Continued from part 1. See part 1 for intro/header. Crossposting of any of this material to the "raw" list is prohibited. All material here is copyright 1997 by Thomas E. Billings, all rights reserved. P.S. this is a long posting - if you followup, please edit out all but the essential parts related to your post. My e-mail queue thanks you! Tom Billings [log in to unmask] ======================================================================== Date: Sun, 1 Jun 1997 20:14:54 -0700 From: "Thomas E. Billings" <[log in to unmask]> Subject: EXPO: common sense on diet & health the following is part of the 1997 SF-LiFE "Health & Rejuvenation Expo" newsletter/program guide (the Expo was held on June 1, 1997). Because I am a member of only two e-mail lists (raw-food and veg-raw), I must specify that this particular article can NOT be crossposted to any other list, without my express permission. Please see the "Introduction to EXPO Posts" for further details. Tom Billings [log in to unmask] =========begin newsletter article============================= COMMON SENSE ON DIET AND HEALTH - PERSONAL OPINIONS Tom Billings 1) No diet can guarantee excellent health because diet is only one factor; health involves many other factors such as exercise, stress reduction, the mind, and so on. 2) There is no such thing as a perfect diet. There is no single diet that is "best" for all. Diet and health are not "one size fits all" approaches. Diet should serve the individual; you should not be a slave to dietary dogma. Your health is more important than dogma! 3) There are no guarantees in life. Wild animals often die of disease, despite eating a completely natural, raw diet in the wild. So too, even the most conscientious raw fooder can get sick. A raw foods diet does not guarantee good health (whether physical or mental)! 4) If one takes the word holistic to refer to the whole person: body, mind, and spirit, then with a few exceptions (e.g., the Essenes), no raw food diet/ system is a true holistic health system. Most raw food diets deal with the body, but not the spirit. A few systems (e.g., natural hygiene) mention mental health, but provide little practical advice on the subject. 5) Healing is where you find it. Due to idealism, raw fooders often are blind to the reality that other diets can assist healing. These other healing diets contradict raw foods vegan dogma. Examples include instincto, which is raw but non-veg, macrobiotic, which is usually vegetarian but almost 100% cooked, and ketogenic diet, which is cooked and non-veg. 6) The obsession with mucus and toxemia that afflicts many raw fooders can be harmful. That obsession, coupled with the idealism of raw foods dogma, may lead a sick person to ignore symptoms and/or refuse medical care, as the illness is assumed to be due to detoxification. If you are sick, you should consult qualified health professional(s) for advice and treatment as appropriate. 7) Many of the world's medical systems say, in effect, "there is no such thing as an incurable disease, but there are incurable patients". The point is that your attitude is very important in determining healing/health. You should have positive reasons for your diet; avoid negative reasons. Examples of negative motivations for a raw foods diet, include the fear of mucus, fear of raw protein foods, and fear/hatred of cooked foods and those who consume them. A diet high in processed/over-cooked food, but with positive motivation, might eventually harm your body. However, a diet that is motivated by negativity (even a raw foods diet) will surely poison your heart and mind. 8) Raw foodism is usually concerned only with the body, with the result that our mental attitude towards food can be very unhealthy. Eating may become an exercise in perfectionism, with low self-esteem because we backslide and eat "improper" foods. This type of behavior and attitude are factors in eating disorders (anorexia, bulimia), and we should avoid such attitudes/behavior. >>> Posting number 2946, dated 1 Jun 1997 20:18:47 Date: Sun, 1 Jun 1997 20:18:47 -0700 From: "Thomas E. Billings" <[log in to unmask]> Subject: EXPO: closing comments the following is part of the 1997 SF-LiFE "Health & Rejuvenation Expo" newsletter/program guide (the Expo was held on June 1, 1997). Because I am a member of only two e-mail lists (raw-food and veg-raw), I must specify that this particular article can NOT be crossposted to any other list, without my express permission. Please see the "Introduction to EXPO Posts" for further details. Tom Billings [log in to unmask] =========begin newsletter article========================== Note: the following was written as a closing address for the Expo. Because the closing ceremony was moved, and because things were disorganized at the end, I did not deliver the comments (other than a few lines). The article below was not in the SF-LiFE Expo program guide/newsletter, but may appear in a future issue. 1997 SF-LIFE EXPO: CLOSING REMARKS An Opinion by Tom Billings I hope that today's Expo has been interesting and helpful to you. I would encourage those of you who are not already raw fooders, to seriously consider incorporating elements of raw/living foods into your lifestyle. However, I would urge you to do so in a positive, constructive manner. Specifically: 1. Keep diet in its proper place - as a support function. Diet should NOT be the most important thing in your life! 2. Have a positive motivation for your diet, and a positive attitude. In particular, avoid the negative motives zealously promoted by some raw fooders: fear of mucus, or fear/hatred of cooked foods. Please note that I am NOT referring to honest, scientific criticism of cooked food; instead I refer to those zealots who falsely blame the world's problems on cooked food consumption. Negative motives can be harmful; they may pull you into an eating disorder, or towards hostile zealotry. If that happens, the result of a raw food diet could be a healthy body but a very sick mind! 3. Have realistic expectations of what your diet will do for you. 4. Be honest: with others regarding your compliance with the diet, and with yourself regarding whether it works or doesn't work for you. 5. Ignore raw-food dogma. What counts is what helps you, not what someone wrote in a book. Your health is more important than dogma! 6. Understand that raw food writers are ordinary humans (so don't think they know everything about health - they don't), and that the raw food books available range from very good to unspeakably bad. (You can quickly recognize the bad ones: those are the books that promote fear/hate as motives for your diet, and/or they lack credible evidence to support their claims) 7. Recognize that 100% raw diets are not for everyone. Some thrive on them, while many others do not. Don't believe the zealots who will claim that it is your fault if the diet does not work for you. (Apparently the zealots think you should serve the diet, rather than the other way around - shame on them!) 8. Introducing perfectionism into your diet (and self-esteem) is a very bad idea. To put it bluntly, the idea that "dietary purity" determines your personal merit, is ridiculous and potentially harmful. 9. Avoid eating disorder behaviors: binge eating, lying about eating, eating in secret, obsessions with food, and so on. If these problems occur and persist, you should seriously consider changing your diet and/or getting counselling and therapy. 10. Have an open mind at all times. Actively question and challenge the so-called "truths" of rawism. The results of such an approach may astonish you, as many of those "truths" are discredited, one after the other. (Note: this is also a way to find out if the "experts" are zealots - see if they react with hostility when challenged.) The raw foods movement will never go mainstream as long as it is promoted in a negative, zealous manner, or as long as raw-fooders refuse to critically and honestly examine the "truths" of rawism. However, we can change this situation: we can ignore the zealots, and put the raw foods movement squarely on an open, honest, positive course towards the future. I invite you all to join me in working towards such a future! Again, I thank you all for coming to the Expo.