---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote :

 What kind-a doctor was she before?
 

She was a fake "website" doctor, just fill in a questionaire on herbal myths, 
pay a few bucks and your diploma is in the post.
 

 She had a thriving business selling all sorts of wonder foods in powdered form 
to add to your muesli, she still does actually just without the title to 
bamboozle the unwary,
 From: salyavin808 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Sunday, December 7, 2014 8:07 AM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] You can’t detox your bo dy. It’s a myth. So how 
do you get healthy?
 
 
   

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote :

 I once knew some folks who were into their particular "liver cleanse," during 
which they fasted a short bit, then drank down a combination of lemon juice, 
olive oil, and Colosan (a natural colon cleanser). This would supposedly clean 
out years of accumulated gunk in your liver, which would appear magically in 
their toilet as green-colored globules of gick, after which all who tried this 
cleansing routine raved about how much better and more energetic they felt. 
They swore by this routine, and recommended it to others.

 

 Turns out the green-colored globules of gick are just what happens to olive 
oil when you mix it with lemon juice and ingest it. They were "cleansing 
themselves" of exactly the thing they had ingested a few hours earlier. :-)

 

 In a similar vein the Guardian's Bad Science columnist Ben Goldacre once 
tested a lot of popular, and expensive, detox products.
 

 He did it by having all his usual bodily excressences analysed both before and 
after taking many of these supposedly cleansing substances, and he found there 
wasn't anything there that wasn't there before. You'd think there would be 
something to show for all the expensive rituals. 
 

 He ruined many a promising new age health "experts" career by hounding them 
with the results of his data. "Dr" Gillian McKeith doesn't call herself a 
doctor any more because of him.
 

 This whole conversation is starting to make me feel good about continuing my 
chocolate and mince pie consumption well into the new year. Oh yes.

 From: "Michael Jackson mjackson74@... [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> 
 Sent: Sunday, December 7, 2014 1:40 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] You can’t detox your body. It’s a myth. So how do 
you get healthy?
 
 
   
 I used to know an medical doctor who also was a TM'er. He was a pathologist 
and said that in doing autopsies on several hundred people over the years he 
had yet to see any of the alleged "encrusted crud" in colons. He said it just 
doesn't exist. All the "crud" that comes out from cleansing diets is the clay 
etc people are eating and drinking to clean themselves out. This was a guy who 
had also taken the TM ayurveda training in pulse diagnoses. 
 

 


 From: "Share Long sharelong60@... [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> 
 Sent: Sunday, December 7, 2014 7:27 AM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] You can’t detox your body. It’s a myth. So how do 
you get healthy?
 
 
   
 Thanks, Eustace, fascinating article. I prefer a safe and gentle route for all 
this which consists of drinking plenty of water. Though years ago I read that 
when John Wayne died they discovered (gross alert) I think it was 27 pounds of 
encrusted crud in his colon! 

 

 From: eustace10679 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Sunday, December 7, 2014 3:54 AM
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] You can’t detox your body. It’s a myth. So how do you 
get healthy?
 
 
   
 There’s no such thing as ‘detoxing’. In medical terms, it’s a nonsense. Diet 
and exercise is the only way to get healthy. But which of the latest fad 
regimes can really make a difference? We look at the facts

 
Friday 5 December 2014 04.00 EST
 

 Whether it’s cucumbers splashing into water or models sitting smugly next to a 
pile of vegetables, it’s tough not to be sucked in by the detox industry. The 
idea that you can wash away your calorific sins is the perfect antidote to our 
fast-food lifestyles and alcohol-lubricated social lives. But before you dust 
off that juicer or take the first tentative steps towards a colonic irrigation 
clinic, there’s something you should know: detoxing – the idea that you can 
flush your system of impurities and leave your organs squeaky clean and raring 
to go – is a scam. It’s a pseudo-medical concept designed to sell you things.

“Let’s be clear,” says Edzard Ernst, emeritus professor of complementary 
medicine at Exeter University, “there are two types of detox: one is 
respectable and the other isn’t.” The respectable one, he says, is the medical 
treatment of people with life-threatening drug addictions. “The other is the 
word being hijacked by entrepreneurs, quacks and charlatans to sell a bogus 
treatment that allegedly detoxifies your body of toxins you’re supposed to have 
accumulated.”

If toxins did build up in a way your body couldn’t excrete, he says, you’d 
likely be dead or in need of serious medical intervention. “The healthy body 
has kidneys, a liver, skin, even lungs that are detoxifying as we speak,” he 
says. “There is no known way – certainly not through detox treatments – to make 
something that works perfectly well in a healthy body work better.”

Much of the sales patter revolves around “toxins”: poisonous substances that 
you ingest or inhale. But it’s not clear exactly what these toxins are. If they 
were named they could be measured before and after treatment to test 
effectiveness. Yet, much like floaters in your eye, try to focus on these 
toxins and they scamper from view. In 2009, a network of scientists assembled 
by the UK charity Sense about Science contacted the manufacturers of 15 
products sold in pharmacies and supermarkets that claimed to detoxify. The 
products ranged from dietary supplements to smoothies and shampoos. When the 
scientists asked for evidence behind the claims, not one of the manufacturers 
could define what they meant by detoxification, let alone name the toxins.

Yet, inexplicably, the shelves of health food stores are still packed with 
products bearing the word “detox” – it’s the marketing equivalent of drawing 
go-faster stripes on your car. You can buy detoxifying tablets, tinctures, tea 
bags, face masks, bath salts, hair brushes, shampoos, body gels and even hair 
straighteners. Yoga, luxury retreats, and massages will also all erroneously 
promise to detoxify. You can go on a seven-day detox diet and you’ll probably 
lose weight, but that’s nothing to do with toxins, it’s because you would have 
starved yourself for a week.

Then there’s colonic irrigation. Its proponents will tell you that mischievous 
plaques of impacted poo can lurk in your colon for months or years and pump 
disease-causing toxins back into your system. Pay them a small fee, though, and 
they’ll insert a hose up your bottom and wash them all away. Unfortunately for 
them – and possibly fortunately for you – no doctor has ever seen one of these 
mythical plaques, and many warn against having the procedure done, saying that 
it can perforate your bowel.

Other tactics are more insidious. Some colon-cleansing tablets contain a 
polymerising agent that turns your faeces into something like a plastic, so 
that when a massive rubbery poo snake slithers into your toilet you can stare 
back at it and feel vindicated in your purchase. Detoxing foot pads turn brown 
overnight with what manufacturers claim is toxic sludge drawn from your body. 
This sludge is nothing of the sort – a substance in the pads turns brown when 
it mixes with water from your sweat.

“It’s a scandal,” fumes Ernst. “It’s criminal exploitation of the gullible man 
on the street and it sort of keys into something that we all would love to have 
– a simple remedy that frees us of our sins, so to speak. It’s nice to think 
that it could exist but unfortunately it doesn’t.”

That the concept of detoxification is so nebulous might be why it has evaded 
public suspicion. When most of us utter the word detox, it’s usually when we’re 
bleary eyed and stumbling out of the wrong end of a heavy weekend. In this 
case, surely, a detox from alcohol is a good thing? “It’s definitely good to 
have non-alcohol days as part of your lifestyle,” says Catherine Collins, an 
NHS dietitian at St George’s Hospital. “It’ll probably give you a chance to 
reassess your drinking habits if you’re drinking too much. But the idea that 
your liver somehow needs to be ‘cleansed’ is ridiculous.”

The liver breaks down alcohol in a two-step process. Enzymes in the liver first 
convert alcohol to acetaldehyde, a very toxic substance that damages liver 
cells. It is then almost immediately converted into carbon dioxide and water 
which the body gets rid of. Drinking too much can overwhelm these enzymes and 
the acetaldehyde buildup will lead to liver damage. Moderate and occasional 
drinking, though, might have a protective effect. Population studies, says 
Collins, have shown that teetotallers and those who drink alcohol excessively 
have a shorter life expectancy than people who drink moderately and in small 
amounts.

“We know that a little bit of alcohol seems to be helpful,” she says. “Maybe 
because its sedative effect relaxes you slightly or because it keeps the liver 
primed with these detoxifying enzymes to help deal with other toxins you’ve 
consumed. That’s why the government guidelines don’t say, ‘Don’t drink’; they 
say, ‘OK drink, but only modestly.’ It’s like a little of what doesn’t kill you 
cures you.”

This adage also applies in an unexpected place – to broccoli, the luvvie of the 
high-street “superfood” detox salad. Broccoli does help the liver out but, 
unlike the broad-shouldered, cape-wearing image that its superfood moniker 
suggests, it is no hero. Broccoli, as with all brassicas – sprouts, mustard 
plants, cabbages – contains cyanide. Eating it provides a tiny bit of poison 
that, like alcohol, primes the enzymes in your liver to deal better with any 
other poisons.

Collins guffaws at the notion of superfoods. “Most people think that you should 
restrict or pay particular attention to certain food groups, but this is 
totally not the case,” she says. “The ultimate lifestyle ‘detox’ is not 
smoking, exercising and enjoying a healthy balanced diet like the Mediterranean 
diet.”

Close your eyes, if you will, and imagine a Mediterranean diet. A red chequered 
table cloth adorned with meats, fish, olive oil, cheeses, salads, wholegrain 
cereals, nuts and fruits. All these foods give the protein, amino acids, 
unsaturated fats, fibre, starches, vitamins and minerals to keep the body – and 
your immune system, the biggest protector from ill-health – functioning 
perfectly.

So why, then, with such a feast available on doctor’s orders, do we feel the 
need to punish ourselves to be healthy? Are we hard-wired to want to detox, 
given that many of the oldest religions practise fasting and purification? Has 
the scientific awakening shunted bad spirits to the periphery and replaced them 
with environmental toxins that we think we have to purge ourselves of?

Susan Marchant-Haycox, a London psychologist, doesn’t think so. “Trying to tie 
detoxing in with ancient religious practices is clutching at straws,” she says. 
“You need to look at our social makeup over the very recent past. In the 70s, 
you had all these gyms popping up, and from there we’ve had the proliferation 
of the beauty and diet industry with people becoming more aware of certain food 
groups and so on.

“The detox industry is just a follow-on from that. There’s a lot of money in it 
and there are lots of people out there in marketing making a lot of money.”

Peter Ayton, a professor of psychology at City University London, agrees. He 
says that we’re susceptible to such gimmicks because we live in a world with so 
much information we’re happy to defer responsibility to others who might 
understand things better. “To understand even shampoo you need to have PhD in 
biochemistry,” he says, “but a lot of people don’t have that. If it seems 
reasonable and plausible and invokes a familiar concept, like detoxing, then 
we’re happy to go with it.”

Many of our consumer decisions, he adds, are made in ignorance and supposition, 
which is rarely challenged or informed. “People assume that the world is 
carefully regulated and that there are benign institutions guarding them from 
making any kind of errors. A lot of marketing drip-feeds that idea, 
surreptitiously. So if people see somebody with apparently the right 
credentials, they think they’re listening to a respectable medic and trust 
their advice.”

Ernst is less forgiving: “Ask trading standards what they’re doing about it. 
Anyone who says, ‘I have a detox treatment’ is profiting from a false claim and 
is by definition a crook. And it shouldn’t be left to scientists and charities 
to go after crooks.”

 

 You can’t detox your body. It’s a myth. So how do you get healthy? 
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/dec/05/detox-myth-health-diet-science-ignorance?CMP=ema_565

 
 
 
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/dec/05/detox-myth-health-diet-science-ignorance?CMP=ema_565
 
 You can’t detox your body. It’s a myth. So how ... 
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/dec/05/detox-myth-health-diet-science-ignorance?CMP=ema_565
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