Fw: 5 Foods that dissolve your bones (Osteoporosis warning)

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HOYT D. F. SPARKS

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Mar 24, 2024, 8:39:09 AMMar 24
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From: your bone density <help...@truthaboutabs.com>
Sent: Saturday, March 23, 2024 23:33
To: hoyts...@hotmail.com <hoyts...@hotmail.com>
Subject: 5 Foods that dissolve your bones (Osteoporosis warning)
 
these 5 common foods cause Osteoporosis

:



5 common foods that DISSOLVE your bones?



Yes, they’re really that bad - AVOID these foods if you’re over 60.

==> 5 foods to Avoid for Osteoporosis

 







 

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Walking vs. Jogging:  Which is better for you?

Although I personally love the benefits of resistance training, many people just want to know whether simpler things like walking or jogging can be helpful, and which is best for them... today, I'm going to let my friend and world-renowned fitness expert Danette May explain the benefits of walking vs running, and also what she chooses instead of walking or running...

Is walking or running better for you? (new article from fitness expert Danette May)


The #1 WORST Exercise for aging (stop doing it!)

Did you know that certain exercises can help you slow aging and help you to look younger, but other specific types of exercises can actually age you FASTER.  Not good!

Make sure to AVOID the types of exercises that accelerate aging in your body.  My colleague Steve Holman explains which exercises to avoid at this article:

This exercise accelerates AGING in your body (plus 5 tips to look 10 years younger)

Steve also shows you on that page which specific format of exercise helps reverse aging, so make sure to read the full article.

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Here's a brand new post I made about how I'm leaner, stronger, and with more energy and high Testosterone at almost 50 years of age, while also fixing years of terrible digestion problems with a very easy and delicious way of eating...


Why Eating More Red Meat and Less Veggies and Fiber Fixed my Digestion Problems, and Got Me Leaner, Stronger, and With More Energy Than I Had 20 Years Ago...

At age 47, I'm feeling like a million bucks, the best I can ever remember feeling. I've continued to optimize my diet and overall health routines every year. I honestly feel better right now in my late 40s than most of my 20's and 30s...

I can hike a steep mountain all day and not even feel tired. I do sprints at the soccer field and they don't even gas me anymore. I swim laps in my pool and can hold my breath for double the distance I used to be able to. Everybody that knows me says I have more energy than anyone they know my age. After years of digestive issues when I was eating tons of veggies and fiber years ago, I've finally found the diet (animal based) that has solved my digestion issues and digestion feels incredible every day now. And I sleep 8 to 8.5 hours every night now, deeply, whereas for years I had trouble falling asleep and staying asleep in the middle of the night.  I feel lean and strong all the time now.  And I also have naturally high testosterone and libido that's equivalent to someone 30 years younger than me while I've still never used TRT once.

 I occasionally screw up and overeat certain things if I'm at a party or at a restaurant, but I don't worry about it, because I know I'm back on my normal diet the next day and will feel incredible again. If you think about it, if I screw up 2x per month and eat too much ice cream, cake and drink too much, I still had 28 days out of 30 of eating exactly what I know makes me feel incredible.

I want to share my simple way of eating that I know can help a lot of people, because everyone that stays with me loves the way I eat and a lot of friends end up adopting the way I eat and say it's best they've ever felt too.

You may disagree with me if you're a plant based advocate, but I'm not looking for a debate here, and dozens of my close friends and colleagues have seen very similar results as me eating this way.  So you can either try the way I eat and decide for yourself, or if you feel like you're already 100% optimized, then keep doing what you're doing.

A couple points to consider...

1. I'm not eating "carnivore" per se... I do eat some plant foods, but mostly fruit (including non-sweet fruit like cucumbers, squash, and avocados), and occasional starches. With that said, 90-95% of my calories comes from grass fed red meat, fish, eggs, honey, and raw dairy, and I feel best on this sort of "animal based diet".

2. I've discovered that I feel best eating 2 large meals per day, lunch and dinner. Both meals have at least 60-90 grams of protein each (I'm 190 lbs and very lean, so I need about 150 to 190 grams of protein per day). Protein is the most satiating macronutrient and eating a lot of protein at lunch allows me to NEVER need to snack during the day...I can go from noon to 7 or 8 without even thinking about food. I don't technically "fast" in the mornings, but I don't eat solid food either, because I do a large mug of bone broth first thing, and then coffee with raw honey and grass fed heavy cream.  I will occasionally have a piece of fruit either mid morning or mid afternoon as a separate snack if I feel like it.

3. I don't personally eat any "veggies" at all (except some carrots or potatoes occasionally)... but I don't eat leaf and stem-based veggies like leafy greens or cruciferous veggies. First of all, I don't think leaves and stems are "essential" in any way... there are no unique nutrients in veggies that I can't get in meat, fish, fruit, and raw dairy. And the micronutrients in veggies are not particularly bioavailable... for example, the calcium and iron in veggies are only about 3-4% bioavailability, whereas the calcium and iron in animal-based foods are about 30-40% bioavailability.

Interestingly, whenever I say anything bad about veggies, I always get a certain % of people that get triggered and angry. I never understood why people were so passionate about their beloved veggies (because they don't even taste that good, it's all about the butter and cheese and dressings that are on veggies that taste good. Dry ass greens don't taste good). However, I think I figured out why people get defensive about veggies... it's because your mom told you to "eat your veggies", so by saying bad things about vegetables, you subconsciously think I'm saying your mom was a liar, lol. That's my theory about why people get triggered about veggie hating.

4. Removing veggies and beans was the most important thing that fixed my digestion problems in the last 5-6 years. I also think oxalates are a bigger issue than most people realize. Even most gurus, doctors, dieticians, etc have never studied the effects of excessive oxalates on human health problems such as kidney stones, thyroid problems, gut problems, joint problems, etc.

Read the book "Toxic Superfoods" by Sally Norton and make your own decision on whether high oxalate veggies, beans, grains etc belong in your diet or not.  Some of what she claims in that book is overstated, but she also has a lot of good research that is mostly misunderstood in the mainstream health world. Although we evolved to tolerate and detoxify a certain level of oxalates in certain plant foods, those foods would have never been available more than maybe 2-3 months a year at most latitudes, whereas now people are bombing themselves with high oxalate foods like spinach, almond milk, almonds, turmeric, cacao, sweet potatoes, beets and beet greens, etc 365 days a year.

Our bodies didn't evolve to detoxify a constant daily assault of exceedingly high oxalate levels... high oxalate foods were probably only eaten maybe 20% of the year in most latitudes, leaving the other 80% of the year with very low oxalate levels so it never overloaded the body and all of the joint probolems, gut problems, kidney stones etc that came along with excess oxalate intake. You can read this article showing how green smoothies and green juices can cause kidney failure and other health problems from oxalate poisoning.

5. The bulk of my diet is made of these simple healthy foods:

- grass fed red meat: beef, bison, venison, elk, etc. (I only eat chicken and pork maybe once or twice a month... red meat wins big time nutritionally)
- wild fish, mostly salmon and herring for me
- oysters, shrimp, lobster, mussels whenever I can get them (oysters are the most nutrient dense food on the planet right behind liver)
- pasture raised eggs (egg yolks are probably the 3rd most nutrient dense food on the planet)
- raw dairy, mostly local raw goat milk, goat yogurt, grass fed heavy cream in my coffee, and a little cheese here and there.
- fruit, including both sweet fruit and non-sweet fruit (I don't eat as much fruit in the winter in a northern latitude as I don't believe it's appropriate from an evolutionary perspective. But I'm not an extremist and still have some fruit in winter, and if traveling in the tropics, I enjoy a lot of tropical fruit)

6. I don't eat side dishes. I find them unnecessary and time consuming. I can sear a steak or a piece of salmon (or both many nights) in about 4 minutes and be eating in under 5 minutes of cook time.

Honestly, once you eat mostly red meat, you don't crave anything else. It's so nourishing, all I want is another steak or burger or ground meat every single night. Every friend that stays with me for extended periods of time agrees that all they end up wanting is more steak every night and they don't feel fully nourished unless they have red meat every night, even if we have some fish too. I try to minimize high mercury fish like tuna to just occasional sushi nights out.

7. I eat a decent amount of organ meats, the most nutrient dense foods on the planet, which aside from high micronutrient content, also contain unique peptides etc that are beneficial for your organs in many ways (like supports like, such as eating heart gives you unique nutrients important for your heart). Heart and thymus are my favorite organs taste-wise. Most of my organs come from ground meat I buy that contains 10% organs and 90% ground meat which contains a lot of collagen...

Force of nature meats have these blends, and so does Northstar bison, US wellness meats, Maui Nui venison, etc. I also take dessicated organ meats as a supplement (Heart & Soil is my favorite brand) and it's one of the few supplements I take these days. 

Here's what an average day looks like for me...

- Bone broth first thing while I do hot tub and cold tub and listen to podcasts.

- Then coffee with raw honey and grass fed heavy cream (yum!)

- Lunch is then perhaps ground red meat with 10% organs, 2 eggs over easy, raw cheese melted into the meat, and maybe some taco seasoning or organic sloppy joe seasoning. This lunch is incredible and I never get tired of it. Super quick too. After lunch, I'll have some Cocoyo coconut yogurt (200 billion probiotics per container) with wild blueberries or cherries. Or I'll have raw goat yogurt instead.

- Dinner is usually a grass fed ribeye or ny strip steak (much higher in collagen than filet tenderloin cuts), plus a piece of wild salmon, and maybe a half an avocado, some olives, and a few forkfuls of kimchi or kraut (the only veggies I eat are a little fermented veggies like this). Dessert might be a little fruit some days, or a tablespoon of raw honey... I'm obsessed with honey and I believe it has a ton of health benefits, including oral health, nitric oxide and blood flow, and tons more.  My friend Dr Joshua Levitt has a book all about benefits of honey you can get here, and it's free right now... Free Book shipped to your door -- The Honey Phenomenon (How this Liquid Gold Heals Your Ailing Body)

And that's about it... maybe a square or two of dark chocolate here and there, or a glass of red wine with dinner one or two nights a week or out on a date. Even at restaurants, I usually just order oysters, and then steak and fish, and that's about it. I don't eat much of the side dishes because they're likely cooked in inflammatory vegetable oils (aka, seed oils). I'm not worried about entirely eliminating seed oils, so I'm not obsessed with that like some health influencers...I'll eat a couple fries in they're in front of me, but I keep the quantity super low and it's only occasional. I'll even enjoy some quality artisan sourdough bread with real butter maybe once or twice a month and enjoy every bite of it! Quality sourdough bread is the easiest form of wheat to digest because the fermentation helps break down the gluten and other antinutrients so it's easier to digest.

I might also drink a coconut water a couple times a week, maybe a potato here and there without the skins (the skins contain most of the antinutrients that can do more harm than good), and maybe a random banana or orange here and there. I absolutely LOVE what I eat every day, and NEVER get tired of these foods. In fact, my body seems to only want these foods now, and if I'm traveling and get off my diet for a couple days, I start craving just getting back to my simple diet again of meat/fish/fruit/raw dairy, because I just won't feel 100% anymore if I'm eating random restaurant foods, grains, etc.

If your diet isn't working for you, or you want an easy way to fix digestion issues, get lean really easily all while eating delicious filling food, get stronger, and have tons of energy every day, honestly the way I've laid this out works for almost every friend of mine that has tried it. Everyone reports that they feel absolutely incredible if they actually put away their biases and beliefs and just try it. In fact, one of my friends tried what I eat for 2 weeks and lost 16 lbs in 2 weeks while loving everything he was eating and felt incredible and satisfied after every meal without any hunger pangs or cravings.

As for fiber, I know this is controversial, but I honestly don't think most humans need much fiber, at least not much more than 5 - 10 grams per day. Personally, my digestion is absolutely perfect on this low level of fiber and years ago when I was eating tons of fiber, I was a mess and always bloated and gassy. Now, with this way of eating, I never have gas (great for dating), am never bloated, and have perfect bowel movements every morning. And many hunter gatherer groups that display almost perfect health like the Hadza don't eat much fiber either... The Hadza eat only 5 foods... meat/organs, honey, baobab fruit, berries seasonally, and tubers... but the tubers are so fibrous that they chew them up and spit out the fiber. There was a journalist that was claiming the Hadza ate a high fiber diet because of these fibrous tubers, but they actually eat a low fiber diet of mostly meat and honey, but just smaller amounts of fruit and berries, and the tubers are their least favorite food and don't even give them that many calories.

Also, I think gurus that cite "studies" about benefits of fiber are mistaken... most of these so called "studies" are just epidemiology (surveys), and I think all it shows is simply that people that eat more fiber are eating less junk food (chips, candy, cookies, cakes, fast food, vegetable oils, sugar, etc)... so was it the fiber that led to their better health or the LACK of all those junk foods I just listed? I think it's the lack of junk foods and not their higher fiber intake. That's the problem with epidemiology studies... the researchers try to make a conclusion about something and that's what you see in the headlines, but their conclusion was often the wrong conclusion. The same exact thing happens all the time with trying to claim benefits of a "plant based diet" based on epidemiology studies and the inherent "healthy user bias" that happens... it's not the plants that make people healthy, it's that people that are intentionally trying to be healthy (exercising, drinking less alcohol, eating less junk foods, smoking less, etc) are the ones that trying an intentional eating plan like plant-based... but it has nothing to do with their ratio of plants vs animal foods, and has everything to do with their healthy habits in all areas of their lives. That's why most epidemiology studies are mostly garbage, despite trying to account for these factors.

Anyway, I hope all of this helps if you want to try it. I'm not saying my way of eating will work for everyone, but it has worked for dozens of my friends and colleagues that have tried it and not a single person yet has said it didn't work wonders for them.   If you know any vegans, it's important to get this information out there, as there are plenty of studies showing vegans are lacking in DHA/EPA, b12, creatine, carnitine, taurine, zinc, iron, k2, etc, etc which all can significantly harm brain health or other parts of the body. In fact, one study showed that adding creatine to vegan/vegetarian diets significantly improved brain function in these plant based dieters, but didn't show any improvement in omnivores, proving that the omnivores already were topped off on creatine (it's in meat), and that the vegans are severely deficient in creatine which was harming their brain function. Also, let's not forget that an important study showed that vegetarians have 28% lower bone density than omnivores, and vegans have a whopping 48% lower bone density than omnivores.

So if you want to be frail and weak, have lower cognitive function, have a weak immune system, and have a damaged gut from excessive amounts of plant based antinutrients, fiber, etc, then by all means, eat vegan. I'll continue to eat mostly grass fed red meat (which actually helps the environment instead of vegan foods which harm the environment), and I'll continue to be strong, lean, perfect digestion, and amazing brain clarity on this type of diet.

To your health,
Mike Geary -- Certified Nutrition Specialist, Environmental Scientist

 

 
 
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