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Juice Fasting
DOING LESS AND ACCOMPLISHING MORE: A TECHNIQUE FOR
SUCCESSFUL FASTING
1/4 th of what you eat keeps you alive
The other 3/4 th's keeps your
doctor alive.
Americans eat way too much fat, way too much sugar, and way too
much protein. In fact, Americans simply eat too much of everything.
The way out of this dilemma is so easy that we usually miss it: consider
occasionally fasting.
I can almost hear the sound of yet another one of my books being
slammed down, being put back on the shelf, or being quietly
incinerated. While you are warming your hands from the imaginary glow
that these pages would doubtlessly produce, may I continue?
Look: nothing succeeds like success. We could spend all day
talking about the value of fasting, but only you can find out for
yourself what it can do for you. Experience is your best teacher, and
improved health is always the best proof. A fast will cost very little
money, and may well be one of the best things you've ever done for
yourself.
Yes, you cannot accuse me of being in this just for the money,
for not eating is certainly cheap enough. Fasting should be with your
doctor's approval, and is not for growing children, and clearly not for
anyone pregnant or nursing. People who are taking certain medications
and people who have other compelling medical reasons should not fast.
This still leaves the majority of us as more-or-less willing
candidates.
One of the reasons fasting merits your attention is that
anything else is so often ineffective or downright dangerous.
Ever since George Washington's doctors killed him with their
prescriptions (No kidding: Medical and Physical Journal, London,
1800. Volume 3, page 409), people have been seeking LESS HARMFUL
treatments than conventional medicine has offered. A common
"scientific" argument against fasting is that it is always unsafe.
Truly the pot is calling the kettle black when drug-based medicine
criticizes the safety of the therapy that all animals naturally use,
namely fasting. First thing a sick animal does is go off its feed.
Fasting has GOT to be safer than, say cocaine or heroin, don't
you think? Yet each year, doctor-prescribed drugs kill
more Americans than street drugs. Drug Abuse Warning
Network statistics indicate less than 10,000 deaths annually
from illegal drugs. 130,000 Americans actually die in hospitals
each year from prescription medication.
The following is
an approach to safe fasting.
21-DAY CYCLE FOR CLEANSING AND GOOD HEALTH
A "cycle" is made up of an eight day juice fast, three days to
come off the fast, and then ten days on a three-quarters raw food diet.
(8 + 3 + 10 = 21 days.) This really works.
FASTING
First, fast. Eight days may seem like a very long time to go without
food. Actually, for the first day or two of a fast, your body uses up
the food remaining in your digestive tract from previous meals. For the
next couple of days, your body uses stored food reserves from your
liver. This means that a fast doesn't really begin until about the
fifth day. Now an eight day fast is closer to a three day fast, and
attainable by nearly everyone.
(Diabetics and persons on medication
requiring meals should check with their physician, of course.
Fasting is not for children, pregnant women or nursing women. If
there is a medical reason why you should not fast, then don't.
Check with your doctor first.)
Since "fasting" conjures up visions of starvation, it is
important to realize that we are talking about JUICE fasting
here. Freshly made vegetable juices, taken in quantity,
are not a beverage. They are a raw, highly digestible
food. It is ideal to have all the juice you want, without
forcing yourself to drink it. The rules: "When you are
hungry, drink juice. When you are thirsty, drink juice
also."
JUICING
It is generally a good idea to dilute your juice 50/50 with water. If
you can afford filtered water, use it. If not, don't worry... the
goodness of the juices will carry you. Some people, including me, do
not like the taste of diluted juice. An alternative is to drink a glass
of water, then drink a glass of juice. This gives the same effect, and
tastes better. Be sure to drink the water first, for after the juice
you may not want the water as much.
When we say "juice", we generally are referring to vegetable
juice, freshly prepared. Fruit juice tends to be too sweet for
comfortable fasting. However, there is nothing to stop you from
experimenting and coming up with your own best regimen. As long as you
get good results, HOW you get them is secondary.
You cannot buy freshly prepared vegetable juice in any store at
any price... unless they literally juice the vegetables right in front
of your eyes and you drink it down before they make you pay for it!.
Any juice in a carton, can or bottle has been heat treated and was
certainly packaged at least a few hours ago. Even frozen juice is not
fresh, then, is it? This means that you will need one essential and
somewhat expensive appliance: your own juicer.
JUICERS
A juicer is not a blender. A juicer makes juice; a blender makes raw
baby food. There is nothing wrong with blending your foods. If you
found such food to your liking, it would actually be very digestible.
However, to make juice you need to extract the fluid part of the
vegetable along with the vitamins, minerals and enzymes it contains.
Therefore, you need a juice extractor. We are also not referring to a
whirl-top orange juicer, either.
Be sure to get a really good juicer. Good juicers make tastier
juices, faster. Good juicers also clean up more quickly than cheap
juicers. I have no financial connection whatsoever with anyone who
makes or sells a juicer. I do not sell juicers; I only recommend owning
one. I personally like the "Champion" brand juicer. It costs under $300
and might last you 30 years. Basically a motor with teeth, a Champion
will virtually juice a two-by-four. Quick and easy to use and to
clean. I’ve had mine for 15 years now and it is used daily. I did buy
for an extra blade assembly, but haven’t really needed it yet.
There are many cheaper juicers and also many dissatisfied folks
who thought they'd save a buck and now regret that they bought a
"bargain" juicer. If you spend under $150, you will be disappointed
with your purchase within weeks.
Clean-up is easy. The moment you have finished making (and
drinking!) your juice, just rinse the cleanable parts with water and set
them in a dish-drainer rack until the next use. Soap will rarely be
necessary as long as you don't mind the plastic parts of the juicer
gradually becoming the same color as your favorite vegetables.
WHAT TO JUICE
You can juice almost anything you can eat raw. Vegetables are best,
especially carrots, cucumbers, beets, tomatoes, zucchini squash, romaine
lettuce, sprouts, celery and cabbage. You may juice fruits also,
naturally. Freshly made raw apple, grape, and melon juices are
delicious. It is not generally a good idea to juice potatoes, eggplant
or Lima beans (not that you'd want to.)
It is wise to peel vegetables that have been sprayed or waxed,
such as cucumbers. Sprayed fruits are also good to peel before
juicing. Carrots and other underground vegetables often do not need
peeling. Instead, give them a good scrubbing with a nylon-bristle
vegetable brush while rinsing under tap water. Beets are the
exception. Since beet skins are very bitter, it is wise to peel beets
before juicing. A hint to save time: dip the beets for about 20
seconds in boiling water and then peel them... it's much easier.
Your juice will taste the best if you drink it right after
preparing it. I mean within moments! Fresh juice contains a great
amount of raw food enzymes and vitamins, many of which are easily lost
as the juice sits. So don't let it sit! Drink it right down, with the
thought that this is unbelievably good for you.
HOW MUCH JUICE TO DRINK
Drink as much juice as you wish. Remember that it is a food, not
a beverage and that you can have as much as you want. There is little
fear of over doing it. It is, after all, hard to hurt yourself with
vegetables!
A good rule of thumb is to drink three or four eight-ounce glasses
of fresh juice a day (for an adult). The best time is right before a
meal, or between meals. Absorption of and benefit from the juice is
highest then.
You will probably find that you will be urinating more as you
drink more juices. That figures, doesn't it? You are taking in more
liquid. You may also notice that you have more bowel movements now than
you were previously accustomed to. This, too, is to be expected. Your
body may well respond to all this nourishment by "cleaning house" a
bit. More excretory symptoms would be the result. Ever notice how many
trash cans you fill when you clean out the attic, basement or garage?
Why, you hardly noticed all the rubbish you had stored in there until
you went to clean it out. The same is true, by analogy, with your
body.
WHAT JUICES ARE BEST FOR YOU
You may drink those juices that appeal to you the most. To find
out your favorites, try each of them!
CARROT juice is tasty and popular, and two glasses of
carrot juice per day are highly beneficial. There is no need to peel
your carrots if you first scrub them well with a tough brush. I
recommend a vegetable brush with nylon bristles for this purpose. Brush
the daylights out of the carrots while rinsing them under water. This
is quicker than peeling, and is less wasteful.
Carrot juice is very high in vitamin A. The vitamin A in carrots
is actually "provitamin A" or carotene. Carotene is completely
non-toxic, no matter how much you consume. The worst thing that can
happen if you drink a huge amount of carrot juice is that you will turn
orange.
No, really. You see, beta carotene is a natural pigment, a
natural coloring. Excess carotene is stored in your skin until your
body wants it and then turns it into active vitamin A as needed. An
abundance of carotene in your skin makes you look orange. This
condition is called "carotenosis" and is harmless. Okay, it looks odd
to visit the folks (or the doctor) when you are orange. I know: when
our son was little, he LOVED sweet potatoes, carrots and butternut
squash to the point of orange skin. The relatives got a bit worried,
but the coloration disappeared after we limited his orange veggies for a
week or two. So, to get rid of the color, simply back off the carrot
juice (and other orange vegetables) for a while and it will go away.
If someone thinks you are not well, tell them what you are doing. A
doctor who thinks you have jaundice could then understand right away
that you don't. Liver function tests would also confirm your good
health. Naturally, you don't have to turn orange to enjoy the goodness
of carrot juice. You can drink just enough to feel great ...without
looking like a pumpkin!
Some folks have tried canned or bottled carrot juice and they
didn't like it. No wonder! Fresh juice tastes SO much better that
there isn't really any comparison. I have two teenagers who WILL drink
freshly-made carrot juice. Could there possibly be any higher
recommendation than that?
CELERY juice is very tasty, but a bit high in sodium. Use small
amounts of this juice to flavor the others. Juice celery leaves and all
for the most benefit.
CUCUMBER juice is remarkably tasty. It tastes rather different
than a cucumber itself. Perhaps you will find that the taste reminds
you of watermelon. Peel cucumbers before juicing to avoid the waxes
applied to their skins to enhance their shelf life in supermarkets.
ROMAINE LETTUCE or BEAN SPROUTS will make an especially nutritious
juice with a taste that is well worth acquiring. This "green drink" is
loaded with minerals and chlorophyll.
ZUCCHINI SQUASH juiced up tastes better than you'd ever imagine.
Peel first, and enjoy. You may well be the first on your block to be a
zucchini-juice fan. It also keeps the juicer from clogging on
higher-fiber vegetables.
BEET juice is, traditionally, a blood-builder. In days past,
herbalists looked at the blood-red beet as a tonic more so because it
worked, rather than any color similarity. Beets must be peeled before
juicing. Beet skins are very bitter. The beets, on the other hand, are
quite sweet and make great juice. They will also permanently stain your
juicer, so don't try to remove that color by washing. More important,
beet juice will color your bowel movements.
That lovely red color of fresh beets can cause genuine alarm when
it is seen in the toilet water. I know someone who had forgotten that
he'd had beet juice the day before. He could only figure that he had a
terrible case of hemorrhoids when he looked into the toilet and saw that
red, red water. It was the beets, of course. When you have beet juice,
remember not to be alarmed. Beet juice is widely used in the food
industry as a natural coloring agent. You can (literally) see why!
A hint: you will save time if you first carefully dip beets in
boiling water before peeling them.
CABBAGE juice was used by Garnett Cheney, M.D. to cure bleeding
peptic ulcers back in the 1950's. (Cheney, G. (1952) "Vitamin U therapy
of peptic ulcer." California Medicine, 77:4, 248-252) Dr.
Cheney's patients drank a quart of cabbage juice a day and were cured in
less than half the usual time... with no drugs whatsoever. Since then,
cabbage juice has successfully been used for a variety of
gastrointestinal illnesses. Colitis, spastic colon, indigestion,
chronic constipation, certain forms of rectal bleeding and other
conditions seem to respond well to the nutrients in cabbage juice. Dr.
Cheney called its healing factor "Vitamin U" (for unknown). More
recently, the American Cancer Society has urged people to eat more of
the cabbage/broccoli family of vegetables because of their protective
effects against cancer. There may be something to this cabbage juice
idea. It certainly couldn't hurt to try it.
TOMATOES are easily juiced. Do not juice the leaves, vines, or
green tomatoes. Only the red, ripened fruit is good for you. Yes, the
tomato is a fruit. A fruit of a plant is essentially a seed-containing
structure that can be picked without killing the plant. Hmm. This means
that cucumbers, squash and even green beans are all fruits. That's
true. Think of the fun you will have at your next Thanksgiving dinner
when you ask Aunt Xanthippe to "Please pass the fruits" when the only
foods near her are squash and green beans.
This may help ease the minds of those who question whether you
should have fruits and vegetables together at a meal. Since few people
are aware that pumpkin pie, tomato soup, and zucchini bread are all made
out of fruits, why split hairs?
A TIMETABLE
At the beginning of this section we were talking about a 21-day "cycle"
beginning with eight days just on fresh juices, three days to come off
the juice "fast," and then ten days of a 75% raw food diet. This makes
a total cycle duration of three weeks (21 days). Now that you have a
better idea about the juicing segment, let's take a look at the next
steps.
Coming off the juice "fast" is best done by eating lightly for a
while. Fruit, fruit salads, vegetable soups, cottage cheese and other
light foods are appropriate at this point. A good rule of thumb here is
to eat only half as much as you want to at any one time... but eat twice
as often. This is for about three days.
For the ten day 75% raw food diet, you can eat all you want as
long as three-quarters of it is uncooked. For the uncooked part of the
diet, eat fresh, raw vegetables and fruits. Don't forget nuts, too. If
they are raw, they count. Begin each meal with a large salad, perhaps a
fruit salad for breakfast. Then, when you've finished the salad, have
whatever you want within reason. The 25% cooked portion could include
whole grain breads and pasta, brown rice, cooked beans, lentils, cooked
vegetables including potatoes, sweet potatoes, yams, squash and other
foods that you like. Meat is not recommended, nor is chicken or turkey.
One of the best sources of fresh protein is seafood. Fish is a
major source of important oils and other nutrients in addition to
protein. Enjoy it as often as you wish, but avoid breaded or fried
seafood. Shrimp and shellfish are good foods. Generally, it is wise to
avoid eating a catch from questionably polluted waters, such as the
Great Lakes. This is one statement that I look forward to striking from
this writing when our fresh waters are cleaner.
If you don't want to eat seafood, you do not have to. Eggs in
moderation, cheese, unsweetened yogurt, raw cow's milk, goat's milk,
tofu, miso, tempeh, nuts, and especially beans and bean sprouts are all
good protein sources. The issue is not WHERE you get your protein but
ARE YOU getting your protein. If you are not yet a vegetarian, now is
the time to move in that direction. If you currently don't eat meat,
good for you... and remember: get plenty of protein.
When you go out to eat, it's easy to stay right on this program by
eating at salad bars. Remember, try to make the other three-quarters of
your diet fresh and raw.
All the strongest and longest-lived animals on
earth are vegetarians.
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