Killing Off the Good Guys – Radical Harmony Food

Antibiotics and Veggies

When I was a child, penicillin was discovered.  Soon it became commonplace.   The words “wonder drug” were used almost interchangeably with antibiotic.

I took my fair share of that pink liquid, mostly for earaches, sometimes for strep throat. It truly seemed wondrous.

I also lived through the DDT era, where DDT was a commonplace insecticide applied all around me, to the fields and crops near my home.  Until Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring, and enough people woke up to realize that wonder-chemicals sometimes have a dark side.

Sometimes it’s said, “It ain’t what we don’t know that’s the problem… it’s what we know for sure that just ain’t so.”   So here’s what I’ve been learning about what I thought I knew for sure.

Antibiotics and VeggiesA week ago, I was attacked by a cat which sent me to the ER where I was prescribed a double course of antibiotics to prevent infection. I was grateful for the medication and took it as directed.  But here’s what I know now that I didn’t know a few weeks ago. Because of my recent studies (about food and the microbiome), I was intensely aware of what I was doing to my GOOD bacteria, while I was knocking out the (potential) bad ones.

Talk about collateral damage – that euphemism for “ooops… sorry ‘bout that…”

First – according to a number of sources (verified by Pulitzer Prize winning Politifact) – 80% of the antibiotics created for humans and food animals are fed to food animals.  Most of these are the same drugs.  Some of that 80% may be used for treating illness, but the majority of it is used – get this – to fatten them up.  To cause them to gain weight.

Whoa!   There’s a lot of stuff wrong there… it’s known that resistant super-bugs are developing in response to overuse and misuse of antibiotics.  That’s one issue.   Another is that we are eating meat from animals that were using antibiotics.  A third one is – did you notice? – the animals are fed “preventive doses” of the same medicines we are taking for illnesses – “to fatten them up.”

Second – that antibiotic we take – to treat or prevent infection or illness – kills all our good guys too.  Yep.  It kills off the wonderful bacteria that are digesting our food for us, breaking it down so when it goes into our intestine it’s ready for the next steps, separating the nutrients from the fiber and waste, and creating a healthy nourishment for the body we want.   But wait.  We just killed many of these good guys…ooops?!  Now what?

When it’s necessary to take antibiotics – and I felt it was for me with this cat attack – we deal with it.   So all through the course of the antibiotic I kept eating my probiotics and prebiotics both.  By the end of the 7 days, however, I’d gained 3 pounds, when my weight been very stable before.  And my vision had deteriorated quickly as well.

Evidence?  Or all in my head?  I’m not sure, but I’m eating everything I know to rebuild my microbiome.

Here’s what Dr. Raphael Kellman (MD) says:  “I know it’s challenging to wrap your mind around the idea that there is a whole other ecology within your body, an ecology that is not human but nevertheless an essential part of you as well as a crucial aspect of your health.  

“And yet, it’s true. The health of your microbiome determines the quality of YOUR health, and without your microbiome you couldn’t survive.  In fact, without your microbiome you would no longer be you, just as you would no longer be you without your brain or your heart.” 

(From The Microbiome Diet, by Dr. Raphael Kellman MD)

So what to do?   Double – no, quadruple – your vegetable intake.   Eliminate all processed/packaged/pre-made foods (make your own).  Get rid of sugars (except in fruit) and, for the most part, get rid of grains.  (Study it – then conduct your own lab experiments with your body – you’ll see why.)  Then add a lot of fermented vegetables and other foods.

Oh, and avoid antibiotics as much as possible. Educate yourself.

It’s worth it to work with, instead of against, this amazing organ/organism that is part of who you are.   The microbiome.

Radical Harmony – Gut Garden

I have a friend who is nursing her wounds, today, from taking her positive living, inspirational blog into the realm of politics-with-humor, yesterday.   Her feel-good readers didn’t all feel good about what she wrote and let her know with a barrage of criticism.   She has written a warm and candid response and will go on to write another day.  Read Pam Grout’s Blog here

But, in her actions, she has inspired me to do what Spirit has been nudging me to do for quite some time now – to use my platform, Radical Harmony, to write about food.

Yes.  Food.  Believe me, it’s every bit as controversial as politics and a lot more up close and personal.

But with Pam as Chief Role Model and Inspirer, here I go.

I’ve had a health issue – double vision –  that was originally infrequent, but the last 3-4 years has become nearly constant, with brief remissions.  I have long felt it had to do with my eating, and with stress – as well as the metaphysical side:  “What are you not willing to look at?”  Or more accurately, “Are you seeing two worlds, instead of One?”   or something….

My desire to heal completely from this is passionate.  Yes, I’ve had the MRI (nothing), the blood tests (nothing of consequence) and regular doctors shaking their heads.

Fast forward.  About 6 weeks ago, I declared that I was going to follow my intuition and learn all I could learn about my gut and what is going on down there.  I ordered books from Amazon and from my library and began to read, and slowly, implement what I’m learning.

My eyes got better, fast.  And other symptoms too – like small painful cracks in my fingertip skin.     And then, they got worse.  But, this time, more predictable.  I’m keeping records of what I’m experiencing and of the way I’m eating.

The story is too long for here, but here’s the nugget:  in your gut – intestine – live trillions of microscopic bacteria which digest your food, govern your appetite, influence your mood, and so much more.

It’s called the MicroBiome.  By numbers and by influence, it is way more powerful than “you.”   And yet, we don’t even know it’s there, much less learn how to manage it well so that we can live happy healthy lives.

Author and MD Dr. Raphael Kellman likens it to Dr. Seuss’s “Who-ville,” and himself to Horton, who can “hear” this tiny world (Remember Horton Hears a Who?).  My husband Stan (Slaughter) is a long-time compost/soil educator and he knows very well the secret microscopic world of the soil – from which our plants – our food – get their nutrients, or not.   So he and I have lively discussions about what will best benefit our personal Gut Gardens.

Know what else?  This huge-tiny world of bacteria can change entirely within hours – depending on what you are feeding them.  Each little guy (bacteria) may have a life-span of only 20 minutes.  So when you feed the “good guys” you get more of them reproducing more buddies like themselves.  When you feed the “bad guys” – the ones who produce inflammation and allergic responses – they also multiply, and then demand more of the foods they want you to eat.   Yes, they influence our appetites.

So to those who say “I can eat anything!” I say, “Fine! You and your microbiome are doing well – at the moment.  Enjoy.”   But to anyone listening, I say… omg.  This is an astonishing and powerful world within… a world that can produce healing – or disease.

Hippocrates said “All disease begins in the gut.”  He must have known something about the microbiome.