Showing posts with label constipation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label constipation. Show all posts

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Starch Hurrahs, New Exercise Equipment, Cherry-Almond Smoothie

I hope everyone's having a great weekend. We seem to be perpetually busy right now, and I can't blame the full moon! I can blame these Anchorage trips: we're getting ready to take off again and all the back-and-forth is unsettling. Hopefully after this week, we can start going less frequently.

I've been promising to share my experiences around trying out eating more starch and cutting out PUFAs. I'll talk about the latter next week, but am ready to talk about the starches! As I mentioned before, I felt that I had good reasons for being Carbophobic, between celiac/gluten allergy and the difficulties that I've experienced digesting starch on many occasions, as well as all the claims that equate starch with sugar in the body.

Although I still have to go through candida clearout when I finish with chelating, my sense is that I'm far less rife with yeastie-beasties than I was a year ago. Far fewer yeasty symptoms, and whereas last summer, even yams and beets would upset my stomach, lately they have been my great friends--yams and parsnips especially. And my ND says that I'll still be able to eat those even when cleansing candida.
 I'm not eating a huge amount of it, but am eating some every day, usually at dinner. I'd been tackling the mental portion of Carbophobia by reading a lot of research showing that starch (as opposed to sugar) is good for our bodies. This is per rule #5 in my conversation about ground rules for nutritional research: I'd sucked in a lot of why starch was bad, and come to find out, there was plenty of research showing the opposite was the case!

But here's the gold/paydirt: I just got through my 11th cycle of chelating, eating some starch every day, and had been eating some every day the week before, and I wasn't constipated at all! This was a hallelujah event (and I'm sorry if it's tmi). I'd had the ample experience of ten previous chelation cycles, and in every instance, constipation was one of several major discomforts. It is also one of long-term results of my 'bad and ugly' years of self-mistreatment, and I'd pretty much resigned myself to having to control it with high doses of Magnesium for the rest of my life. Can't take Magnesium during chelation, hence the problem. This last time, no problem at all! I was caught between wanting to sing hallelujah all day every day and not wanting to breathe a word and jinx it!

This feedback from my body is a wonderful gift in two ways at least:
1) It's the first sign I've had in years that my body knows what she's doing and can come back into balance. I've always believed in the self-healing and homeostatic powers of bodies, just not of my own body.
2) It feels so liberating to relax on demonized foods: to think of foods like yams and even bananas as 'good for me' rather than 'something I shouldn't be eating.'

And so, I share a smoothie that made me so happy, I've had to repeat it.
 It's: 1cup almond or coconut milk
        half a frozen banana
        half a cup of frozen cherries
        a handful of greens (this one had cilantro but I couldn't taste it)
        a couple tablespoons irish moss gel
       half a teaspoon sunflower lecithin (tastes gross by itself but is a great emulsifier)
       vanilla
       half a teaspoon almond extract
       spoonful of spirulina
       half a teaspoon of yacon syrup
       bit of coconut oil (it's solid up here, so I just put in a little chunk.)
       dusting of stevia powder
Perhaps it's since I made that marzipan, but the richly cyanided blend of almond and cherry flavors just melts me and delights me. So good! One time I made it with leftover baked yam in place of the banana--and then found that Lori had done something quite similar. I'm also seeing myself heading in a similar culinary direction to the wonderfully talented Pure2Raw ladies: nourishing and delectable combinations of cooked starches with lots of raw food all around.

Of course, per rule #4, I'm not making any long-term conclusions yet, but this feedback that my body can learn to function unassisted is just entrancing. If it can do that, maybe my metabolism can normalize too, and, and.... :)

Moving on to exercise equipment. I love to be outdoors but my work involves being indoors, and sometimes even stubborn old me is deterred by icy winds and sideways snow. I love rebounders and finally bought one recently. The challenge, even with a piece of equipment so small, is how to fit it in our little space!

Here's Phil figuring it out...
It hangs above our heads like a dorky sun-negative with little feet, when not in use. When I want to use it, I unclip the rope and down it comes (easy now!).

I bounce away. It's a blurred pic but you can see I'm smiling!
And yes, it's pretty cold in here, so I'm wearing my hat and heavy booties. Much of what I've been reading about exercise lately is suggesting that short, intense bursts of exercise are the way to go. Having those super-heavy feet is one way of ensuring that I'm gasping and panting and ready to stop after a short but fun bounce.

The pulley is strong enough to support my weight, so I can also hang onto the rope and work my upper body while bouncing. Super-tiring. Phil is a genius!
Do you like exercise that makes you feel like a kid?
What's the best validation you've had from your body recently?