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Lucy Tucker's avatar

It helps to love at least a couple of fermented foods. Like, e.g., plain full fat yogurt and kombucha. The kombucha you can buy and then just a drink a bit every day. You don’t need the whole thing. Most cultures have some sort of fermented food. Yum.

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Sonya Lazarevic MD, MS's avatar

this is a hot topic, thank you for writing about it! Its one ive dipped into personally. Functional Medicine focuses on the gut microbiome as a birthplace for health and disease (my language), they seem to have good reason for this perspective.

My own study/exploration into nutrition was driven by a need to cultivate a healthier gut + immune system, and has led me towards a primarily unprocessed or whole foods diet (a personal opinion is that 'plant base' may be misleading, because its tagged into foods which are highly processed, such as 'plant based meat' -my 2 cents)..... I appreciate the comments abt fermented foods.

Ive started to explore the question of WHY the body is impaired from functioning optimally... this led to inquiring if there are environment factors which impact the gut... I found Stephanie Seneff's book Toxic Legacy, a detailed review of her research on Glyphosate- its biochemical and pathophyiologic effect on living organisms... its an incredibly informative and damning report on big-Ag's affect on the quality of our food. She's a research scientist from MIT, Glyphosate is one of her focuses, aka roundup (a herbicide, dessicant but also an ANTIBIOTIC). She describes how it disturbs the balance of microbes in the human gut (plus a host of other deleterious mechanisms and proposed effects). I encourage anyone interested to listen to her lectures online (before diving into her dense book), shes very knowledgeable, informative and may shape decisions made around food shopping.

Modern, thanks for this post.

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