This period between Christmas and the New Year is often when people start taking a hard look at their health and decide what they want to sort out in the coming year. One of the areas coming onto the radar in recent years has been digestive disorders.

 A significant increase in the number of people suffering a range of complaints affecting the digestive system can only be down to diet and lifestyle – what we’re choosing to eat, how much of it we’re eating, and how we are living life in general.

It’s a touchy subject because people don’t want to be told how to live their life. But shut away in their bedrooms and bathrooms around the planet, from mouth and throat ailments, down to the stomach with its gurgling acid, all the way through that serpentine plumbing with its bowel disorders, down to those pesky haemorrhoids, folks are not having a good time, enough said.

Some of these disorders are mild, others are extremely serious and need addressing without delay. One area that continues to be overlooked is proper intestinal/colonic health and elimination. Diseases linked with poor bowel function are extremely common and debilitating and are almost always linked to overweight, poor diet, lack of raw plant-foods, and so on.

Fancy making a change? You’ll need to be ready to do things you haven’t done before… and keep doing them! Your best friends in this worthy endeavour? Plants. Lots and lots of them. First, let’s find out where the major problems lie.

CROHN’S DISEASE (REGIONAL ENTERITIS)

Pain in the lower right abdomen, malabsorption of nutrients, low-grade fever, weight-loss, flatulence. Crohn’s is a condition where segments of the colon (large intestine) become inflamed, thickened and ulcerated. Traditional treatments will include corticosteroids, antibiotics, immunosuppressive drugs and dietary changes. Crohn’s can cause partial blockage of the large intestine, causing pain and bouts of diarrhoea. The same condition occurring in the small intestine is known as regional enteritis, the chronic form of which may also create fistulae (unnatural joinings) between adjacent loops of the intestines or between bowel tissue and the bladder, vagina or skin.

ULCERATIVE COLITIS 

Inflammation of the colon lining. Symptoms are pain, with blood and/or mucus in the faeces.

LEAKY GUT SYNDROME

Where damage to the small intestine wall can increase gut permeability to undigested food particles which enter the bloodstream and begin causing ‘allergic’ reactions. Dr Leo Galland, Director of Medicine at the Foundation for Integrated Medicine, states:

“Leaky gut syndrome is a group of clinical disorders associated with increased intestinal permeability. They include inflammatory and infectious bowel diseases, chronic inflammatory arthritides, cryptogenic skin conditions like acne, psoriasis and dermatitis herpetiformis, many diseases triggered by food allergy or specific food intolerance, including eczema, urticaria, and irritable bowel syndrome, AIDS, chronic fatigue syndromes, chronic hepatitis, chronic pancreatitis, cystic fibrosis and pancreatic carcinoma. Hyper-permeability may play a primary, etiologic role in the evolution of each disease, or may be a secondary consequence of it which causes immune activation, hepatic dysfunction, and pancreatic insufficiency, creating a vicious cycle. Unless specifically investigated, the role of altered intestinal permeability in patients with leaky gut syndrome often goes unrecognised.” [1]

DIVERTICULOSIS, DIVERTICULITIS 

Sacs may appear in weak sections of the intestinal tract, caused by pressure from the inner lining (pulsion diverticula) or from pressure exerted without (traction diverticula). Diverticulosis describes the passive existence of diverticula. Diverticulitis describes the condition when these sacs become perforated, inflamed or impacted.

DYSBIOSIS

The human digestive system contains over four hundred species of microflora (bacteria, yeast, fungi, protozoa, etc.) weighing over three pounds. Usually, in a properly pH-adjusted, harmonious alimentary tract, they live together in peace and balance (homeostasis). When, through our choices of food and lifestyle, we upset this balance, dysbiosis occurs, a term coined by Russian scientist Elie Metchnikoff, who maintained that toxic compounds produced by the aberrant breakdown of food by these bacteria caused many of the degenerative conditions, especially since this toxicity was carried to other parts of the body via the bloodstream and lymph.

IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME (IBS)

A general condition, thought to affect over 15% of the western populations, describing generalised abdominal pain, usually accompanied by diarrhoea and constipation, which leads to dysfunctional contractions in the intestine. Officially (according to orthodox medicine, unwilling to accept its existence as a separate disorder) the cause of IBS is unknown. In reality, IBS is yet another manifestation of what happens when 21st century processed food is put through the human digestive system.

COELIAC DISEASE (MALABSORPTION SYNDROME)

A condition in which the small intestine fails to digest and absorb food. Usually due to gluten/gliaden damage, which atrophies the nutrient-absorptive villi lining of the intestine. Symptoms include stunted growth, distended abdomen and pale, frothy, foul-smelling stools.

STOMACH ULCERS, REFLUX AND HP

Pain in the stomach after eating and reflux (‘heartburn’), where hydrochloric acid is driven up the oesophagus, is often caused by excess abdominal fat distorting the ring of muscle at the base of the oesophagus – the oesophageal sphincter - a one-way valve designed to prevent this from happening. Other causes include too much acid, not enough acid, a hiatal hernia, gluten/gliaden aversion, and helicobacter pylori (HP)infection, a troublesome bacterium that can inhabit the mucus of the stomach causing ulcers in the stomach lining and, eventually, stomach cancer.

HIATAL HERNIA

The top section of the stomach displaces itself by pushing through the gap in the diaphragm. This common complaint is often symptom-free but in other cases, acid reflux is experienced due to distortion of the , which can proceed in time to ‘Barrett’s Oesophagus’, a pre-cancerous condition, and thereafter to esophageal or stomach cancer.

CHRONIC CONSTIPATION AND ITT

Many have up to eight full meals in them at any one time. The proper Intestinal Transit Time (ITT) is ideally around 24 hours. This is the length of time it takes a meal to go from mouth to anus. In many, this period is extended dramatically up to 48-72 hours because of over-consumption of low-fibre meats and grains (breads, pasta, etc.). As you know from your childhood, flour and water make great glue. Dr Dennis Vander Kraats from Australia advises:

“Generally, most of the digestive processes and absorption of beneficial nutrients occur within 12 hours after consuming the food. Therefore, the slower the ITT, the longer the spent toxic waste matter sits in the bowel, putrefying and fermenting. The bowel is a semi-permeable membrane, which means toxins that have built up in the waste matter can filter through the bowel wall and be absorbed into other tissue and the bloodstream.”

In other words, toxins are taken all over the body where the immune system will have to detoxify and eliminate the trouble. The act of the immune system clearing this mess is sometimes mistakenly remarked upon as a ‘disease process’.

Constant straining of a constipated bowel has been linked to colorectal cancer. Certainly putrefying matter caught in the colon is subjected to bile acids over an extended time, and bile acids in human colons are carcinogenic.

CHIEF CAUSES OF DIGESTIVE ANGST
  • Overweight, overweight, overweight
  • Overeating, too much food at one time
  • Too much fat and sugar in the diet
  • Gluten/gliaden damage from wheat, barley, rye and oat products
  • Bacterial and/or mycoplasmic (fungal) infections
  • Small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), brought on by low digestive enzyme output
  • Processed diets
  • Lack of proper exercise
  • Terror, stress and emotional upsets
  • Too much refined sugar and grains (a high percentage of western grains, stored in silos, are contaminated with aspergillus moulds)
  • Too little fibre
  • Clogged or damaged villi receptors in the intestine preventing inadequate nutrient absorption
  • A generally acidic, anaerobic internal environment, resulting in an inadequate immune system response
  • Antibiotic abuse
  • General drug abuse
  • Coffee, carbonated beverages and alcohol
  • Poor water intake
In her best-selling book, Internal Cleansing, Dr Linda Berry, a chiropractor and clinical nutritionist, summarises the symptoms of self-poisoning.

“If you experience any of the following symptoms, you may be experiencing autointoxication (a process whereby you are poisoned by substances produced by your own body as a result of inadequate digestion and elimination), and therefore you might want to consider some type of internal cleansing program:
  • Allergy or intolerance to certain foods
  • Bad breath and foul-smelling gas and stools
  • Constipation, diarrhoea, sluggish elimination, irregular bowel movements
  • Frequent congestion, colds, viruses
  • Flatulence or gas and frequent intestinal disorders
  • Frequent headaches for no apparent reason
  • General aches and pains that migrate from one place to another
  • Intolerance to fatty foods
  • Low energy; loss of vitality for no apparent reason
  • Lower back pain
  • Lowered resistance to infections
  • Needing to sleep a long time
  • Pain in your liver or gall bladder
  • Premenstrual syndrome (PMS), breast soreness, vaginal infections
  • Skin problems, rashes, boils, pimples, acne”
If any of these problems affect you, try the following template:

THE FOOD FOR THOUGHT LIFESTYLE REGIMEN Ø      Little or no meat in the diet. Any meat consumed should be hormone- and pesticide-free. White meat is better than red. Avoid pork

Ø      Avoid sugar, dairy, coffee and alcohol

Ø      Ensure at least 80% of the diet comprises organic, plant-based foods, the majority eaten raw. This represents a new system of eating for most people but is highly effective in sorting problems in a hurry. Eat properly constituted, organic, whole, living foods. If you want hot, briefly steam your veggies, do not murder them. Remember that heat kills enzymes, vitamin C, wrecks fats and destroys around 50% of the protein content of your food. Excellent transition recipes are provided in our companion guide, Food for Thought.

Ø      The ideal balance is: 80% alkali/20% acidic ash foods. Most diets today comprise 90% acid/10% alkali

Ø      Avoid the foods below

Ø      Hydrate the body (2 litres (4 pints) of clean, fresh water a day)

Ø      Ensure half a teaspoon per day of Himalayan salt goes into the mouth. Sprinkle a few flakes on your tongue before retiring to help sleep

Ø      Keep high-glycaemic fruit intake down. Eat more fruits that have low sugar-conversion, such as pears and apples

Ø      Eat small meals, ensuring a) that you don’t go hungry, and b) that the body has a constant supply of nutrients

Ø      Juice veggies. Learn the art. What a fantastic way to drop weight and pile in the nutrients with minimal processing deficit

Ø      Take a BASIC SUPPLEMENT PROGRAM comprising ionised colloidal trace minerals, antioxidant tablets, Vit C and B complexes and essential fats. Also, Vitamin D serum concentration needs to be optimised to around 140-150 nmol/L for maximum immune function (see A GUIDE TO NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS)

Ø      Peak performance exercise (to get everything moving and assist in detoxing the body in an oxygen-rich environment) (see EXERCISE). A regular walk in the early morning and last thing at night is also healthy and very invigorating

Ø      Avoid stress. Your thoughts affect your biochemistry. If stressed, you need either to modify your response to the event(s) in order not to elicit a physical response, or else change your lifestyle/situation completely to avoid stress. The majority of the diseases suffered by western cultures occur because the immune system has been compromised by lifestyle factors. Diet, lack of exercise and stress are the three leading contenders

Ø      Rest. Rest. Rest. Rest. Rest

Foods to avoid

Ø      Pork products (bacon, sausage, hot-dogs, luncheon meat, ham, etc.) These are high in nitrites and are known homotoxins which can cause high blood urea and dikitopiprazines, which cause brain tumours and leukaemia.[2]  

Ø      Scavenger meats (inc. ALL shellfish and other carrion-eaters – see Leviticus 11 in the Bible). Carrion-eaters, pork and shellfish in particular, concentrate toxins of other animals in their tissues, which we then consume to our detriment. The same goes for the elimination organs of commercially raised animals, such as liver and kidney, which can be high in drug and pesticide residues

Ø      Aspartame/saccharin, artificial sweeteners. These are known mental impairment problems and cancer risks.

Ø      Eliminate grains in general for a period if suffering a grain-sensitive problem. Avoid refined sugar/flour/rice. SUCROSE FEEDS CANCER. Restricted amounts of wholegrain bread are OK for those who can tolerate it. Use only wholegrain rice. No sugars should be consumed other than those contained naturally in whole foods

Ø      Hydrogenated & partially hydrogenated fats (margarine)

Ø      Junk (processed) food, including fizzy sodas and other soft drinks containing sugar, artificial sweeteners or phosphoric acid, which are drunk out of aluminium cans 

Ø      Fat-free foods. Essential fats are essential!

Ø      Olestra, canola, soy, etc. Avoid fake or synthetic fats. Soy, in its unfermented state (meat and milk substitute products), disrupts the hormone (endocrine) system, blocks the absorption of calcium and magnesium, and acts like estrogen in the body. Small usage of unfermented soy and fermented soy products (soy sauce and miso) is OK. For more information on soy, see Food for Thought

Ø      Polluted water (chlorinated or fluoridated – see Health Wars, ‘Water Under the Bridge’)

Ø      Caffeine products

Ø      Alcohol products

Ø      Excess refined salt. Himalayan salt is fine. It’s also a good idea to spice food with ground kelp to maintain a healthy iodine intake
 
Your main food intake – Take the raw challenge

The emphasis should be on a dietary intake high in plant foods, the majority eaten raw. This is undoubtedly an alien concept to those addicted to cooked, processed animal-protein-heavy diets – I make no excuses. If you want to avoid what everyone else is getting, animal products need to come down to under 5%, and the raw component of your food needs to be above 80%. Synthetic, processed fats need to go. Natural fats can come in. I can throw all the science in the world at you on the benefits of eating a majority plant-based diet in this way but if you really won’t, you will fulfil your part in the statistics which make up the Western disease scourge. Here are some points to consider by way of review:

Ø      You do not need to eat animal protein to generate human protein. Animal protein cannot be directly used as human protein, it needs to be deconstructed into its component amino acids and then reconstructed using DNA/RNA transcription into the required protein peculiar to the particular task in your particular body. The animal protein we ingest is invariably cooked and thus much of its useable protein component is useless and worse, now toxic junk.

Ø      To make proteins, you need amino acids. The most plentiful source of amino acids on Earth is the uncooked plant kingdom.

Ø      Cow’s milk is unnecessary for human health and is potentially harmful and even dangerous to many humans. Cow’s milk is for baby cows.

Ø      The ‘eat right for your blood type’ farce is based on the faulty premise of Darwinian evolution (though even evolutionist scientists have shot it out of the sky). Anyone who tells you to eat a high level of animal products ‘because you are a blood group O hunter type’ has been getting high on their own supply and not reading the scientific literature.[3]

Ø      The argument is not about whether to eat animal products or not, it’s a question of degree and quality. Humans are omnivores and can eat some meat. Science has shown, however, that a cumulative consumption of animal products in excess of 10% will contribute to the Western disease profile.[4] 

Ø      Humans are also suffering because of an over-consumption of grain products, specifically wheat, barley, rye and oats – the gluten-predominant grains. These foods can cause serious digestive issues but are flogged off to the public as breakfast cereals and health foods because they are cheap to produce and highly profitable. Many of these products are contaminated with aspergilus moulds or fungi due to long-term storage issues.   

Ø      Cooked food doesn’t keep you warm in winter beyond the initial heat ingested from the cooking appliance. Tremendous internal heat, on the other hand, is generated from the consumption of real, living raw plant dietary since this is the fuel the body uses to make more of you with. You have mentally conditioned yourself to believe that cooked food nourishes and keeps you warm. Try a prolific salad on a snowy day and judge the results honestly - you will be surprised. And by the way, no-one’s saying you can’t have a cooked meal now and then or briefly steam your food if you wish. Don’t murder it.

Ø      Switching to a majority plant-based diet requires a little organisation:

Ø      Locate a good company which can supply organic produce to your door without you even needing to get in the car. There are many benefits to Western civilisation and this is one of them. In Britain, I use www.riverford.co.uk. Take a look at their site and see if you have an equivalent in your area/country.

Ø      Familiarise yourself with the foods in the Credence UK store at www.credence.org to give you ideas on what to add to make your food special and highly nutritious.

Ø      Make use of a juicer to make delicious vegetable juices. Use organic vegetable powder mixes like Nature’s Living Superfood and Credence’s Green Phytofoods to top up. I also use tropical superfood juices such as mangosteen, goji, noni and acai to boost phytonutrient payload.

Ø      Avoid soy milk and meats. Unfermented soy is bad news because it is an endocrine (hormone) disrupter. For a thorough treatment of this subject, log on to www.soyonlineservice.co.nz.

Ø      Visit specialty organic food stores and give them your business. Become an expert at preparing food the natural way. There are simply hundreds of organic and raw food sites specialising in promoting this way of eating. My food choices are now so wide, I view hotel menus with a mixture of disgust and withering pity whenever I’m on tour – pretty much the same emotions I level at TV celebrity chefs like Gordon Ramsey, whose diet has turned him into a raging, potty-mouthed incubus of the fallen order, or Nigella Lawson, Britain’s inflatable kitchen sex-Valkyrie. Listen, it’s your body, you feed it.

Conclusion

Fruit before noon on an empty stomach assists elimination. Big breakfasts thwart it. Try this regime for five days and notice how different the body feels. A diet comprising 80-85% unrefined plant dietary (unadulterated fruit and veggies) will ensure a body saturated in highly bio-available, waterborne nutrition. A body well-watered in this way can expect Appropriation, Assimilation and Elimination to work with consummate ease. High water-content foods rich in fibre will fill you for less, leave you satisfied with stabilised blood sugar, increased energy, better clarity of thought, fewer mood swings and a twinkle in your eye.

Exercise – don’t dodge this one

Research shows that those with a sedentary lifestyle are more prone to disease. A good exercise program will assist in cleansing the body and getting all the pieces toned and in proper working order. The most effective way to exercise and save time is peak performance training (see The Essential Guide to Exercise). Firstly calculate your maximum heart-rate, which is 220 less your age for females, 226 less your age for males. Next:

Aerobic: Exercise 30-40 minutes a day, ensuring to vary your heart-rate regularly between resting pulse and 70% of your maximum heart-rate. Gyms are best for this because they have a variety of equipment with heart monitors. Anyone can sit on a stationary cycle and read a magazine while they do this. Cycling, stair-climbing, hill-climbing, rowing, etc., are all ideal activities outside. Do not shirk!!

Resistance/weights: 15 minutes a day, weight/load-bearing exercise

Stretching: 10 minutes a day

Further resources

Health Wars by Phillip Day

Food for Thought by Phillip Day

Digestive Health by Phillip Day

Simple Changes by Phillip Day

The Essential Guide to Exercise by Phillip Day

Notes
[1]Galland, Leo, ‘Leaky Gut Syndrome: Breaking The Vicious Cycle’ at http://www.healthy.net/asp/templates/Article.asp?Id=425 [2] Food for Thought, op. cit; Biologic Therapy,“Adverse influence of pork consumption on human health”, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1983[3] For a critique on Peter D’Adamo’s work, see Wikipedia under ‘blood type diet’. [4] “Animal-based nutrients linked with higher risk of stomach and esophageal cancers”, Science Daily Magazine, 31/10/2001; “Animal fat consumption and prostate cancer: a prospective study in Hawaii”, Le Marchand L; Kolonel LN; Wilkens LR; Myers BC; Hirohata T, Epidemiology May 1994, 5 (3) p 276-82; “Animal product consumption and mortality because of all causes combined, coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer in Seventh-Day Adventists”, DA Snowdon, American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 48, 739-748; “A case-control study of milk-drinking and ovarian cancer risk”, Mettlin CJ, Piver MS, American Journal of Epidemiology 132(5): 871-876, 1990; “A High Ratio of Dietary Animal to Vegetable Protein Increases the Rate of Bone Loss and the Risk of Fracture in Postmenopausal Women”, Sellmeyer DE, Stone KL, Sebastian A, et al., Am J Clin Nutr. 2001;73:118-122; “A prospective study on intake of animal products and risk of prostate cancer”, Michaud DS, Cancer Causes Control 2001 Aug;12(6):557-67; “Beta-carotene and animal fats and their relationship to prostate cancer risk: a case-control study”, Mettlin C, Selenskas S, Natarajan N, Huben R, Cancer 1989;64:605-12; “Blood pressure and blood lipids among vegetarian, semi-vegetarian and non-vegetarian African Americans”, Melby CL, Toohey ML, Cedrick J, Am J Clin Nutr. 1994;59:103-109; “Bovine growth hormone: human food safety evaluation”, Juskevich JC, Science 1990 Aug 24;249(4971):875-84; “Breast cancer in Argentina: case-control study with special reference to meat eating habits”, Matos EL, Thomas DB, Sobel N, Vuoto D, Neoplasma 1991;38(3):357-66

 

 
 
by Phillip Day

SALT IS GOOD FOR YOU: EATING MORE COULD EVEN LOWER THE CHANCES OF HEART DISEASE: Controversial findings question push by authorities to get people to cut consumption. For years, doctors have been telling us that too much salt is bad for us. Until now. A study claims that cutting down on salt can actually increase the risk of dying from a heart attack or a stroke. The research has left nutritionists scratching their heads.

Use Himalayan Salt

‘Your table salt is actually 97.5% sodium chloride and 2.5% chemicals such as moisture absorbents and iodine. Dried at over 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit, the excessive heat alters the natural chemical structure of the salt causing the potential for a myriad of health problems in your body.' - Dr Joseph Mercola

The papers today are full of a new, ‘controversial' study that actually shows that salt may be good for you (yawn). Of course, nowhere in the article do they strike the all-important distinction between refined table salt and natural whole salts, so let's do a review on this most important of subjects.

Common table salt is a poison, refined from Nature's storehouse to remove all elements but sodium chloride. Some say we ended up with this particular compound due to industry's colossal use of it. Whatever the reason, table salt is not real ‘salt' and its dangers are well touted:
  • It destabilises blood pressure
  • Can cause cellulite, kidney stones and rheumatism
  • Upsets your fluid balance
  • Acts as a diuretic (expels water from cells)
  • Thereby a cell-toxin
  • Contains the endocrine disrupters, fluoride and iodine
  • Contains fillers such as calcium carbonate and aluminium hydroxide, the latter aluminium implicated in Alzheimer's Disease
Some PR job to convince the world we need it, eh?

Salt is essential

Yet ‘salt' is essential for the body's systems. Nobody questions why we put seriously ill people on a saline drip. Farmers know if they don't put out the salt blocks for their cattle, they die. This is real salt as Nature intended, busting with electrolytes, not the truncated, worse-than-useless mess made of it in the refining process.

Enter saltpan salt, sea salt, Celtic salt, and the pink Dalek of all salts, Himalayan crystallized salt, or ‘white gold' as it's come to be known (light pink gold, actually). Mercola declares this mother-of-all-salts:
  • Regulates the water content throughout your body
  • Balances excess acidity from your cells, particularly your brain cells
  • Balances your blood sugar levels and helps reduce your aging rate
  • Assists in the generation of hydroelectric energy in cells in your body and absorption of food particles through your intestinal tract
  • Helps clear mucus plugs and phlegm from your lungs - particularly useful in asthma and cystic fibrosis
  • Acts as a strong natural antihistamine to help clear up congestion in your sinuses
  • Prevents muscle cramps
  • Makes the structure of your bones firm - osteoporosis can occur when your body needs more salt and takes it from your bones
  • Regulates your sleep - it is a natural hypnotic
  • Maintains your libido
  • Prevents varicose veins and spider veins on your legs and thighs
  • Stabilizes irregular heartbeats - in conjunction with water, [salt] is actually essential for the regulation of your blood pressure
These claims are backed by evidence. Barbara Hendel MD and Peter Ferreira cover most of it in Water and Salt, The Essence of Life (available through Amazon). World renowned water guru, Dr Fereydoon Batmanghelidj's Water and Salt, Your Healers From Within, available through Credence, contains much of the Iranian physician's decades of studies into the building blocks of life. The manufacturers of FIJI water, as another example, remark on their web-site:

‘A nine-week, double-blind university study undertaken in 2003 at the Inter-University of Graz, Austria, examined the effects of drinking a minimum of 1.5 liters of tap water per day with common table salt vs. a minimum of 1.5 liters of FIJI Water with Original Himalayan Crystal Salt on physical and psychological functions of the body. In the study, patients who drank FIJI Water together with the Original Himalayan Crystal Salt saw significant positive changes in respiratory, circulatory, organ, connective tissue and nervous system functions. Patients also reported increases in the quality of sleep, energy and concentration levels, brain activity, weight loss, enhanced consciousness and noticeable nail and hair growth.' [1]

The medical orthodoxy is not kind to any notion of a super-salt, crying ‘commercialism' and ‘quackery', indubitably the pot calling the kettle black. My advice? Switch to Himalayan salt or at least a whole salt. Table salt is just that - sodium chloride. Himalayan salt is sodium chloride plus 82 other minerals in its natural, crystalline form, all ready to feed metabolic processes the way Nature intended. There are other advantages.

Get sole and slap it all over

Topical applications and baths in whole salt solutions have been found to help with psoriasis, eczema, toe-nail fungus, insect bites, rheumatism and arthritis, acne, ear infections, nasal congestion and sore throats. The solution used is known as sole, (pronounced so-lay). Take a container of water and start mixing Himalayan salt crystals into it, stirring well, until the salt no longer dissolves. The solution is now 26% saturated and sterile, so can be re-used. Sole in a hot water bowl can be inhaled as a decongestant for blocked sinuses since it is antiseptic and ideal for bacterial/fungal/yeast conditions.

Salt - further benefits

Whole salt has many other functions than just regulating the water content of the body. Here are some of its additional duties:
  • Salt is a strong, natural antihistamine. It can be used to relieve asthma by putting it on the tongue after drinking a glass or two of water. It is as effective as an inhaler, without the toxicity. You should drink one or two glasses of water before putting salt on the tongue
  • Salt is a strong ‘anti-stress' element for the body
  • Salt is vital for extracting excess acidity from inside the cells, particularly the brain cells. If you don't want Alzheimer's disease, don't go salt-free, and don't let them put you on diuretic medications for long!
  • Salt is vital for the kidneys to clear excess acidity and pass the acidity into the urine. Without sufficient salt in the body, the body will become increasingly acidic
  • Salt is essential in the treatment of emotional and affective disorders. Lithium is a salt substitute that is used in the treatment of depression. To prevent suffering from depres­sion, make sure you take some salt
  • Salt is essential for preserving the serotonin and melatonin levels in the brain. When water and salt perform their nat­ural antioxidant duties and clear the toxic waste from the body, essential amino acids, such as tryptophan and tyrosine, will not be sacrificed as chemical antioxidants. In a well-hydrated body, tryptophan is spared and gets into the brain tissue where it is used to manufacture serotonin, melatonin, and tryptamine-essential anti-depression neurotransmitters
  • Salt, in my opinion, is vital for the prevention and treatment of cancer. Cancer cells are killed by oxygen; they are anaer­obic ‘organisms'. They must live in a low-oxygen environ­ment. When the body is well hydrated and salt expands the volume of blood circulation to reach all parts of the body, the oxygen and the active and ‘motivated' immune cells in the blood reach the cancerous tissue and destroy it. As I explained in my book on lupus, dehydration-shortage of water and salt-suppresses the immune system and its disease-fighting cells' activity in the body
  • Salt is vital for maintaining muscle tone and strength. Lack of bladder control in those who suffer from involuntary leakage of urine could be a consequence of low salt intake. Salt is most effective in stabilizing irregular heartbeats and, contrary to the misconception that it causes high blood pressure, is actually essential for the regulation of blood pressure-in conjunction with water. Naturally, the pro­portions are critical. A low-salt diet with high water intake will, in some people, actually cause the blood pressure to rise. As a secondary complication, it can also cause asthma-like shortness of breath. The logic is simple. If you drink water and do not take salt, the water will not stay in the blood circulation adequately to completely fill all the blood vessels. In some, this will cause fainting, and in others, it will cause tightening of the arteries -- and eventu­ally constriction of bronchioles in the lungs -- to the point of registering a rise in blood pressure, complicated by breathlessness. One or two glasses of water and some salt -- a little of it on the tongue -- will quickly and efficiently qui­eten a racing and ‘thumping' heart, and in the long run, will reduce the blood pressure and cure breathlessness
  • Salt is vital for sleep regulation. It is a natural hypnotic. If you drink a full glass of water, then put a few grains of salt on your tongue, and let it stay there, you will fall into a nat­ural, deep sleep. Don't use salt on your tongue unless you also drink water. Repeated use of salt by itself might cause nose bleeds
  • Salt is a vitally needed element in the treatment of diabetics. It helps balance the sugar levels in the blood and reduces the need for insulin in those who have to inject the chemical to regulate their blood sugar levels. Water and salt reduce the extent of secondary damage associated with diabetes
  • Salt is vital for the generation of hydroelectric energy in all of the cells in the body. It is used for local power gen­eration at the sites of energy need by the cells
  • Salt is vital to the communication and information pro­cessing of nerve cells the entire time that the brain cells work-from the moment of conception to death
  • Salt is vital for the absorption of food particles through the intestinal tract
  • Salt is vital for clearing the lungs of mucus plugs and sticky phlegm, particularly in asthma, emphysema and cystic fibrosis sufferers
  • Salt on the tongue will stop persistent dry coughs
  • Salt is vital for clearing up catarrh and sinus congestion
  • Salt is vital for the prevention of gout and gouty arthritis
  • Salt is essential for the prevention of muscle cramps
  • Salt is vital in preventing excess saliva production to the point that it flows out of the mouth during sleep. Needing to constantly mop up excess saliva indicates salt shortage
  • Osteoporosis, in a major way, is the result of salt and water shortage in the body
  • Salt is absolutely vital to making the structure of bones firm
  • Salt is vital for maintaining self-confidence and a positive self-image-a serotonin- and melatonin-controlled ‘per­sonality output'
  • Salt is vital for maintaining sexuality and libido
  • Salt is vital for reducing a double chin. When the body is short of salt, it means the body really is short of water. The salivary glands sense the salt shortage and are obliged to produce more saliva to lubricate the act of chewing and swallowing and also to supply the stomach with water that it needs for breaking down foods. Circulation to the sali­vary glands increases and the blood vessels become ‘leaky' in order to supply the glands with more water to manufac­ture saliva. This ‘leakiness' spills to areas beyond the glands themselves, causing increased bulk under the skin of the chin, the cheeks and into the neck
  • Salt is vital for preventing varicose veins and spider veins on the legs and thighs
  • Sea salt contains about 80 mineral elements that the body needs. Some of these elements are needed in trace amounts. Unrefined sea salt is a better choice of salt than other types of salt on the market. For instance, ordinary table salt has been stripped of its companion ele­ments and contains additive elements such as aluminium sil­icate to keep it powdery and porous. Aluminium is a very toxic element in our nervous system. It is implicated as one of the primary causes of Alzheimer's disease
  • As much as salt is good for the body in asthma, excess potassium is bad for it. Too much orange juice, too many bananas, or any ‘sports drink' containing too much potas­sium might precipitate an asthma attack, particularly if too much of the drink or too many bananas are taken before exercising. It can cause an exercise-induced asthma attack. To prevent such attacks, some salt intake before exercise will increase the lungs' capacity for air exchange. It will also decrease excess sweating
  • It is a good policy to add some salt to orange juice to balance the actions of sodium and potassium in maintaining the required volume of water inside and outside the cells. In some cultures, salt is added to melon and other fruits to accentuate their sweetness. In effect, these fruits contain mostly potassium. By adding salt to them before eating, a balance between the intake of sodium and potassium results. The same should be done to other juices
  • I received a call one day from one of the readers of my book to tell me how he had unwittingly hurt his son. Knowing that orange juice was full of vitamin C, he forced his son to drink sev­eral glasses of it every day. In the meantime, the young boy developed breathing problems and had a number of asthma attacks until he reached college and moved out of the sphere of influence of his father. His asthma cleared and his breathing became normal. The father told me he had to call his son and apologize for having given him such a hard time when he was younger. The more the son had rebelled against orange juice, the more the father had insisted he should take it, convinced a large amount was good for him
  • As a rough rule of thumb, you need about 3 grams of salt-a half-teaspoon-for every 10 glasses of water, or a quarter teaspoon per quart of water. You should take salt throughout the day. If you exercise and sweat, you need more salt. In hot climates, you need to take even more salt. In these climates, salt makes the difference between survival and better health and heat exhaustion and death
  • Warning! You must at the same time not overdo salt. You must observe the ratio of salt and water needs of the body. You must always make sure you drink enough water to wash the excess salt out of the body. If your weight suddenly goes up in one day, you have taken too much salt. Hold back on salt intake for one day and drink plenty of water to increase your urine output and get rid of your swelling
  • Those in heart failure - or kidney failure requiring dialysis - MUST consult with their doctors before increasing salt intake.
Further resources The Essential Guide to Water and Salt - F Batmanghelidj MD and Phillip Day