefer to think of it. There really wasn’t anything you could simply grab and eat. My husband is either on the road or works from home and our daughter is home schooled so the demands for something to eat seem incessant. I’m excellent with breakfast, but the dinners I was making would take two hours when taking into account cleanup. Oh, and forget about lunch. It was non existent. I’d wonder to myself in amazement why they couldn’t simply have a glass of milk or a piece of sprouted toast with lots of butter.

And then one day it happened. I simply went on strike. Charlotte had gone to stay with her grandparents in Wisconsin for her annual summer visit and I was done with cooking! I had simply had it. We started going out to dinner. For the first three weeks this was a nice change of pace. Unless we’ve picked someplace outstanding to dine in the city (NYC) we prefer to eat at home because then I have control over the integrity of the ingredients. As the strike wore on, we both became exhausted with exercise. It was no longer fun, there are only so many places to frequent without crossing the bridge, and getting ready every night quickly lost it’s charm.

With the arrival of the Amex bill, I was forced to come up with a solution. I remembered that Liberation Wellness had recently connected with Jamie Busch who has lots of experience in the kitchen. Jamie recommended Chef Lisa of Simple Earth Cuisine. I was really looking forward to having Lisa cook for our family; her menu sounded delicious and she loves cooking in a traditional manner. Everything was perfect except the cost of her services, which I’m certain are worth every penny, but still out of reach for us. I was lamenting to a friend who lives in the apartment above us about not being able to engage Chef Lisa. A week later she contacted me with an excellent solution. She’d cook for us at a price we could afford! Kelly recently moved to NJ, from PA, to be with the love of her life. She is new to the area and ended up taking a less than satisfying job to avoid sitting around all day. Kelly is quite the go getter. Back in PA, she ran a bed and breakfast. Her favorite part of this experience was menu planning and cooking. Oh, and as fate would have it, I offered to lend her my copy of Nourishing Traditions, but her mom had already given her a copy!

Last week, Kelly delivered Pyrex dish after Pyrex dish filled with delicious satisfying meals. She has decided to start her own business as a Personal Chef to the residents of our building. I think it’s an excellent idea and am thrilled to be her first client.

Lauren Snyder Grosz is a Certified Nutrition and Wellness Educator. She writes for LiberationWellnessBlog.com. As a student on a lifelong quest for exceptional health and happiness, her mission is to empower people to take complete responsibility for their own health by rethinking everything we’ve assumed to be true and rediscovering what truly works based on accurate science.

Posted in Chef, Family Wellness, Nutrition | Tagged: , , , , , | 10 Comments »

Liberation Wellness Comes to Lehigh Valley

Posted by Kevin Brown on September 16, 2010

Liberation Wellness Dynamic Duo Make First Official Appearance Together!

On Thursday, 10/28/10, Kevin Brown and Maureen Diaz, will speak about “Liberation Wellness” at the United Steelworkers Hall, 53 East Lehigh Street (just north of the New Street/Fahy Bridge), Bethlehem. Doors open at 6:30pm. The presentation begins at 7. Free admission (donations welcome).
Kevin will talk about his groundbreaking nutrition plan that has proven to help many people become truly healthy and maintain normal weight. Maureen will walk us through implementing Liberation Wellness/Weston A. Price principles in our daily lives, providing “many helpful tips, solutions, and ideas about how to transform your life into one of vibrant health.”
More about the event

Local producers may bring grass-fed, organic, and/or biodynamic products for sampling or sale. Attendees can check out the produce tables before and after the presentation (bring your coolers!). Books & videos will also be available. Ample on-site parking: the parking lot is accessible from Center St (at the equivalent of 315 Center St if you’re googling). Sponsored by the Lehigh Valley Chapter of The Weston A Price Foundation, a nonprofit organization.
About Liberation Wellness
(from the Liberation Wellness website: www.liberationwellness.com )
When did our nutritional values start falling apart?  Early to mid 1900’s, the message that butter, eggs, beef, coconut oil and other sources of saturated fats changed from good to bad.  Manufacturers found a way (laboratory experiments) to imitate the taste of foods and extend their shelf life (chemicals and preservatives). Then they sweetened our meals for us, literally, with added sugar, alternative low calorie sweeteners and fortified our foods with synthetic vitamins, minerals and fiber.  How can we make healthier food in a lab than a backyard garden?
We transitioned from butter, lard, and coconut oil to hydrogenated to partially hydrogenated vegetable oils.  Saturated with lies, marketers had us believing that this was heart-healthy and would be the solution to the rise in obesity and incidences of cardiovascular disease.  Natural, saturated fats were the culprits and the answer was in fake butters and oils. We bought into the low-fat craze. Manufacturers are quick to point out (market) benefits of eating whole foods while providing products that didn’t come close to whole.
And yet, America’s health hasn’t gotten any better. The foods our ancestors ate were no longer good for us, and for the first time EVER, we’re finding out that today’s children may not live as long as their parents.
Over time, true nutrition ideology got lost in translation.  We intellectually talked ourselves out of the game, believing we can eat ANYTHING we THINK is good for us.
People are made to believe that…
  • vitamins in a bowl of cereal are just as nutritious as eating organic fruits.
  • cooking with vegetable oils is better than grass-fed butter and organic virgin coconut oil.
  • it’s safe to consume aspartame, high fructose corn syrup and other alternative sweeteners and our bodies can naturally process these “just as real” ingredients.
  • commercially raised beef (full of hormones, fed an unnatural diet) is perfectly acceptable to eat.
We at Liberation Wellness want to empower people to have excellent health and normal weight by:
  • Teaching about REAL food (know which foods and ingredients matter and why numbers on labels don’t mean much)
  • Exposing partial truths and lies (truth about marketing hype and manufacturer claims
  • Changing the way people think about food (such as knowing when to say when and when to say MORE to eating)
About the Speakers

Kevin Brown, CPT, CNWC, is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Palmyra NJ Chapter Leaders of the Weston A. Price Foundation.
Maureen Diaz is a certified Liberation Wellness Nutritionist, Educator, and Cooking Instructor and Gettysburg Area/Franklin County Chapter Leader of the Weston A. Price Foundation. She works from home where she oversees the education and daily life of her large family. Maureen has also produced 3 cooking DVDs including her latest available now, the Liberation Wellness Home Cooking DVD.
About The Weston A. Price Foundation

The Weston A. Price Foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt charity founded in 1999 to disseminate the research of nutrition pioneer Weston A. Price, DDS, whose studies of isolated nonindustrialized peoples established the parameters of human health and determined the optimum characteristics of human diets. Dr. Price’s research demonstrated that men and women achieve optimal physical form and health, generation after generation, when they consume nutrient-dense whole foods and the vital fat-soluble activators found exclusively in animal fats, whereas they have numerous physical form and health problems when they switch from their traditional diets to the displacing foods of Western commerce, such as foods made with white sugar and white flour, canned goods, and commercially-processed foods.
The Foundation is dedicated to restoring nutrient-dense foods to the American diet through education, research and activism and supports a number of movements that contribute to this objective, including accurate nutrition instruction, organic and biodynamic farming, pasture-feeding of livestock, community supported farms, honest and informative labeling, prepared parenting and nurturing therapies. Specific goals include establishment of universal access to clean, certified raw milk and a ban on the use of soy-based infant formula.
About the Lehigh Valley Chapter (WAPF-LV)

WAPF-LV hosts public presentations dealing with food, nutrition, health, and food-producing systems, and publishes a newsletter. As part of WAPF-LV’s efforts to connect local food producers and consumers, we also publish a directory of local farms. For more info, contact Alan Stangl, DC, (610-434-7562) or Martin Boksenbaum (610-767-1287).

Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Events, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, Weight Loss, wellness, weston price | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Dr. Erik Von Kiel D.O. – Weston Price Medical Doctor

Posted by Kevin Brown on September 13, 2010

Total Health is the moniker of this rare medical doctor who believes in holistic health and the constitution of the United States.

Hear this remarkable man on the Liberation Wellness Hour!


Posted in Fear, Food freedom, god, government, kevin brown, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, Weight Loss, weston price | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

It’s Complicated

Posted by Lauren Snyder Grosz on September 8, 2010

When thinking back, I realize that my relationship with Whole Foods isn’t that different from my past romantic relationships. I was in my late twenties when Whole Foods opened their first store in Chicago and boy was I smitten, from the deli to the bakery, not to mention, aisle after aisle was brimming with enticing food stuffs that had never before been looked upon. Twas a glorious scene! Yes, this was the store for me and in my eyes everything was perfect. Of course, this was the period when I considered tofu a health food.

As I learned about the principles of nutrient dense eating things began to change. Why is this chain of stores insistent on using canola oil to prepare almost everything in the prepared foods section? People would write comments to the shift managers about this and at one point I saw a response from the store declaring the topic tabled for discussion. Wow, that is so harsh. I thought of breaking things off at that time, but simply put, they have other things I can’t do without.

And so the cycle continues…I’m enraged when they announce their low-fat vegetarian agenda, though several months earlier I was on a high when the CEO discussed his thoughts on health care reform. Things take another bad turn when it’s decided they’ll  no longer stock their shelves with the raw milk produced by the amazing folks at Organic Pastures in CA.  Though if I miss the deadline to order from my farmer, they have grass fed, unhomogenized,  dairy products from Sky Top Farms. Do you really think I believe that kids were getting drunk from drinking GT’s Kombucha? I’m not always in the mood to make it myself and my batches aren’t as predictable as his.

Sometimes, I’m doing a happy dance because it tastes great and other times I’m dumping it down the drain as quickly as possible. It was at this point that I swore the place off. The result of which was spending far too much on dining out because the Shop Rite in my neighborhood is absolutely disgusting. Suddenly, going out to eat is no longer fun and I head towards Whole Foods with a snarl on my face, I walk past a the refrigerated section and to my astonishment I see Ciara’s  great tasting Kombucha and the snarl is instantly replaced with a smile. My final example involves a pet peeve of mine. Can no one in the world make a bottled salad dressing without canola or soybean oil? Yes, finally someone can and her name is Kerry Wood. Her salad dressing even contains fermented soy sauce. It’s delicious. So right now Whole Foods and I are in a good place. In fact, I hardly even mind the solicitations from the cashiers to Help Put Salad Bars In Schools, which I translate as “let’s get more rancid oils into the kiddies.”  If they ever do a Help Add Saturated Fat To School Lunches, I’ll gladly get my check book out! Until then, I’ll simply have to be at peace with our highs and lows.

Lauren Snyder Grosz is a Certified Nutrition and Wellness Educator. She writes for LiberationWellnessBlog.com. As a student on a lifelong quest for exceptional health and happiness, her mission is to empower people to take complete responsibility for their own health by rethinking everything we’ve assumed to be true and rediscovering what truly works based on accurate science.

Posted in polyunsaturated fats, raw milk, real food, saturated fat | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Bacteria– Our Capricious Allies

Posted by John Chisholm on August 31, 2010

There’s a natural equilibrium involved in staying healthy, and an outstanding example can be observed in how well the body is designed for maintaining our eating apparatus: healthy teeth and gums.

Helpful Allies
Besides the obvious mechanical action of the jaws, teeth and tongue, there are biochemical processes going on in the mouth.  Enzymes from the food we eat and from our saliva are required for digestion and their presence is provided for by our biology and our diet.  In addition, bacteria that live in our mouth also play a crucial role in digestion, and are ultimately necessary for our survival.  Bacteria are so pervasive and abundant on Earth that they insinuate themselves into the survival mechanisms of all complex life forms.  A few infamous pathogenic strains have tarnished all bacteria with a bad rap, but instead of going to war against them all, let’s see and appreciate how well our bodies are designed to cooperate with our little allies.

We can’t avoid bacteria.  People used to think that most of the Earth’s biomass was in the form of forest trees, but recent discoveries of additional habitats for bacteria are leading to the re-evaluation that most of the biomass is actually in the form of bacteria.  Even in our own bodies, up to 10% of our weight is actually the weight of bacteria.  There are many times more of these single cell creatures living in and on each of us than there are human cells that comprise our body.  It’s estimated that 99% of bacteria on the planet are either benign or helpful, some indirectly, such as “fixing” nitrogen from the atmosphere to the nodules of food-plant roots, and some more directly, such as protecting us from pathogenic microbes.  We could not live without the services of our bacterial occupants.

By occupying the moist, hospitable environments of our mouth, nose, and throat, colonies of beneficial bacterial flora crowd out any harmful microbes that may attempt to take up residence.  Some strains of beneficial bacteria actively destroy pathogenic microbes as well.  Aside from keeping us healthy from pathogens, beneficial bacteria also are critical to our absorption of food.  Bacteria throughout the digestive tract, from the mouth to the stomach and the intestines, help in the process of breaking down the chemicals of food into molecules small enough for the body to absorb.

Designed for Equilibrium
In a typical mouth, over 300 strains of oral bacteria have been identified.  Under the conditions in which primitive humans have lived for thousands of years, all of these strains coexisted among themselves and with the human body in a healthful equilibrium.  Under modern conditions, the equilibrium has been upset, leading to a few strains of bacteria getting so out of hand that they infect gums and teeth.  The repercussions are an epidemic of gingivitis, periodontitis, tooth decay, and over time a host of bodily ailments.

But when in balance, the equilibrium worked so well that the skeletal and teeth remains of early humans show that they had excellent oral health.  As recently as the 1930’s, there were still isolated populations who lived and ate like our ancient ancestors and also had excellent oral and bodily health (as documented by Dr. Weston A. Price).  Before turning our attention to what upset the equilibrium, let’s look at how well this beautifully balanced system worked.

As mentioned above, the 300+ strains of oral bacteria lived in equilibrium and the digestion-aiding bacteria were allowed to grow just populous enough to work on the food that the humans ate.  Part of this equilibrium was the interplay between a person’s diet and the four-phase life cycle of bacteria.  At the (first) lag phase, bacteria adjust to their environment and make the vitamins and amino acids necessary to reproduce.  At the exponential phase, the bacteria multiply by having each bacterium split into two daughter cells, doubling in population from a few days to as little as a few minutes, the maximum rate differing according to the strain.  How well the different strains of bacteria are supplied with their specific nutrients also affect how quickly the first two phases progress.  When a person’s diet was such that the slower-replicating bacteria were fed nutrients that allowed them to keep pace with the faster-replicating strains (which received less of their favorite nutrients), then the bacterial habitat became so fully populated by the varieties of bacteria that they went into the (third) stationary phase, in which their growth declined.  With all niches in the mouth occupied, equilibrium among the bacterial strains prevailed.  Finally, for any single bacterium cell, the final phase is the death phase, where reproduction no longer takes place and the cell is absorbed for its nutrients and replaced by another cell.

After thousands of years and many generations of humans eating in a way to keep their bacterial flora in equilibrium, humans started developing and eating refined carbohydrates and sugars that turned out to be high-octane fuel for a few select strains of oral bacteria.  These particular nutrients, never before seen in nature and some pharmaceutically pure, jolted a couple dozen strains of bacteria out of their stationary phase and back into a runaway exponential phase.  Their out of control bacterial population could then displace fellow strains that normally would have kept them in check, and the overpopulated strains would overwhelm the gums’ defenses, leading to an infection of gums and eventually of teeth.

Safety Net
Prior to refined carbohydrates, when a hunter-and-gatherer or neolithic person’s diet temporarily got out of balance, bacterial populations would also fluctuate somewhat, but the body used its built-in safety systems to contain the resulting problems until a healthy diet returned the bacterial flora back to a normal equilibrium.  The gums are especially set up for efficient immune system response in times of temporary infection.

The connective tissue beneath the gum lining funnels specialized cells to the infection site that devour the invading microorganisms (phagocytes, mostly in the gum lining) or that kill them (lymphocyte white blood cells, mostly in the gum’s deeper connective tissue). As other live cells react to the toxins of the bacteria and to the microscopic battle taking place between immune system cells and bacteria, and as dead cells accumulate, the gum tissue at the infection site swells up. When the source of the irritation is removed and the bacteria population is brought under control, the immune system can handle the occasional invader and the entire episode is experienced merely as a temporary and reversible flare up of gingivitis—inflamed gums.

Besides fighting the invading bacteria, gums are also set up for fast healing.  Gum cells are among the quickest to be replaced and have extremely short lifetimes compared to other types of cells.  The lifespan of a healthy gum cell typically ranges from only two to seven days, and is usually replaced in four or five days.  Fast cell replacement rates make for fast healing, once proper nutrients are once again being ingested and after the varieties of bacterial strains once again find their relative balance.

Losing Our Way
After people started eating refined carbohydrates, sugars and denatured foods as a permanent part of their diet, there would be no return to the diet-induced healthy equilibrium.  The few problematical strains of bacteria develop in ways our ancient ancestors hardly ever saw.  An individual free-floating (planktonic) bacterium forms its own hard but tiny mineral shell, but it can’t do any real damage in that form. The bacterium biochemically attracts the minerals of like bacteria, until chains and then clusters form. These are still not too threatening. The clusters join together to form colonies, and the colonies form an even stronger attraction for each other. Eventually there’s a continuous, delicate mat of bacteria and other microscopic material covering the gum and tooth margin, called plaque. The bacteria in plaque thrive on an acid environment, and as they feed and multiply, the by-products of their feeding actually add to the acidity under the mat of plaque. If left undisturbed, this mat steadily builds a hard protective shell of calcified minerals, called calculus. Under the hardened calculus, the colonies of bacteria multiply even more rapidly.  The acids dissolve away enamel, eventually exposing the softer interior of the tooth, which can then be infected.

The immune system tries to fight off the invading bacteria, but the unnatural foods fuel the exponential phase of bacterial growth so much that new bacteria more than replace the casualties that were killed by the immune system.  Eventually the immune system changes tactics from trying to rid the body of the infectious agents (acute inflammation) to trying to isolate the infectious agents from healthy tissue in the body (chronic inflammation).  The immune system will “amputate” infected cells, and this process can be observed as receding gums, deepening gum pockets, and loose teeth (as periodontal ligaments are severed).  These deteriorated conditions that once were very rare are now so commonplace as to be considered a normal part of getting older.

But all is not lost.  Once the problem and its root causes have been understood, there are things that can be done to correct the problem and to return our teeth and gums to health.  First and foremost is learning and following the principles of healthy nutrition.  From this foundation, we can then take measures to reverse teeth and gum problems (the topic of another article due in Sept. 2010).  And in the process of improving our oral health, we’ll also improve our prospects for bodily health (another article due in Sept. 2010).

John Chisholm is co-owner of a small company that makes Good-Gums, a toothpaste-replacement that supports the body’s ability to heal its gums. When WAPF Chapter Leaders started carrying Good-Gums, John started learning and practicing Weston A. Price dietary principles, as lucidly explained by Kevin Brown’s Liberation Wellness. Already a regular exerciser and feeling pretty healthy, John didn’t anticipate how well his body would further respond to unprocessed, full-fat, pasture-raised foods.

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Posted in good gums, health, kevin brown, liberation diet, Nutrition, oral health, real food, weston price | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

 
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