Liz, I'm concerned about your comment.
You wrote:
"Easier to get someone to add a lot of fo/cc to their otherwise normal
life style than ask them to drive 2 hours to the nearest organic food
store every day and take up cooking for the first time in their life
instead of eating the foods the church people bring."
If the foods the church people bring are anything like what the
church people around here would bring, and there is no reason to
suppose they would not be, then we are talking about white flour,
white sugar, lots of processed foods, potato chips, partially
hydrogenated fats, store-bought juices, non-organic meat and poultry,
(very probably pork and ham), canned vegetables, "Cool Whip" ect,
etc...more than enough to set the Budwig Protocol waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay
back.
Would be far better to purchase the "Oil Protein Cookbook" and to get
a couple of those nice church people---maybe widows or people without
children---to prepare meals out of it. They would learn something
about healthful eating, and it would only be 2-3 months before signs
of improvement began to show.
You ARE what you eat, and if you eat junk instead of healthful stuff,
then your health will be junky.
Elliot
--- In FlaxSeedOil2@..., "liz_brown67" <liz_brown67@y...>
wrote:
LOL, who was it said the definition of stupidity is doing the same
thing and expecting a different result?
Still, there's an art to figuring out which few lifestyle changes
are
likely to a big effect on a specific individual, instead of
insisting
someone simultaneously change everything - diet, clothes, thought
patterns, where they live, pets, jobs, friends, soaps - even though
each of these can be negatively affecting someone.
Easier to get someone to add a lot of fo/cc to their otherwise
normal
life style than ask them to drive 2 hours to the nearest organic
food
store every day and take up cooking for the first time in their life
instead of eating the foods the church people bring.
Ya gotta find the few changes that work well, because suggesting too
many changes can be so overwhelming the result is people give up
without trying anything.
Liz
major lifestyle changes are hard to do, easier
to make a few minor adaptations.
That is quite normal. You are absolutely right that major
lifestyle
changes are hard to do, but major lifestyle changes are often
required to get major results. Minor changes bring minor results.