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Perfect Health Diet: Regain Health and Lose Weight by Eating the Way You Were Meant to Eat PDF

389 Pages·2012·4.97 MB·English
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Thank you for purchasing this Scribner eBook. Join our mailing list and get updates on new releases, deals, bonus content and other great books from Scribner and Simon & Schuster. CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP or visit us online to sign up at eBookNews.SimonandSchuster.com Contents Foreword by Mark Sisson Preface Part I: An Evolutionary Guide to Healthful Eating 1: Why We Start with an Evolutionary Perspective 2: The Paleolithic Diet 3: The “Cannibal Diet” of Fasting 4: What Breast Milk Teaches Us About Human Diets 5: What Mammalian Diets Teach Us About Human Diets 6: The “Tastes Great!” Diet 7: The Way We Were Meant to Eat Part II: What to Eat for Energy 8: An Economical Approach to Nutrition 9: Protein 10: Carbohydrates 11: The Dangerous Fats: PUFA 12: The Safe Fats: SaFA and MUFA 13: Medium-Chain Fats and Therapeutic Ketogenic Diets 14: Fiber 15: Alcohol 16: The Best Foods for Energy 17: Nutrient Hunger: A Key to Weight Loss Part III: Foods to Avoid 18: Food Toxins 19: The Most Toxic Food: Cereal Grains 20: Almost-Grains: Legumes 21: Liquid Devils: Vegetable Seed Oils 22: The Sweet Toxin: Fructose 23: Toxins Introduced by the Industrial Food System 24: Four Steps to a Low-Toxicity Diet 25: A Traditional Pacific Islander Diet 26: Food Toxins Matter Part IV: How to Be Well Nourished 27: Why Most People Are Malnourished 28: Multivitamins: Good or Bad? 29: Vitamins A, D, and K2 30: Selenium and Iodine 31: Potassium and Sodium 32: Calcium, Collagen, and Magnesium 33: Zinc and Copper 34: Vitamin C 35: Choline and Folic Acid 36: Other Vitamins, Minerals, and Nutrients 37: Micronutrient Recommendations Part V: A Recipe for Healthful Living 38: The Infectious Origins of Disease 39: A Strategy for Immunity 40: Fasting 41: Blood Lipids 42: Circadian Rhythm Enhancement 43: Healthful Weight Loss 44: Meal Plans Perfect Health—for Life Acknowledgments About Paul Jaminet, Ph.D., and Shou-Ching Jaminet, Ph.D Index Notes Dedicated to the memory of Annette Marie Jaminet, Paul’s mother, who died of cancer at age 33, and Tei-Kuang Shih, Shou-Ching’s father, who died of stroke at age 62, and to the hope that disease and premature death will soon be eradicated. Foreword I n writing e Primal Blueprint, my goal was to improve the overall health of the general population—the folks who just want to be healthier, happier, stronger, fitter, and more productive. Most of the complaints, the aches and pains, and the concerns that your mom, your dad, your friends, your grandparents, your coworkers, and you worry about aren’t inevitable. Most health issues can be avoided with just a few simple tweaks to your lifestyle. I try to help guide people toward these changes by showing them what’s worked for me and countless others. I’m a generalist, and that’s how I’ve always been. e world needs generalists. But the world also needs people who delve deeply into the medical and scientific literature, probing for knowledge that can address the specific illnesses and health issues reducing the quality of life—and life span—of people today. Paul and Shou-Ching Jaminet, both trained scientists, are perhaps the finest examples of the type of experts we need. eir book and blog, Perfect Health Diet, represent the culmination of a half decade of rigorous research. ey’ve combed the relevant literature for clues, hints, and knowledge they needed to address their own rapidly deteriorating health. What they found healed their ailments and changed their lives. And what began as a highly specific approach to their own health issues quickly became a more general, overarching approach to good health—for everyone. Anyone and everyone will benefit from their dietary recommendations, but the Jaminets’ advice is particularly relevant for those suffering from health issues that traditional medicine has been unable to treat or improve. If you’re reading this book, you’ve likely had some personal experience with the failings of conventional medicine. Now, I don’t want to sound antimedicine. I’m not. Conventional medical professionals are fantastic technicians and mechanics; they can patch you up, keep you alive, put in new equipment and take out old malfunctioning stuff. ey wield an array of powerful drugs with specific applications, many of them helpful. ey have an immense amount of technology at their behest. And yet many in the world of conventional medicine are missing the big picture—or at least a large part of it. With Paul and Shou-Ching, you have the missing piece. ey bridge the gap between the philosophical, broad-based, almost intuitive ancestral approach to health and the hard-core data hounds who need to see proof at every step. e authors are scientists through and through, an astrophysicist and a molecular biologist, who deftly wield the scepter of cold, hard science while paying homage to the inescapable wisdom of traditional, ancestral, evolutionary health. While we wait for the medical community to catch up and get with the big picture, we’re lucky to have a pair of minds like the Jaminets’ to read, absorb, and learn from in the meantime. is is the future of medicine, of health. It has to be, because it’s the right way to do things, a way of thinking about food and nutrition that helps us to heal and live better lives rather than making us suffer. If history is any indication, eventually we do get it right. A consensus forms and is broken; this process might repeat several times over many decades (or longer), but it eventually coalesces behind what is truly right. We’re reaching that moment. We started as a fledgling group of athletes, scientists, doctors, patients, parents, and skeptics who found something that seemed to work really, really well. And so we shouted it from our keyboards. We wrote books. People read our words, implemented the advice they advocated, and saw their health transform before their eyes. Now, I’m not sure we’re quite yet out of the fledgling stage, but we’re growing. You can’t deny that. is, the newest edition of Perfect Health Diet, is helping lead the charge. By reading this book, you are taking part in a new (yet ancestral), radical (yet reasonable) movement toward better health. For that, I thank you, and I look eagerly toward what lies ahead. Mark Sisson Author of The Primal Blueprint, publisher of Marksdailyapple.com Preface W e are two scientists who ate poorly and ignored a gradual decline in our health. By age forty, we had developed disturbing health problems: • Paul had neuropathy, memory loss, impaired mood, physical sluggishness, and rosacea. • Shou-Ching had painful endometriosis, ovarian cysts, and uterine fibroids; hypothyroidism; allergies; constipation, acid reflux, and bloating. Doctors were of little help. Nothing we tried worked; surgery made Shou-Ching worse. Medical professionals couldn’t even offer a reason why we were experiencing these problems. Yet, every year, we were a little worse than the year before. en, in 2005, we tried Chinese herbal medicines: twigs, bark, seeds, and leaves prepared at home like a tea. They seemed to work, but we both developed allergic reactions to the medicine and had to stop. at planted an idea: if medicines had no effect but a tea made from plants did, perhaps the path forward lay in what we were eating—in our diets. Paul was then developing a new approach to economics, a theory of relationships and social networks (see relationshipeconomics.com). rough the economist Craig Newmark, Paul learned of the low-carb Paleo diet of the economist Art de Vany. e Paleo idea is that we evolved for 2.6 million years eating hunted animals and foraged plants and that these remain our most healthful foods. It is supported by evidence: robustly healthy Paleolithic skeletons were succeeded by unhealthy skeletons with cavity-riddled teeth after the invention of agriculture,1 and some modern hunter-gatherers are entirely free of cardiovascular disease—for instance, the islanders of Kitava on their diet of coconut, yams, taro, and fish.2 We were persuaded to give the Paleo diet a try. Paul became leaner and stronger. Shou-Ching’s allergies and digestive problems cleared. Clearly there was something to this diet. But new problems appeared. Paul developed a systemic fungal infection; over the next year his cognitive and neuropathic issues worsened, and after a year of very-low-carb dieting, he developed scurvy, which caused his weight to drop to a mere 145 pounds. e scurvy was a wake-up call: if we were malnourished in one nutrient, we were probably malnourished in others. As scientists, it was natural to us to turn to the biomedical literature for answers. Since the quality of our lives was at stake, we undertook to scour the literature, fine-tuning our diet to provide the optimal amount of each nutrient. This occupied the next five years. In 2009, Paul traced his neurological problems to a chronic bacterial infection; a course of antibiotics cleared it. Our health kept getting better; we began to feel as though we were in our twenties again. The Perfect Health Diet Is Born Five years of arduous research had finally led us to a healthful diet. We were convinced that our work could help others and felt obliged to share what we had learned. So in June 2010 we started a blog and self- published a book spelling out our ideas and the reasoning and evidence that had led us to them.

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.