
Healing with Whole Foods
by Pitchford, Paul-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Origins | p. 1 |
The Roots of Diagnosis and Treatment | |
Yin-Yang and Beyond | p. 49 |
Qi Vitality | p. 56 |
The Six Divisions of Yin and Yang | p. 57 |
Heat/Cold: The Thermal Nature of Food and People | p. 58 |
Interior/Exterior: Building Immunity | p. 67 |
Excess and Deficiency | p. 89 |
Essentials of Nutrition | |
Dietary Transition | p. 105 |
Water | p. 122 |
Protein and Vitamin B[subscript 12] - The Plant and Animal Kingdoms as Sources | p. 129 |
Oils and Fats | p. 158 |
Sweeteners | p. 187 |
Salt | p. 196 |
Condiments, Caffeine, and Spices | p. 204 |
Vitamins and Supplements | p. 211 |
Calcium | p. 217 |
Green Food Products | p. 227 |
Survival Simplified | p. 250 |
Enjoyment of Food | p. 251 |
Food Combinations | p. 260 |
Fasting and Purification | p. 274 |
Food for Children | p. 283 |
The Five Element and Organ Systems | |
Five Elements: Seasonal Attunement and the Organs in Harmony and Disease | p. 305 |
Therapeutic Use of the Five Flavors | p. 308 |
Wood Element | p. 316 |
Fire Element | p. 331 |
Earth Element | p. 339 |
Metal Element | p. 346 |
Water Element | p. 354 |
Diseases and their Dietary Treatment | |
Blood Sugar Imbalances | p. 371 |
The Stomach and Intestines | p. 378 |
Blood Disorders | p. 387 |
Cancer and the Regeneration Diets | p. 405 |
Other Degenerative Disorders | p. 424 |
Recipes and Properties of Vegetal Foods | |
Vibrational Cooking | p. 447 |
Grains | p. 456 |
Breads | p. 489 |
Legumes: Beans, Peas, and Lentils | p. 506 |
Nuts and Seeds | p. 530 |
Vegetables | p. 535 |
Sprouts | p. 568 |
Salads | p. 571 |
Seaweeds | p. 580 |
Soups | p. 596 |
Sauces | p. 602 |
Condiments | p. 606 |
Spreads and Pates | p. 608 |
Pickles | p. 609 |
Grain and Seed Milks | p. 612 |
Rejuvelac and Yogurt | p. 613 |
Fruit | p. 614 |
Desserts | p. 624 |
Summary | p. 640 |
Epilogue | p. 653 |
Parasite Purge Program | p. 654 |
The Effect of Root Canals on Health | p. 667 |
Bibliography | p. 670 |
References and Notes | p. 681 |
Resources | p. 704 |
Index | p. 710 |
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |
Excerpts
When the excessive principle reaches its limit, the extreme yin or yang transforms into its opposite. This is known as the “Principle of Extremes.” This principle is readily observed in warm-blooded animals, when a fever is produced in response to an exposure to cold, or when chills result from an excess of summer heat.
Other examples:
1. Extreme activity, such as hard physical work, necessitates rest.
2. If activity is very fierce and yang (such as in war), death (which is very yin) can be the result.
3. People frequently become more child-like with extreme age. Also, with advancing years, a person gradually exhibits less physical strength but, if healthy, greater wisdom. This represents the loss of bodily attachment to earth and the shifting of focus toward heaven, an example of extreme yin changing to extreme yang.
4. As internal heat and blood pressure become higher (yang), a stroke resulting in paralysis (yin) becomes more likely.
5. Extremely energizing substances such as cocaine cause utter debility later. One also is eventually weakened by stimulants such as caffeine and refined sugar.
6. In meditation, proper concentration on a single object ultimately results in universal awareness.
The process by which phenomena change into their opposites may be described graphically with spirals, a very common pattern in the universe. These cycles of change are progressively quicker while contracting, slower while expanding. Such cycles are balanced by opposing cycles. For instance, when the national economy slows toward stagnation, cycles of emotional anxiety become ever more intense. Another pair of spirals illustrates the way in which metabolic cycles in the body take longer to fully repeat with age, with a simultaneously greater need for nutrients. For this reason, we need less quantity but more nutritionally concentrated food as we grow older.
Excerpted from Healing with Whole Foods: Asian Traditions and Modern Nutrition by Paul Pitchford
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
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