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Date: | Sun, 21 Feb 1999 22:58:56 GMT |
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At 08:07 AM 2/21/99 -1000, Forest wrote:
>> Tom:
>> As one who tried fruitarianism under nearly ideal conditions: warm
>> climate, regular sunshine and exercise, and food of incredibly high
>> quality (most organic, the rest unsprayed, most food grown in the high
mineral
>> content soil of Merritt Island, Florida), the serious problems I experienced
>> on the fruitarian regime suggest that the currently popular "low quality
>> food" excuse is nothing more than a weak rationalization advanced by folks
>> who will grasp at anything to retain their idealistic (and false) fruitarian
>> dogma. Fruitarianism is a failure ..
>
Forest:
> things like lack of healthy family bonding, subconscious thoughts about
>money, unresolved friendship problems, unresolved childhood traumas, things
>like this can be major influences on how we may respond to foods we eat and
>the outcome of diet experiments....
So are you saying that if you fail on fruit***ism then its psycological, and
if you do well on some other foods then ?
Forest:
> my own experiments with fruitarianism have proved to me it's possible under
>ideal social and mental conditions but none of us in my mind are there yet, me
>included.
So are you saying that you succeeded, but that you did'nt succeed?
(Don't worry about failing on fruit***ism, you're in the company of everyone
else who tried it.)
Forest:
> i have found i can stabilize my limited health by being on a
>predominantly fruit diet with a "stuffing" or "filler" food added that fills
>the empty places in my body and spirit that a loving family should be
occupying.
>
I wonder: would you share with us this magical "stuffing/filler" food? This
could be a real breakthru ! ( Would I be surprised that its got some good
nutrients in it ;)
Remember that success on a food regime is over many years, not when you
first try it.
Lynton
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