How I discovered how important digestion is to health
In 1991 when I had my car accident that disability retired me from my career in criminal justice, I thought I would recover and get back to work. But someday never came and just like that, in the blink of an eye and with the sound of the crash reveberating in my head forever, it was over. I was never to put a uniform on again. It was a crushing blow to my ego. It was an even worse blow to my body which never seemed to recover from the trauma, both from the accident and the loss of my career. After months of wallowing in self pity and anger, I was finally able to let go of the grief (with the help of counseling) and begin to rebuild my life, although at the time I seriously wondered what life I had left to live. But the Universe always provides answers when we open to the possibilities. I was in so much physical pain from the accident that it kept me from spending a lot of time thinking about the job I'd loved and lost. I spent years going to doctors, having them put me on this drug then that one. One caused constipation so bad I thought I was backed up from San Francisco to New York City. So they gave me another drug which made me have so many out of body experiences I was beginning to wonder where my true body really was! When I began showing signs of memory loss, inability to form words and the loss of use of one hand and foot the doctor told me to shop for a wheel chair and I said "NO MORE!" I'm done with this shuffling around with no one having answers or caring enough to help me figure it out.
My first step was to begin a regimen of digestive enzymes. I worked with a wonderful enzyme therapist who tailored a program specifically for my needs. In about 2 weeks time I began to feel more alive, more like....well....me, again. Hello me! Wow it felt great. But it was expensive, and without a job, it was hard to keep paying the money it took to take the pills. I perservered for 2 years though because my husband and I both were committed to finding my way back. I got off all the drugs after a few months (never ever just quit, you could make yourself deathly ill or cause irreparable harm. Any weaning should be done under a doctors care, as I did, especially if you are taking any kind of narcotic or addictive drug. Always always always do it with your doctors supervision, there is no room for cheating here.) The panic attacks went away, the muscle pains were fewer and I regained all control of my hand and foot. Still, I had limitations but at least I was able to function.
After I became a Biofeedback Specialist, I always saw key things come up for my clients: water, which I've already discussed in a previous post and digestion combined with adequate exercise which we'll discuss in another post. Digestion is what I want to talk about today though, because we never give it a lot of thought. We take it for granted for the most part. We ignore it when it starts acting up, causing belching and rectal gas, sometimes we have pain, constipation or diarrhea. We just swallow an antacid or take another over the counter pill and wish it away. Eventually, we learn to live with it, identifying the foods that make it worse and avoid them, or in some cases, eat them anyway because they taste too good to pass up. So here is a brief anatomy lesson. It's just a general description, so all you medical people out there don't yell at me, I'm just trying to make a point here: Your digestive tract is a tube. When you put something in your mouth, something should be coming out the other end. If it isn't, you have a problem. If you have gas or pain, you have a problem. This is your body trying to tell you something is not right. Pay attention. The simplest thing you can do is increase your water, but not at meal time. It was recommended to me that I drink no more than 4 oz. of fluid one hour before, during or after a meal. This is so the enzymes in our body don't get diluted so much they can't do their job of breaking down the food we are eating. Their job is to basically liquify the stomach contents before it reaches the small intestine. Hydrochloric Acid and enzymes work together to make this happen. If one or the other is off, you have a problem. Research I've read recently on Dr. Mercola's site, along with Dr Susan Lark and Dr. David Williams all say that acid stomachs come from too little acid, not too much and the piling on of antacid medications only makes the problem worse in the long run.
Think about it this way. If you aren't pushing something out your "tube" when you take something in, where is it going? What is happening to it as it sits in your gut and begins to back up and putrify? Does it just grow bigger and harder and cause upset stomach and nausea? Sometimes for some people it may do that. Does it become so hard because you aren't drinking enough water, remember water is absorbed through the intestines, that it punctures holes in your intestinal walls and pass bacteria into the bloodstream where it can invade other organs and make you sick? Maybe for some people it does. So what can you do about it? Besides drink more water you mean? I'm so glad you asked! Digestive enzyme formulas can be found at any health food section of supermarkets and health food stores. Online there are enzyme formulas marketed by direct marketing associations and independent companies and of course, yours truly carries a line of energized enzymes. Some are pretty good, some are so so, some are awful in my experience. Ideally, a good enzyme therapist would be my first choice if you can afford to do that. If not, look for a product that has active units of plant based enzymes. If it is in milligrams, forget it, you want to see USP units for Amylase (breaks down carbohydrates), Protease (breaks down proteins), Lipase (breaks down fats) etc. Oxbile or Pancreatin alone usually isn't enough, but if it is working for you then great! Keep at it. Just don't IGNORE your digestion. It is the key to everything else our body does. If you can't absorb the nutrients you are eating, your body is starving. What else can it do? And if it is starving, what is happening to the foods that aren't being broken down in your stomach and passed whole into your intestines? Something to think about. I know for me, once I got my digestion handled, a lot of my pain went away. I can eat corn now and not see it come out whole at the other end. That is how I know I'm digesting! Try it and see for yourself.
