hello i was wondering since vegitarians dont get alot of protein because the main source of protein from meat is gone, is it okay to take protein supplements to maintain your protein levels? or are there other ways of getting protein like beans and cheese?
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suttree
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Hi Duncan
When l go out during the daytime there is always a bag of fruit with me, an apple is a complete meal, its that simple really. At home a meal consists of cider vinegar and olive oil dressings, over chopped tomatoes, onion or garlic, cucumber, celery or fennel, lettuce or spinach, sweet pepper or persimons and grated carrot or sweet potatoe, i change the sauce by adding mustard or mango chutney and even curry paste, sometimes a chopped apple, its all mixed in the bowl i eat from, this can be eaten anytime. Thanks for your kind comments regarding my step-daughter, at one stage she regained 5lb weight on fruit juice alone, in a week, after 6mths of loss, but then returned to her normal diet until the end. You will find it difficult to believe but green juices shrink cancers, try arnoldsway.com, you will love this guy.
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Now that sounds like a much more tangible diet - I can certainly see the attraction on eating a mix of fruit and salads for a day. It's impressive that you eat like that on a regular basis and it does seem a pretty balanced diet too - plenty of fibre, vitamins and so on.
Do you find that still need to take any supplements, like iron for example?
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HI Duncan
l am just eating a bowl of apple carrot and celery, cut into chunks with lime juice drizzled over to prevent oxidation, as far as im concerned, its perfect, as nature intended. Others can add whatever they wish, but i know that some organic minerals, obtained from the soil, such as iron, revert back to their inorganic form when subjected to high temperetures, they are poisons. Cooking with plants is playing at chemistry, the long term effect are sickness and disease, the sun has already cooked them to perfection. Supplements are highly lucrative products, aimed at the sick and disabled, just another product of the greedy processed food industry.
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Just to follow up on this, The Guardian newspaper in the UK have just published an article on raw food. Normally their 'lifestyle' articles are a bit thin on the ground, but this one takes the subject pretty seriously and is a good read:
"I have been challenged by my editor to eat entirely raw for a week, and reading up online has left me veering between mild enthusiasm and intense scepticism. Proponents attribute massive benefits to eating only raw foods, including increased energy, weight loss, emotional balance, and even the prevention of cancer and heart disease. They claim that raw, unprocessed food contains enzymes essential for digestion which are destroyed in the course of cooking - many even believe that cooked food is actively toxic.
[..]
I also have my suspicions, though. One concerns the argument advanced by many raw-foodists that their diet is best for us because the human digestive system was founded on a raw vegan diet. This is disputable - many prehistoric communities (including the Inuit) are thought to have lived primarily on meat and fish, while archaeologists have traced cooking back more than 1.5m years. Even without such evidence, though, these ultra-Luddite arguments annoy me. Many prehistoric humans also lived in caves, never brushed their hair and had a perilously low life expectancy, and I don't fancy that much, either."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/food/story/0,,1947951...
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