The Health of
Our
Colon
Determines the
Health of Our
Body
By now, most of
us know the
nutrition we
take into our
body is a vital
factor in
determining our
health ... how
we feel, how
effectively our
body heals
itself and how
long we live. On
the flip side of
that coin there
is a factor of
equal - if not
greater -
importance that
is sometimes
completely
overlooked and
nearly always
underestimated.
This often
un-discussed
area of health
maintenance
concerns the
elimination of
waste and toxins
from our body.
While it is
practically
impossible to
overestimate the
importance of
putting good
things into our
body, it is more
likely that we
will
underestimate
the importance
of getting the
bad things out
of our body.
It was Henry
Wheeler Shaw who
said, "A good
reliable set of
bowels is worth
more to a man
than any
quantity of
brains."
All cells must
take in
nutrients to
maintain their
metabolism and
their life. As
an end result of
this metabolism,
every one of our
approximately
140 trillion
cells also must
produce waste
material. To
maintain optimal
health, we must
eliminate this
waste
efficiently.
Every cell and
every organ in
our body
eliminates waste
and is effected
by waste
elimination from
the body as a
whole.
It is up to our
colon to
eliminate the
bulk of the most
toxic and putrid
waste in our
body. When we
obtain energy
from the food we
eat, we create a
waste product
(feces) that
should be
eliminated
within 24 hours
or less. But
with a
meat-based,
high-fat,
low-fiber diet,
the average
American has a
transit time of
72 to 96 hours,
meaning this
waste begins a
toxic build-up
that creates
numerous
problems for the
colon and every
other part of
the body. If it
is not quickly
eliminated,
fecal matter in
the colon turns
into a toxic and
putrid waste
that is absorbed
into the rest of
our system. Over
the course of
time, this
effects the
functioning of
every cell and
organ in our
body. It poisons
the blood,
lymphatic
system, nervous
system and
brain, while
clogging up the
heart, vascular
system, lungs
and sinuses.
A proper diet is
one that
provides
necessary
nourishment for
the body, and
facilitates
proper
|
Most
colons
have
become
stagnant
cesspools,
collecting
layers
and
pockets
of toxic
and
putrid
feces
and
mucus
that
poisons
the
blood
stream
and
every
cell and
organ in
the
body. |
waste removal
and cleansing
... from the
cellular level
to the colon.
But the typical
American diet
featuring an
abundance of
meat, dairy,
fried and
over-cooked
foods, sugar,
starches, salt
and artificial
chemicals is
hard to digest,
very little of
it can be
assimilated as
nutrition into
our cells, it is
high in toxic
waste, fat and
cholesterol, and
slow to move
though the colon
because it is
low in fiber.
We know the body
of a dead animal
in hot weather
creates quite a
stench after a
couple days.
This stench
gives us a good
idea of what
meat does inside
the 98.6-degree
temperature of
the body. The
comparison of a
human colon with
the colon of a
true carnivore,
such as a dog,
provides strong
evidence that
humans were not
designed to eat
meat. The colon
of a dog is
smooth and
straight, like a
stove pipe, and
takes a short,
direct route. In
contrast, the
human colon
turns back and
forth along a
convoluted
pathway with
many puckers,
pouches, twists
and turns. The
dog's colon is
designed to
allow a short
transit time for
even
hard-to-digest
meat,
cholesterol and
fat, without
much need for
fiber to move
things along.
In
Diet for a New
America,
John Robbins
points out,
"Dogs, cats and
the other
natural
carnivores do
not get colon
cancer from
high-fat,
low-fiber,
flesh-based
diets. But we do
...The toxins
from putrefying
flesh are not
the problem for
them that they
are for us
because
everything
passes through
them so much
more quickly."
He notes that
colon cancer is
a killer that
affects more
than 20 percent
of American
families, and
his book
provides an
incredible
number of
statistics and
medical studies
proving that the
more meat, the
more fat, the
more cholesterol
and the less
fiber we eat,
the more likely
we are to die of
colon cancer.
Fiber acts as an
intestinal broom
to sweep things
along in the
colon while fat
clogs up the
intestines. It
is vital
to-remember that
all animal
products - meat,
dairy
and eggs -
have zero fiber,
while most are
high in fat. In
addition to
constipation and
increased risk
of colon cancer,
a meat based,
high-fat,
low-fiber diet
can cause a host
of other
colon-related
problems,
including
diverticulosis,
hemorrhoids,
irritable bowel
syndrome,
spastic colon
and
appendicitis.
These are all
problems that
can be caused by
slow-moving,
hard, dry feces,
and can be cured
by something as
simple as a
predominately
raw foods,
vegetarian diet,
which is high in
fiber, low in
fat, and
produces soft,
moist feces that
are easily
eliminated.
An excellent
supplement for
your colon is
Fiber Klenz Plus
from Greenwood
Health Systems.