Results 1 to 6 of 6
  1. #1
    Registered User COUNTRYBUMPKIN's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Michigan
    Age
    51
    Posts
    2,021
    Post Thanks / WTG / Hug
    Rep Power
    16

    Default A Guide To Using Whole Food Supplements And Minerals To Support Your Health

    Guide to Using Whole Food Vitamins and Minerals to Support Your Health
    By Dr. Ben Kim on March 01, 2008 Healthy Eating Resources
    What you don't know about vitamins and minerals may destroy your health. I don't make this statement lightly, as I have worked with enough people who have hurt their health with synthetic vitamin and mineral supplements to know that experiencing vitamin and mineral toxicity is far more common than you might think.

    Vitamins A, D, E, and K are fat-soluble vitamins, meaning that these vitamins can be stored in your fat tissues. Even if you are super lean, your body has significant fat stores in and around all of your organs, as well as in the layer of fascia that lies between your muscles and skin. When consumed in excess, fat-soluble vitamins can cause a number of symptoms related to toxicity since they are easily stored in your body.

    Water-soluble vitamins like the entire spectrum of B vitamins and vitamin C are not stored in your fat tissues. Although your body is capable of excreting excess amounts of water-soluble vitamins from your body (mainly through your urine), water-soluble vitamins can still be toxic to your system and cause significant damage to your tissues if consumed in excess.

    Take, for example, vitamin B6. Some published studies indicate that taking large quantities of vitamin B6 (up to 75 mg per day) may alleviate symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome. The generally recommended daily allowance of vitamin B6 is 1.3 to 1.7 mg per day. While your body will work to eliminate extraneous amounts of vitamin B6, if you regularly consume extremely large amounts of vitamin B6, you will almost certainly arrive at a day when your body will not be able to eliminate enough of the extraneous B6 to prevent B6-related toxicity and tissue damage. The same is true for other water-soluble and fat-soluble vitamins; if regularly consumed in excess, vitamins and minerals can physically damage your cells.

    Fortunately, there's a simple way to avoid vitamin and mineral toxicity: it's to avoid synthetic nutritional supplements, and to focus on eating fresh, minimally processed foods. Whole foods that are found in nature contain only trace amounts of vitamins and minerals. This is why vitamins and minerals are called micronutrients - they exist in micro amounts in natural foods, and they are needed by your body in micro amounts.

    The trace amounts of vitamins and minerals that are found in minimally processed, natural foods are packaged together with large quantities of macronutrients like carbohydrates, protein, and fat. Vitamins and minerals in whole plant foods are also bundled together with fiber. When you obtain your vitamins and minerals from whole foods, the carbohydrates, protein, fat, and fiber in whole foods fill you up and tell you to take a break from eating before you consume dangerous levels of vitamins and minerals.

    Whole foods contain much larger amounts of carbohydrates, protein, and fat than vitamins and minerals because carbohydrates, protein, and fat are the primary sources of fuel that you use to generate energy for all of your activities.

    Vitamins and minerals serve as enzymes and co-enzymes that allow your cells to metabolize the sugars, amino acids, and fatty acids found in carbohydrates, protein, and fat. If you've studied biochemistry, take some time to review the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and why it is needed for your cells to synthesize energy (ATP) - this will allow you to clearly see the important roles that vitamins and minerals play on a microscopic level in your second-to-second metabolism.

    The bottom line is this: the best and safest way to nourish your body with vitamins and minerals is to get them from whole, natural foods. While you can obtain significant quantities of the vitamins and minerals that you need from raw foods, to ensure optimal nourishment with vitamins and minerals, it doesn't hurt to include some cooked foods, broths, and soups in your diet, as cooking vegetables can make some vitamins and minerals more easily accessible.

    The best way to become deficient in vitamins and minerals is to eat foods that are highly processed. Highly processed foods that typically include large quantities of sugar, white flour, and cheap vegetable oils fill you up and give you the illusion that you have eaten enough to satisfy your nutrient needs, even though they are sparse in nutrients.

    This is where the principle of nutrient-density comes in; a simple key to promoting nutritional excellence is to regularly eat foods that are nutrient-rich. This is another way of saying that you should mainly eat minimally processed whole foods like vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, seeds, and if in line with your beliefs, clean animal foods like organic eggs, wild fish, and organically raised flesh meats.

    If your intake of fresh, whole foods is lacking at times, or if you find that the quality of produce that is available to you isn't as good as it can be, you can safely ensure optimal intake of vitamins and minerals by consuming nutritional supplements that are made with whole foods.

    Here are two key guidelines for choosing the best possible whole food supplements to ensure nutritional excellence:

    Look for supplements that are made with 100% whole foods; if the ingredients label doesn't clearly list only whole foods, and if you see fractionated chemicals like "ascorbic acid" or "Vitamin C" without an accompanying listing of a whole food source, then you are likely looking at a supplement that contains synthetic nutrients.

    Look for supplements that come in dark glass jars. Dark glass jars (like amber-colored glass jars) are the best storage containers for preserving nutrient integrity because they are inert (chemically inactive), and they protect the essential fatty acids in whole foods. Plastic containers may allow oxygen to seep in over time, which can cause significant degradation of nutrient value.

    Most nutritional supplements are packaged in plastic bottles because plastic is cheap and doesn't break.

    In case you're curious, my current nutritional supplementation program is as follows:

    On a Daily Basis:

    1-2 tablespoons of super green food formula

    2-3 teaspoons of acerola cherry powder

    1 tablespoon of cod liver oil

    Sometimes, I mix all three with 8 to 12 ounces of water in a jar with a lid and shake vigorously before drinking.

    At other times, I blend all three ingredients into a smoothie, using any fresh fruits that we have on hand. My usual smoothie consists of 1 banana, 2 tablespoons of blueberries, 1 tablespoon of soaked goji berries, and 1-2 cups of a non-dairy milk, such as almond milk.

    For a look at other smoothie recipes that I sometimes blend our greens, cherry powder, and cod liver oil into, please feel free to view the following page:

    Healthy Smoothie Recipes

    On days when my schedule is extra busy and I don't have time to take the whole food supplements mentioned above, I take six tablets of our 100% whole food vitamin and mineral formula. I like to split the six tablets into two portions; three in the morning, and three in the evening.

    I also take a course (one box) of our professional grade probiotic about once every three months to help ensure that I have plenty of friendly bacteria in my intestines. I have found that most people do well taking one course of our professional grade probiotic less often than I do; I like to err on the side of overdoing it a bit with the probiotic, as I was never breastfed as a baby and experienced significant health challenges with my digestive tract when I was in my early 20's.

    If you're looking for specific recommendations on what to take, here are two programs that I generally recommend:

    Whole Food Nutritional Supplementation Program One

    1 teaspoon of super green food formula per 50 pounds of body weight per day

    1 teaspoon of acerola cherry powder per 50 pounds of body weight per day

    1 teaspoon of cod liver oil or fish oil per 50 pounds of body weight per day - cod liver oil during colder months, and fish oil during warmer months if you get regular exposure to sunlight

    Whole Food Nutritional Supplementation Program Two

    6 tablets of 100% whole food vitamin and mineral formula, three in the morning, and three in the evening (if you have no known health challenges and eat plenty of fresh, natural foods, you may even consider taking less than this, say 1-2 tablets in the morning and 1-2 tablets in the evening)

    1-2 capsules of our professional grade probiotic in the morning, and 1-2 capsules in the evening, as often as your digestive tract feels uncomfortable (whenever you have any symptoms of indigestion like gas and bloating for more than a few hours to a day at a time)

    1 teaspoon of fish oil per 50 pounds of body weight per day

    ***

    The two programs outlined above are excellent adjuncts to a minimally processed, whole food diet, and can help to ensure that you safely ingest optimal amounts of the vitamins and minerals that you need to be at your best.

    What if the amount of vitamins and minerals in the programs above don't match the number of milligrams you are looking for of certain vitamins and minerals? Please remember that most recommended values are based on synthetic nutrients, and don't take into account all of the dietary and lifestyle factors that influence how efficiently you break down and utilize the nutrients in your foods and supplements.

    For example, just 1.5 teaspoons of our acerola cherry will provide you with much higher quality and usable vitamin C than several times more synthetic vitamin C.

    Another example: 300 to 400 milligrams of calcium in our greens or 100% whole food vitamin and mineral formula can help to ensure strong teeth and bones to a far greater degree than 1400 milligrams of a synthetic source of calcium that does not come with the many other minerals and vitamins that you need to properly assimilate calcium into your body. And yes, our greens and 100% whole food vitamin and mineral formula both come with the other nutrients that you need to create healthy teeth and bones using the calcium you ingest. For more information on this specific issue, please feel free to view:

    How to Prevent Osteoporosis

    I hope that this article has provided you with the knowledge that you need to optimally support your health with natural vitamins and minerals. You don't need to have half a dozen or a dozen bottles of synthetic nutrients in your kitchen; taking so many synthetic nutrients can and will hurt your health in the long run. To ensure optimal nourishment with natural vitamins and minerals, focus on eating whole foods that are naturally abundant in vitamins and minerals. Then, if your circumstances allow, consider following a simple nutritional supplementation program that utilizes 100% whole food supplements.

  2. #2
    Registered User M55FF's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    south USA
    Posts
    628
    Post Thanks / WTG / Hug
    Rep Power
    5

    Default

    my ex bf ( long before I was married to my now husband) would take vitamin and mineral supplements ( too many of them) and ended up in the hospital and jaundice. Seems he gave himself a problem.

    I know too that taking asprin and vitamin e.... together can give a person problems as well as many other vitamin combination or overdose of a vitamin can give a person big problems.
    I think some of the problem when talking to people about "greens" and raw food, whole food or any of that is they dont know or have a vitamix and realize how delicious these things can be... or the health benefit from raw food... how enzemes in the raw food work in the hiuman body or why we need them
    and it does sound like something yucky for those who are not familair with it or this style of eating.

    Lets face it, a smoothie just isn't the same when made in a regular blender.
    but thank you for that info...
    as for myself I am new to this way of eating and learning more and more each day about the wonders of eating whole, raw food.
    Last edited by M55FF; 03-16-2008 at 08:36 AM.

  3. #3
    Registered User COUNTRYBUMPKIN's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Michigan
    Age
    51
    Posts
    2,021
    Post Thanks / WTG / Hug
    Rep Power
    16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by M55FF View Post
    my ex bf ( long before I was married to my now husband) would take vitamin and mineral supplements ( too many of them) and ended up in the hospital and jaundice. Seems he gave himself a problem.

    I know too that taking asprin and vitamin e.... together can give a person problems as well as many other vitamin combination or overdose of a vitamin can give a person big problems.
    I think some of the problem when talking to people about "greens" and raw food, whole food or any of that is they dont know or have a vitamix and realize how delicious these things can be... or the health benefit from raw food... how enzemes in the raw food work in the hiuman body or why we need them
    and it does sound like something yucky for those who are not familair with it or this style of eating.

    Lets face it, a smoothie just isn't the same when made in a regular blender.
    but thank you for that info...
    as for myself I am new to this way of eating and learning more and more each day about the wonders of eating whole, raw food.

    One can actually experience a blocked digestive trac from consumption of too many supplements. All of the fillers and capsules can become clogged. There are some people who literally take 100 to 200 supplements per day! And in my opinion, that is not a good thing.

    I only take whole food supplements myself and I drink the wonderful green smoothie every morning that I make in my vitamix.

    I also try not to talk about eating raw to others. I just go about my business and try to set the example of the person that I have become from eating raw. People are taking notice and starting to ask the questions now. I have one dear friend who is about 50 to 60% raw as a result. My own 75 year old mother is now taking a great interest as well. I have even lent out several of my raw food books to them.

    Good for you for taking that initiative and researching and learning more about the raw food lifestyle! That is wonderful! Are you starting to experiment with any of the recipes yet? You will find that once you become used to eating raw that cooked just does not even compare.

  4. #4
    Registered User M55FF's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    south USA
    Posts
    628
    Post Thanks / WTG / Hug
    Rep Power
    5

    Default

    I've been making green smoothies with kale, banana, fruit, non fat yougurt and spelnda. They are more effective at thirst quencing than commericial smoohie mix.
    I was amazed at the energy they gave me.

    They taste good too. Rich, creamy and full of natural vitamins.
    I tell you the vitamix is the best kitchen appliance I ever bought, it was worth the money.
    In the summer I plan to do more and more meals with it. Its just too cold out now to be drinking so much cold liquid.

    I'm ready to do some margaritas too with fresh limes. YUM !!!!
    I'm new to all this and learning as I go, alittle more each week.... I will tell you the smoothies are great and refreshing... and give you energy.

  5. #5
    Registered User COUNTRYBUMPKIN's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Michigan
    Age
    51
    Posts
    2,021
    Post Thanks / WTG / Hug
    Rep Power
    16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by M55FF View Post
    I've been making green smoothies with kale, banana, fruit, non fat yougurt and spelnda. They are more effective at thirst quencing than commericial smoohie mix.
    I was amazed at the energy they gave me.

    They taste good too. Rich, creamy and full of natural vitamins.
    I tell you the vitamix is the best kitchen appliance I ever bought, it was worth the money.
    In the summer I plan to do more and more meals with it. Its just too cold out now to be drinking so much cold liquid.

    I'm ready to do some margaritas too with fresh limes. YUM !!!!
    I'm new to all this and learning as I go, alittle more each week.... I will tell you the smoothies are great and refreshing... and give you energy.
    Your smoothie sounds wonderful, all except for the Splenda. I cringe whenever I know that someone is consuming Splenda or Aspartame/Nutrasweet. Only because I care about people and do not want them to harm themselves with these two neurotoxins. Let me see if I can find the article that I have saved on Splenda and post it here in Alternatives.

    I use the kale when I make veggie wraps and pate wraps. I will have to try it in my smoothies as well.

    Ahhh, I love to indulge in a good margarita with fresh lime during the hot summer months. Sometimes Dh and I and our friends will mix up a few batches and take them to the beach for sunset. This has me dreaming of summer now! LOL.

  6. #6
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Posts
    2
    Post Thanks / WTG / Hug
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Thanks for the information provided in the post. Whole food supplements are available in different varieties and forms. It contains so many health benefits. The fact that these supplements are prepared from natural foods and normally does not have synthetic constituent or chemicals.

Similar Threads

  1. Health Plus, Inc. - Vitamin & Supplements Samples
    By luvdietcoke in forum Freebies
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 03-18-2007, 12:00 AM
  2. Replies: 0
    Last Post: 04-12-2005, 09:58 AM
  3. Drugs vs Natural Supplements & Whole Food Enzymes
    By COUNTRYBUMPKIN in forum Health and beauty
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 12-03-2004, 09:02 PM
  4. What vitamins, minerals, herbs and/or supplements do you take?
    By PrairieRose in forum Health and beauty
    Replies: 18
    Last Post: 10-25-2002, 09:13 AM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •