Kris -
You are correct in my opinion. And by "fat" I mean only raw fat - not
cooked. Not enough raw fat in the diet will tend toward promoting dry
skin. I believe that skin tone and condition comes mostly from the
inside (ingested foods). Surface lotions and all are barely able to
make real long-term change to the skin - and then perhaps only at the
immediate surface, not deeply into the skin layers.
After I went on a raw fat/food diet my skin changed from constantly dry,
pale and slightly flaking (especially in winter) to smooth, ruddy and
less wrinkled with no flaking visible. I would say that raw fat from
any good source is fine - it need not be specifically cod liver oil.
Avocado, for example, is an excellent raw fat source, as are raw nuts
from trees, et al. Though I have no way to validate it I somehow feel
that berries (rasp-, blue-, black-, straw-) have an important part in
skin health too...
One of my favorite fats to chew on is suet: melts slowly in the mouth,
is sweet and delicious, cheap and easy to obtain. By the way the phrase
"chew the fat" has one derivation from people chewing on [insert
favorite fatty food: pork ration, whale blubber, bacon, etc.] while
passing the time doing something else, e.g., conversing. So I'd
encourage all to "chew the fat" often - LOL.
Regards,
-=mark=-
KKC wrote:
>Hi All,
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>And last but not least, how DOES diet affect the condition of our skin?
>Could dry skin be a sign of not eating enough fat?
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>Anybody have any input on any of this?
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>Thanks,
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>~Kris
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