Friday, February 15, 2013

Here we go!

Welcome to the beginning of my blog.  :)  It's mainly going to be recipes, but with little health and nutrition bits thrown in as well.

I honestly don't expect that many people will read this blog, but I'm doing it both for the few that may and also so I can have a place to keep track of information, pictures, and recipes as I learn more and make more things.

But first, some history.

Before I got pregnant, I was having all kinds of health issues. I had endometriosis that kept me out of work at least one day every month. I had to give multiple urine samples and have cyctoscopies for unexplained blood in my urine, not to mention the pain that came with it. X-rays showed that my joints were swollen and looked like early rheumatoid arthritis. I had upper GIs and EKGs to try and figure out why I kept getting such a bad sharp pain in my chest. I was tested for lupus and Lyme disease, among others. I got frequent sinus infections, stomach bugs, and colds. My body always seemed to have pains and issues, but doctors could never seem to figure out what was causing them. I knew I wasn't making up all of these ailments, but with no diagnosis for many of them, I just felt like I was going crazy.

Then, a year after we got married, I got pregnant. This seemed to help some of those things (the endo and the blood in the urine, mainly), but I still felt like I wanted and needed to be healthy, especially now that I was growing another little person inside of me. So I started reading and researching online and began to learn about the link between what we eat and how our body functions, and not just in relation to the GI tract. I was hearing (and/or paying attention to) a lot of this stuff for the first time and I was just at the very tip of the iceberg. To be honest, I really didn't eat healthfully during my pregnancy. I've always loved almost anything containing cheese and/or sour cream. I have never been a huge red meat eater, but would eat a pretty decent amount of chicken and deli meats. I adored pasta and breads. I would polish off a box of cereal and a gallon of milk by myself every week. I could probably also go through a whole carton of eggs myself in a week if I wanted to. And I had a killer sweet tooth. I've always loved fruit, but didn't eat much veggies, beans, nuts, or seeds in my diet at all. But that would begin to change.  :)

Not long after Asher was born, I heard about Dr. Joel Fuhrman, both from the Joe Cross film Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead and through my mom. At first I thought he might be something hokey - just another one of those diet guys who was all about weight loss and had a really restrictive plan to follow. But once I went to his site and started reading, I realized that what he said actually made a lot of sense. His approach wasn't just about losing weight; he focused on having good health. He talked about preventing and reversing ailments and diseases and looking and feeling your best. I liked the way he explained why certain things are good for you and why others aren't. I liked that there were no restrictions on portions and that there were vast options of everything you could/should eat (even if they weren't things I was used to eating at the time). I wanted to find out more...

So I did. I read the books Eat to Live, Super Immunity, and Disease-Proof Your Child. I watched documentaries like Food, Inc., Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead, Forks Over Knives, and Crazy Sexy Cancer. I found numerous web sites and blogs that talked about nutrition and health and just became a sponge to all this information. I began to realize I had more control over my health and my body than I had thought. And I realized that I wanted my son (and any future children) to grow up knowing these things and living well -- because it's not necessarily the same as what mainstream society tells you is healthy.

Now we don't buy cow's milk or cereal at all anymore, with the exception of plain cheerios as the occasional treat for Asher. We very rarely purchase any cheese, yogurt, pasta, meat, or sweets. The only bread we buy is organic multi-grain bread or whole wheat pitas (sometimes I make my own too), and we don't eat tons of it. No granola bars, crackers, chips, or other packaged, processed foods. Nothing in the freezer besides fruits, veggies, and milled flax seed.

But I really don't like to focus on what we don't eat... The point of "nutritarian eating", as Dr. Fuhrman calls it, is focusing on what you do eat -- the clean, whole foods that God gave us that are super beneficial to your body and make you feel great! There are so many of them, and you really can learn to cook filling, satisfying, delicious meals without adding in much or any meat, dairy, oils, sugars, flour, etc. I'll also add that I'm definitely not "there" yet. I'm still learning and still trying to eat more of the way I should, and sometimes it's hard on a busy schedule or a tight budget. But it can be done. It's just like anything else -- we end up accomplishing our true priorities. 

Oh, and if you are wondering about how changing our eating has affected our health, my endometriosis has stayed away (so far). I no longer have all of the bladder issues, although I've noticed if I do stray from my healthy eating for more than a few days it will get a bit irritated again. I don't have the joint issues, the chest pain, the abdominal pain, the feeling crappy all the time. I have more energy. Aside from something irritating my allergies, I've only been sick three times since December of 2009 - I had a fever for one day, a stomach bug (or food poisoning?) for one day, and a minor cold for a few days... BIG difference from how it used to be!!

I breastfed Asher for 14 months (exclusively for the first 6) and have fed him a nutritarian diet his whole life, and he's only been "sick sick" a couple times, and those were only for a day, two at most. We've never had to give him antibiotics. The few times he has caught a cold, it's been nothing but a drippy nose or minor cough for several days with no other symptoms. So from my experience in our own family, eating this way really works! It doesn't mean we never get sick, but it seems to happen a lot less for us and be a lot less severe. Plus the benefits for our bodies in the future are great!

I'll stop there for now, but that gives most of the background on why I'm doing this and how we got to where we are. I hope other people who may look at this blog can learn how to be healthier too and find some new foods and recipes that they really enjoy as much as we do!

1 comment:

  1. WOW. That is AWESOME, Brielle!!! This is Jamie Foo. Thank you SO much for taking the time to do this. I'm really into food and nutrition, although I don't know a ton about it and have never looked into any of those shows/movies/books and have never cut out the foods you mentioned. I'm just mostly big on eating fruits & veggies every day, avoiding simple carbs, alcohol, and stuff high in saturated fat (unless I'm eating something at a joint which is once every 2 weeks- then I just eat one thing high in saturated fat and have a drink), and drinking lots of water. I also avoid stuff w/refined sugar and steer CLEAR of HFCS & partially hydrogenated oils since I only have a real sweet tooth for fruity stuff anyway.

    I had gastritis as a 6th grader, b/c of the stress I went thru that year, but it stabilized tho I've always had indigestion when really stressed since then. However, after getting into grad school 2 yrs ago, my stress levels shot up a lot and I would also forget to eat dinner til pretty late sometimes. Since then, I've had a lot of indigestion every week (lots of stomach gurgling, gas jumping around in my GI tract, stomach feeling upset, and when I go it's diarrhea). Red wine seems to irritate it like nothing else (weird since I eat other acidic stuff w/no problem). So I've been interested in upping my GI-friendly food habits for the new year and buying only hormone-free meat and going organic when it comes to thin skinned-fruits. I don't know if I could ever avoid all the stuff you now avoid, but I'd be interested in learning about the reasons you avoid them and am open to heading in that direction if it will help me too. So proud of you and the changes you've made for your family and yourself. I remember being really worried about you when we were in college b/c of your eating habits, but I'm so happy for you w/how far you've come! Can't wait to see what else you post! I'll be following you every week and you can bet I'll be recommending your site to friends! =D

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