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5 Facts We Haven’t Heard from The Gluten-Free Industry
With market researchers predicting gluten-free product sales as high as 15.6 billion in 2016, and some 28 percent of Americans cutting back on bread, it seems a new dietary trend is upon us. (8) Gluten-free is in and bread is out, but such dietary trends are often fads … with bubbles that burst. Take the cholesterol-free era, for example, which deemed cholesterol-rich foods as the cause of heart disease –only to find out after almost 60 years and a massive dietary shift that cholesterol actually had little to do with heart disease. In fact, this January, cholesterol was finally taken off the nutrient concern list by the FDA, but not after some significant damage to human health that may be linked to the rise of gluten sensitivity today. The shift from a diet rich in good fats to a diet devoid of them resulted in a global craving for a quicker, faster and more efficient delivery system of fuel for the body. The replacement fats were highly processed in order to extend their shelf life, rendering them indigestible and undeliverable as a fuel supply. Cravings for energy were satisfied with more highly processed sugar-laden foods that left America craving the new kids on the block: comfort foods and fast foods. Many of these foods were highly processed from wheat and corn that had been overeaten and coincidently subsidized to be grown in excess for pennies on the dollar. These quick-energy foods would spike and crash blood sugars, unknowingly sowing the seeds for the epidemics we find today: uncontrollable cravings, obesity, diabetes, depression and cognitive decline. Five Facts We Haven’t Heard from The Gluten-Free Industry There are many more pieces to this puzzle, but there is no denying that major dietary shifts away from the foods that we have been genetically adapted to eat can deliver unintended consequences. So, before we completely change our diet once again, let's look at some of the facts that we haven't heard from the gluten-free industry:
Regardless, gluten has been deemed the new poison on the scene. Gluten sensitivity is real for many people, but are we certain gluten is the cause? Could it be the processed nature of the wheat we eat, a 60-year diet of processed fats and preservatives, overeating wheat, or a stressed and broken down digestive system that plagues most Americans? Five Suggestions for Wheat Consumption
So, before we convict a grain that has been eaten for millions of years, why not change the wheat we eat as the first step to re-booting and rejuvenating our broken down digestive systems. References:
Dr. John Douillard, DC, CAP, is a globally recognized leader in the fields of natural health, Ayurveda and sports medicine. Over the past 30 years, he’s helped over 100,000 patients repair their digestive system and eat wheat and dairy again. He is the creator of LifeSpa.com and author of the book, Eat Wheat: A Scientific and Clinically-Proven Approach to Safely Bringing Wheat and Dairy Back into Your Diet, releasing nationwide January 2017. For more information, please visit, www.eatwheatbook.com and connect with Dr. Douillard on Twitter, @johndouillard. |
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