Natural medicine vs Holistic Medicine

Natural medicine vs western medicine vs wholistic medicine. I call it wholistic as to not be confused with anything in the Bible, Koran, Kabbala etc.
It is my understanding from 20+ years in the field of health that natural medicine is the use of natural remedies instead of drugs. This is easy to understand, self prescribe and there is a tremendous amount of literature written about which herb or remedies work for which symptom. You go to a Dr tell him what your symptoms are or he runs tests or both and tells you what you need to take. Prescription or natural remedy the process is the same. Many people just enter their symptoms into the internet and get either the list of drugs or the list of herbs to take. Again the process is the same.The symptom needs a remedy.
As I write a comprehensive book on the wholistic thought process, I am constantly plagued with questions for instance what do I take (natural) for recurring bladder infections. My answer will always be “we need to resolve the reason why you get them, not make the symptoms go away each time”. I am always happy to help a symptom but my soul is here to help find the reason. Wholistic. We have to look at everything to figure out why, what’s the trigger, what’s the weakness, or what is too dominant. I will give one example of each and there are so many examples of each of these to explore. A trigger can be the hormonal changes that happen when your menses begin, a weakness can be worry that uses up your energy to fight things, the dominance can be a mean boss that keeps you in fear. These are examples and then knowing which is the cause helps figure the remedy. Let us use again one example, worry. How does one stop worrying? Each person must individually search and find a remedy for that. Meditation helps me and many others, do some soul searching like asking yourself what to do. You will be surprised!
Back to wholistic thinking. Given that I see natural medicine as being very much a western medical way of thinking (I am not adverse to western medicine by the way) I will encourage you all to broaden your thoughts from symptomatic prescribing to the bigger picture.

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Is Holistic Medicine turning western?

Are holistic (or wholistic as I call it) practitioners just practicing western medicine with natural products?

I am posed with this observation almost daily, as a patient walks in and tells me their practitioner told them to take …. for … I am sickened by the neglect and the repetition of the same treatment to just about everyone..

A day at my office… 4 patients that I have seen that have visited this same unnamed person, all came out with the same DETOX..wow $385 for products alone. Part of me has a tinge of admiration that they can make so much profit in one day, the other part of me is appalled because I KNOW they don’t all have the same diagnosis. Now Holistic medicine should look at the whole, in my opinion that would mean not everyone gets the same thing. Wow, now we all have parasites, dirty colons, and dirty livers. Yet another practitioner I know of puts everyone on a heavy metal detox. Are these people just in it for the buck or do they believe themselves?

One of the prescriptions of natural products includes wormwood a known anti parasitic. There are two different kinds of wormwood which one did you get? Hmmm it just says wormwood. Used in summer fevers (due to its Cold property) or heat in the joints (a feeling) these two types of wormwood are wonderful for these disorders. Let us look Holistically at this herb. A bitter, cold herb effecting the Kidney, Liver and Gallbladder (this is Chinese medicine) useful for fevers caused by a heat condition (some parasites are heat conditions like malaria) Good for bleeding from heat like summer nosebleeds. Great for the runs like the ones you get when you drink the water on vacation. It is not just a cold herb you give for heat.. it is for specific types of heat. Now 5 years post parasite cleansing treatment a client walks in. His immune system wont fight anything, he has pimples, styes, tight tendons (inflexible) and upon diagnosis I find Cold stagnation, no flow either in the lung or large intestine, very damaged spleen energy, and a man that has followed so many different practitioners protocols that I wonder if I can help him regain his life back. Now I used to think this was only from western medicine. Well… I am so saddened that this is happening in our field of alternative, natural medicine. Another client went to a “famous” natural practitioner complaining of muscle spasms, given potassium landing her in the hospital she is rightly dismayed. This however is easy to remedy whereas all of the cleanses and detoxes and anti this and that are really damaging people that don’t have the constitution for it. I can go on and on but as I see the age of people seeking wellness get younger I am pleased and afraid. I hope that practitioners start to look at the whole picture and not the “recipe” they were taught to better everyones lives. In this economic fallout, I am also afraid that helping people with lifestyle changes while keeping the prescribing or I’ll give you this to make you better will not decrease, as rents have soared and incomes have dropped, people just sell patients more stuff. Sad but not holistic, so many in medicine have become money machines.

I sit and think to myself why can’t we just practice with our hands, our minds, and our senses?

Now I ask… Can we please stop this game. People are getting lead into buying and taking and believing in things that are not really helping them. Let us get back to getting the WHOLE data from a patient and using the Whole energetics of the substance we prescribe and let us help people achieve wellness.

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wholistic or holistic

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Melding eastern and western medicine

This topic is a big one! We are in times that are so very intense that we must look at our bodies a a whole. We must remember to treat ourselves right in every aspect. We have so much illness in our world that makes people fearful and jump to rapid conclusions to put supplements in our body. Supplementation is an art… Not to be taken lightly. Herbs and vitamins do have side effects also. I have only found one.. yes one formula that seems to fit everybody. That is in 20 years of searching and testing. Please remember when you look for a supplement or an herb with a western diagnosis, you are trying to make a clay vase out of wood shavings. These things (herbs/vitamins) are better used when you have a wholistic approach, they work better if the whole of you is taken into consideration.

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Pre Spring time Cleanse

Pre Spring  Cleanse Soup

Most everyone overeats around the holidays, its hard not to; food is one of life’s great pleasures; sharing it with people you love is even greater.
So, at the end of December, when you have eaten too much, and too richly, take a few days and rest your digestive tract which has been working overtime.

Here is a cleanse method especially suitable for winter, in that it preserves the integrity of the digestive fire and body’s warmth, and is in soup form, which is ideal for this season. It’s a cleanse that does no damage in the process, like the kinds of cleanses you buy in the health food store with their “heroic” purgative herbals do.

Ingredients

2 quarts water, more or less.
3-5 carrots, to taste, and depending on size, sliced lengthwise and chopped a bit
1 beet, sliced
3-5 celery stalks, chopped
1 bunch dandelion greens. If not available substitute with kale
1 bunch parsley
1 burdock root, sliced lengthwise and chopped a bit.
1 4 inch piece of kombu sea vegetable, or dulse
2-3 slices of raw ginger root

Directions

Place all the ingredients except the parsley and greens in a large pot with the water and bring to a low boil. Low boil until the vegetables are almost fully cooked, and add the greens. Simmer until the greens are well darkened.

How to Use as a Cleanse

Drink a tall glass of this first thing in the morning, and at least three times a day for two days. The rest of the day eat just small amounts of very simple, low-fat, low protein food, like whole grain sourdough rye (Pacific Bakery, Julians Manna heaven (my favorite) , but they need to be toasted, as they are undercooked at the bakery, cooked starchy and green vegetables, like potato and broccoli. If you need protein, try some tempeh roasted with ginger or tofu and bean sprouts stir fried with a green veggie.

Modifications

Delete the beet if you don’t want the red color. If you want it more savory or sweeter, add a sliced yellow or red onion. If you must, add some sea salt to taste. You could also use this basic recipe, or a variation, for miso soup. Just add some mellow or sweet white miso at the end and simmer for three minutes.
I might add chopped scallions at the end in that case

As the basis for a meal you could add some fish, like halibut or salmon or scallops and cook the veggies a little less long, and serve them with the fish over buckwheat soba, having the broth at the side. Who says you can’t eat your cake and have it, too?! Eden brand Soba and Udon are excellent.

Comments

The idea here is to liberate the minerals and other nutrients from the cellulose of the vegetables and into the broth, so don’t worry about over-cooking. Keep the heat relatively low. This is more like cooking Chinese herbs; when the soup is cooked all the goodness is in the broth, and the veggies you can eat or compost.

It’s well worth searching out dandelion greens at Whole Foods Market and other health food stores. Dandelion greens are a diuretic, and foods eaten over the holidays tend to cause water retention. So this is an excellent remedy. They also have a cleansing effect on the gall bladder.

Dandelions are very rich in nutrients. Traditionally, the roots and leaves of the plant have been used as medicines for breast maladies, bloating, digestive disorders, aching joints, fevers, and skin disorders. The leaves of the plant are very rich in vitamins, including A, C, D, and B-complex. They also have high levels of minerals like iron, magnesium, zinc potassium, manganese, copper, choline, calcium, boron, and silicon. The most active ingredient in dandelions, eudesmanolide and germacranolide, are found only in dandelions.

Burdock is a traditional cleansing vegetable that is used in East Asia to remove toxins from the blood and improved the function of organs like the liver, kidneys, and intestines, which play a role in detoxification. It has gentle laxative, diuretic, anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties.

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Beyond organic meat and eggs

 

  

 Beyond Organic

By Jo Robinson

rganic meat, poultry, and dairy products are now available at your supermarket, which is a

change for the better. When you see the organic label, you know the food is going to be free of

pesticide residues, synthetic hormones, genetically modified organisms, and a long list of

questionable additives. You also have the satisfaction of knowing that raising animals organically

causes less harm to the environment. But when it comes to animal production, organic is not

enough. We need to be raising animals on their species-appropriate diets.

Few consumers realize that many producers of “organic” or “naturally raised” animal products raise

their animals in confinement and feed them grain—just like the operators of conventional feedlots.

Feeding large amounts of grain to a grazing animal decreases the nutritional value of its products

whether the grain is organic or conventionally raised. The reason is simple. Compared with grass,

grain has far fewer omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin E.

 

 

 

Therefore, grainfed animals have fewer of

these important nutrients in their meat and dairy products. Grainfeeding also interferes with the

creation of a cancer-fighting fight called conjugated linoleic acid or CLA.

 

 

 

A test by an independent

lab determined that milk from one of the largest organic grain-fed dairies had no more omega-3 fatty

acids or CLA than milk from ordinary dairies. Similarly, meat from organic grain-fed beef has the

same nutritional profile as meat from the largest Kansas feedlot.

The same story holds true for organic but confinement-raised poultry. Their meat and eggs have no

more omega-3s or vitamin E than the products you find in the supermarket.

 

 

 

(Unless the birds are

given special supplements along with the grain.)

For many consumers, food safety is an even bigger concern than nutrition. Once again, grass

feeding offers an important advantage. It has been known for decades that grain feeding makes a

cow’s digestive tract more acid. Now we know that this acidic environment speeds the growth of

potentially dangerous E. coli bacteria and, even worse, makes the bugs more acid-resistant.

Alarmingly, these acid-resistant bacteria are much more likely to survive the cleansing acidity of our

own digestive juices and make us ill.

 

 

 

Depriving our livestock of fresh greens and vastly increasing their consumption of grain has

 

 

 

jeopardized our health in ways people never imagined. Although feeding organically raised grain

reduces our reliance on pesticides and synthetic fertilizers, it does not provide the food that nature

intended us to eat.

Garton, G. A.. “Fatty Acid Composition of the Lipids of Pasture Grasses.” Nature 187(4736): 511-12.

 

 

Dhiman, T. R., G. R. Anand, et al

. (1999). “Conjugated linoleic acid content of milk from cows fed

different diets.” J Dairy Sci 82(10): 2146-56.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lopez-Bote, C. J., R.Sanz Arias, A.I. Rey, A. Castano, B. Isabel, J. Thos (1998). “Effect of free-range

feeding on n-3 fatty acid and alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) content and oxidative stability of eggs.”

Animal Feed Science and Technology 72: 33-40.

 

 

 

 

 

Diez-Gonzalez, F., T. R. Callaway, et al

. (1998). “Grain feeding and the dissemination of acid-resistant

Escherichia coli from cattle.” Science 281(5383): 1666-8.

 

 

 

 © 2005 Jo Robinson, Eatwild.com. This article may be reprinted in full provided it is accompanied

 

 

 

by this credit line.

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