Whole Foods and Whole Food Digestion
Excerpt from Classic Health Book
How and When to be Your Own Doctor
Whole Food Digestive Process
After we have eaten our four-color
meal--often we do this in a hurry, without much chewing,
under a lot of stress, or in the presence of negative
emotions--we give no thought to what becomes of our food
once it has been swallowed. We have been led to assume
that anything put in the mouth automatically gets
digested flawlessly, is efficiently absorbed into the
body where it nourishes our cells, with the waste
products being eliminated completely by the large
intestine.
This vision of efficiency may exist in the best cases
but for most there is many a slip between the table and
the toilet. Most bodies are not optimally efficient at
performing all the required functions, especially after
years of poor living habits, stress, fatigue, and aging.
To the Natural Hygienist, most disease begins and ends
with our food; most of our healing efforts are focused
on improving the process of digestion.
Digestion means chemically changing the foods we eat
into substances that can pass into the blood stream and
circulate through the body where nutrition is used for
bodily functions. Our bodies use nutritional substances
for fuel, for repair and rebuilding, and to conduct an
incredibly complex biochemistry. Scientists are still
busily engaged in trying to understand the chemical
mysteries of our bodies.
Chemistry of Food Digestion
But as bewildering as the chemistry of
life is, the chemistry of digestion itself is actually a
relatively simple process, and one doctors have had a
fairly good understanding of for many decades. Though
relatively straightforward, a lot can and does go wrong
with digestion. The body breaks down foods with a series
of different enzymes that are mixed with food at various
points as it passes from mouth to stomach to small
intestine. An enzyme is a large, complex molecule that
has the ability to chemically change other large,
complex molecules without being changed itself.
Digestive enzymes perform relatively simple
functions--breaking large molecules into smaller parts
that can dissolve in water.
Digestion starts in the mouth when food is mixed with
ptyalin, an enzyme secreted by the salivary glands.
Pylatin converts insoluble starches into simple sugars.
If the digestion of starchy foods is impaired, the body
is less able to extract the energy contained in our
foods, while far worse from the point of view of the
genesis of diseases, undigested starches pass through
the stomach and into the gut where they ferment and
thereby create an additional toxic burden for the liver
to process. And fermenting starches also create gas.
As we chew our food it gets mixed with saliva; as we
continue to chew the starches in the food are converted
into sugar. There is a very simple experiment you can
conduct to prove to yourself how this works. Get a plain
piece of bread, no jam, no butter, plain, and without
swallowing it or allowing much of it to pass down the
throat, begin to chew it until it seems to literally
dissolve. Pylatin works fast in our mouths so you may be
surprised at how sweet the taste gets.
Importance of chewing whole food
properly
As important as chewing is, I have only
run into about one client in a hundred that actually
makes an effort to consciously chew their food. Horace
Fletcher, whose name has become synonymous with the
importance of chewing food well (Fletcherizing), ran an
experiment on a military population in Canada. He
required half his experimental group to chew thoroughly,
and the other half to gulp things down as usual. His
study reports significant improvement in the overall
health and performance of the group that persistently
chewed.
Fletcher's report recommended that every mouthful be
chewed 50 times for half a minute before being
swallowed. Try it, you might be very surprised at what a
beneficial effect such a simple change in your approach
to eating can make. Not only will you have less
intestinal gas, if overweight you will probably find
yourself getting smaller because your blood sugar will
elevate quicker as you are eating and thus your sense of
hunger will go away sooner. If you are very thin and
have difficulty gaining weight you may find that the
pounds go on easier because chewing well makes your body
more capable of actually assimilating the calories you
are consuming.
A logical conclusion from this data is that anything
that would prevent or reduce chewing would be
unhealthful. For example, food eaten when too hot tends
to be gulped down. The same tends to happen when food is
seasoned with fresh Jalapeņo or habaneo peppers.
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