| Re: Alternative treatment for bowel disorders
I had different experiences with different types of fiber. I eat salads and raw fruit quite a bit, and most days I'm fine with that. I will occasionally eat mini-wheat cereal, but have always had a bit of a problem digesting milk, so I don't eat enough cereal for enough fiber. I have just switched to soy milk - so far, so good. I will also use metamucil once in a while, but that tends to bulk me up too much and I sometimes won't go for two days. I've just started with 2 tbsp of flaxmeal per day, but it's too early to tell how that's going. My roommate has used FiberCon, but he doesn't really have intestinal issues (he does have stomach ulcers though). I've never asked him if it works for him.
I have little faith in medical doctors in their ability to handle certain bowel problems, and I'm determined to make a lot of changes of my own to get in overall better health. I've been researching the body's ability to heal itself when it has a chance (i.e. - diet, exercise, more rest, less toxins and processed foods, etc.), and it's amazing what the body can do. Most of it flies in the face of traditional medical care. Sure, prescription drugs can mask symptoms, or put you more at ease, but true healing happens in spite of medicine, not because of it.
Someone pointed out to me - what does a wounded or sick animal do when it wants to recover. Most of them curl up away from others and don't eat anything until they feel better. Their body instinctively tells them something is wrong, and it needs all its energy to recover. As humans, we seem to have lost the ability to allow our instincts to guide us, assuming doctors know best, rather than our own bodies. There is a misconception about fasting that the body will damage its vital organs in an attempt to feed off them. But the body is smarter than that, and instead feeds off the things that shouldn't be there, diseased cells and tissue, stored up toxins and waste, fat, etc.
|