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by author Peter Bennett, ND
Twenty years ago, I learned about fasting from two books: Arnold Eheret’s Rational Fasting (1914) and Frank McCoy’s The Fast Way To Health (1923). These books emphasized the healing abilities of the body if it can rest in a fasting state. I first tried my own extended water fast of nine days while I was on a personal retreat. I was impressed with what just drinking water could do. I had a clearer mind and my energy level was greatly increased. Most importantly, I felt regenerated and renewed. Now, I often recommend water fasting for my patients, especially for chronic health problems and as a yearly spring “tune-up.” Tried and True Healing Fasting is the oldest healing method known to civilization. Not only used by Ayurvedic and ancient Greek physicians, fasting has been discussed in the Bible and the Koran, and popularized by the “physical culturists” of the 19th century. Today, research shows fasting alleviates autoimmune disease, atherosclerosis, diabetes, epilepsy, leaky gut, obesity, pancreatitis, and chemical poisoning (PCB and DDT). My own clinical experience has shown fasting slows aging, improves liver function, improves mental functioning, and alleviates, and possibly cures, arthritis. The “Fast” Way to Slow Aging For hundreds of years, Europeans have been using annual spa retreats to refresh and renew their health through fasting and hydrotherapy. Clinical experience has demonstrated the benefits of this protocol. Recent research shows that rational diet restriction in the form of short fasts may be the most powerful way known to humans to extend life span. In fact, fasting is the only documented “alternative health” method to extend life span. Studies have shown that high glucose and insulin damages mitochondria through oxidative stress, which causes aging. Diet restriction (fasting) reduces this stress. A Livelier Liver Fasting enhances the liver’s ability to clear out metabolic flotsam from the bloodstream. As blood is filtered through the liver, toxins are scavenged, neutralized, and reassembled for elimination. Because of the way in which many of us eat and live, the liver can become sluggish and congested. Constant exposure to a lifetime of toxins, nutrient-poor diets high in hydrogenated fats, and a leaky gut are among the primary causes of liver burnout. Fasting regenerates the liver’s ability to function in a healthy way. But, be careful, because long- term fasting or fasting in a polluted environment can go the wrong way and actually cause accelerated liver disease. Always fast for short periods of time (e.g., two days to ten days) in as pure an environment as possible and take vitamin C during your fasts - one to four grams daily, depending upon bowel tolerance, will suffice. Clean the Blood, Clear the Mind Fasting sharpens the mind and purifies the soul. People who fast report a sense of renewal. Fasting allows the liver to clean the blood, which can then deliver pure uncontaminated “fuel” to the brain. If the liver can’t clean out the “flotsam and jetsam” of the blood then recycled chemical messengers like adrenaline and other stress hormones have a second chance to restimulate the nervous system. Several studies have shown that as liver toxicity increases, we fail to break down drug-like compounds, which creates a toxic state that is truly intoxicating! Power Up the Immune Function Fasting rests the intestines and liver, both key sites of immune function. Sixty percent of our immune system resides in our intestines. When you rest the intestines with fasting, you potentiate a healthy immune system. One study showed that a fast of 36 or 60 hours significantly increases the power of the white blood cells to destroy dangerous bacteria. Alleviate Arthritis
Peter Bennett, ND, is a board-certified acupuncturist and naturopathic physician and is currently medical director of Helios Clinic in Victoria, BC, where he supervises detoxification and performance wellness programs. Web site: peterbennett.com. Source: alive #257, March 2004 |
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