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ndocroth's Blog

by ndocroth
Description: Natural Medicine professional, author of forthcoming book "At Risk? - A Natural Medicine Look at Early Risk Recognition of Pre-Diabetes & Diabetes.
Posts (2)

Weight Gain or Obesity - PART ONE

Posted on Jan 2, 2008

There is no such thing as being simply overweight!


Two out of three North-American individuals are overweight or outright obese.-- It is not the weight per se that is the problem, but the underlying lack of health that triggers your weight gain. You must start seeing weight gain as an expression of an internal imbalance or even a starting illness. You don't simply "get fat."

  • Have you gained weight around your waistline and cannot seem to get rid of it?
  • Is your waistline no longer showing that desired hour-glass figure?
  • Have you developed a beer-belly?
  • Has your body started to turn an apple-shape?
  • Or, are you packing on weight around your thighs and look like a giant pear?


Did you know that during a lifetime an individual of average weight who does not consume unneeded calories consumes 60 million kilocalories and more in food? Unfortunately, most overweight individuals consume considerably more in empty calories and, in addition, expend less energy.

The medical books describe many causes for weight gain: genetic factors, brain damage, endocrine system disorders, prescription drugs, environmental influences, socioeconomic status, psychological components (incl. binge eating and mid-night snacking), excess food intake, large portion size, and a sedentary lifestyle.

Genes often are overrated. They are no more than about thirty percent of all the influences that contribute to weight gain. Initial indications point to the fact that your genes mostly determine where the fat in your body is deposited, not how much fat your body packs on.

One of the recent discoveries is that of a protein called leptin. Leptin is one of the hormones produced in your adipose tissue and links to the brain cells that are responsible for your energy metabolism.

Mainstream medicine rarely looks at mineral deficiencies, adrenal and thyroid hypofunction, or food intolerances as likely causes of weight gain and obesity; all of which natural medicine emphasizes as reasons for "heavyset families."

The bottom line is that the proverbial beer-belly and midriff obesity are clear indicators of insulin resistance and a high risk of diabetes.

2 Comments
 

Article: Why Are You So Tired?

Posted on Dec 31, 2007

Good to see an article that addresses such a broad issue as tiredness. Too bad though, that it starts on the "3rd floor of the building," so to speak. Low thyroid, clogged arteries/heart trouble, iron deficiency/tired blood, hepatitis C/liver virus all are not the root cause of your tiredness but are already the result of something else. Suggesting drug therapy such as synthroid, cholesterol lowering drugs, etc. is not removing those underlying causes but suppresses what ever little ability your system still has to respond.
It would have been a lot more helpful to address the real "foundation" issues. All four conditions have something in common: your food and lifestyle habits and the resulting absorption problems and mineral deficiencies. Addressing in greater detail how with proper nutrition and lifestyle choices these kinds of tiredness could be avoided and the four above mentioned conditions be prevented might have brought greater benefits.
Let us make one major commitment for 2008: let us stop putting diesel into our gas tank; let us look after our body at least with the same dedication and care we show to our cars. Happy New Year to All!

0 Comments