Guest guest Posted July 31, 2006 Report Share Posted July 31, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " emailme_marilyn " <emailme_marilyn wrote: > > thank you so much to both of you. > ill try to stop my husband from eating cold food/drinks, he also > already stopped eating raw sushis (because of his liver's high sgpt). > however we thought eating salads can help him lose weight (those salad > and juice diet). > if he can't eat veggies and fruits, what is a typical healthy meal for > an obese person? > > marilyn > If I understand Vinod correctly he just means raw fruits and veggies. In TCM most anything that is raw takes a lot of energy to digest (in other words it's cool, and needs to be heated up for rottening and ripening of the stomach, and this is both energetically speaking and temperature, hence why it is bad for people with disease to eat or drink cold stuff) and is therefore unfit for a weak constitution, or disease. Light steam to a heavy cook is all that is needed depending on how diseased the individual is. Light steam for regular to light disease and heavier cooking the more diseased they are. In other words eat fruits and vegetables but, just eat them cooked to some degree. It is easier on the body that way. Also something else worth mentioning. Cold drinks and ice cream or anything cold of that nature are rough on the body (meaning anyone's body, but especially diseased people), so moderation is always a good idea, and cool is much less hard on the body which is much less hard than frozen. Think of this in the example of heat stroke. If someone had heat stroke someone who knew how to treat it would never put ice on them. The reason is it would induce shock to some degree. Instead they would take their core body temp and put them in a bath of water 3 degrees F lower or so and slowly bring them down, and add more cold water as the core temp comes down until it reaches desired temp. Another thing to think about is if you take a real glass that has come out of the hot dishwasher and put it in ice water it will shatter. If you have an overall hot composition, this is exactly what you are doing every time you take something cold into your body. Cold between meals is also much more tolerable by TCM standards on the body. In other words if you want to eat ice cream, eat it between meals, not at a meal, as the body will handle this much better. This is also true of cold drinks, or anything cold in nature. I'll explain the reason for this in both TCM and western thought. In western medicine it is well known that for the gastric juices to function properly the mass of food in your stomach needs to be exactly 37 plus or minus 1 degree C. If your stomach does not process at this temp there will be an incomplete breakdown (some people emphasize protein here, as these proteins bonding to the walls of the gut create allergies, remember that in western medicine a big portion of how the body sends messages is protein). The body has a pretty good system (that is when someone is healthy) of being able to regulate this temperature, considering nothing is overly extreme. Your overall meal when combined into a single mass (ie after you have chewed it and it is all sitting in your stomach, with all drinks ect included) should be about 100 F (or 37.8 C) according to TCM, which resounds quite nicely with western medicine. Also if you over eat (or over drink with a meal for that matter) the acids and other gastric juices will not completely mix, and will also result in an incomplete breakdown, causing the same types of indigestion problems. In TCM the spleen and the stomach are one of the first steps in digestion. TCM clearly states that the spleen is very sensitive to dampness and can be overloaded by eating, so both forms of medicine in this example have the same findings, which is overall great! TCM is sometimes better described by analogies. Picture a camp fire with an old pot belly cooker (I am thinking like witches brew here) over the fire. If this were made of clay or porcelain and it was hot (or ready to digest) and you put ice water or something very cold, it would crack and the water would flow out onto the fire, extinguishing it, and you would be left with no fire, and a broken pot. This is Not very desirable if you are hungry (quite literally as your body would be hungry for the nutrients from digestion). Take another example, let's say you over eat and/or drink with a meal. In the pot analogy here, it would be like filling the pot to the brim on a hot fire. You really can't over fill a pot, you can just fill it to capacity and then the rest will drain off (this is noted in TCM as the yang organs can overflow, but never be filled to capacity), and this would start to put out the fire (ie eating till you are stuffed). Since you have a really full pot, you need a good fire to make sure it all gets cooked, but you have started to shoot yourself in the foot because you have started to put out the fire (this is why eating till you are stuffed can be bad for your health over the long term). And in the example of eating till you are completely full-If was up to the brim you could not stir it without it spilling and putting out the fire, so let's say instead you just let it sit. Well if you have ever cooked on a camp fire in the same conditions, you know that the stuff on the edge will burn, while the stuff in the middle will not get cooked. This wouldn't be desirable either, because you would have half burnt, half not cooked food. And in this case the uncooked food could actually be unprocessed proteins that enter in your gut and get absorbed and might help create food sensitivities and allergies, and also other portions of the food could have a high acid content that could maybe irritate the gut wall. This is why it is best to eat to the point where you are not quite full, and when you eat only drink a glass or two of moderate temperatures, remembering your total intake average temperature is best around 100 F. Drink for hydration should be taken between meals (30 min either way of a meal I think is the suggestion). This of course is the optimum for best health, and sometimes people can get away with more depending on the state of disease or health they are in. I would also like to take some time to explain out another " urban myth " . People think that it is ok to eat cold with a meal, and their reasoning is, oh well my body can heat it up. Yes it is true that we are warm blooded and can heat things up, but to this extreme we do not have the capacity in the given time. Food only stays in the stomach about 30 min, so in this hypothetical case we would have to heat the mass entirely up to our 100 F in 20 min, to allow for 10 min for the mass to mix (the mass has to completely be mixed with the acid before it goes into the gut, as not much mixing takes place there). Let's say you eat a 1 lb meal, and drink 1 cup of water and it takes the same amount of energy to heat the meal up as it would if it were water (not an unreal example considering most food is 50% or greater some form of moisture) just for figuring sakes. BTU stands for British thermal unit. It is a form of measuring energy. It takes one BTU to raise 1lb of water one degree F. Water is 8lb's to 1 gallon, so 1 cup (8 oz) of water weighs 1/2lb. Just for sake of figuring, lets say your meal is 80 F, and your glass of water is 50 F. If I average these two together, factoring in the weight, I get a 1.5lb mass @ 70 F. Not too unrealistic eh? Ok so to raise 1.5 lb from 70 F to 100 F takes 30 degrees times by 1.5 lbs or 45 BTU. 1 BTU = 251.9 calories. Now a calorie is not the same as a Calorie. Calorie is what we use in diet, and that is 1000 calories (kind of confusing I know). So to raise this mass to the temp required would take 11.3 Calories, and lets say that 80% of calories burned actually turn into usable heat that we can pipe off to the stomach, so now our total is 14.1 Calories, and that would have to be burned in 20 minutes. Now imagine you take the same meal and guzzle it off with a 64 oz ice cold coke. Not including the health effects of the sugar and carbonation, your body would have to burn 55.4 Calories in the same 20 min. This might not sound too unreasonable, but the human body is only about 11% efficient converting Calories into heat (see note for reference at the end). So let's put this into perspective. If 175lb man were running a 9 min mile he would be burning about 306 Calories in that same 20 minutes and would have covered over 2 miles. At 11% efficiency this is 33.66 Calories turned into usable heat energy (this does not include the heat energy lost in perspiration, as it is lost and no longer usable). Most people are quite sedative after a meal, which would make the figures even more astounding. You can see for this example just how the body is not capable of bringing such an amount of liquid up to temperature in this short time frame to allow for complete digestion, hence why it is good to have an overall average temperature of a meal around 100 F. Also if you are a woman, it is not a good idea to eat ice cream on or around your cycle. Women are susceptible to both cold and damp on the menses, of which ice cream is extremely both. I stated this recently, but it seems relevant here, so I stated it again. =P It looks like Vinod has already responded in the time it took me to write this =P. I hope this might better help you understand some of these concepts in TCM, and hopefully it can do the same for others on the list! I hope my posts have information that relevant to the situation and helpful in explaining TCM and not too long. If they seem a little long, just let me know, and I can shorten them up a bit. Cheers! =) Note: The following excerpt is from LIVING IN SPACE by G. Harry Stine " During sleep, the body's energy expenditure is about 65 Calories (kCal) per hour. At rest lying down, it rises to 80 kCal/hr and, when sitting up, to 100 kCal/hr. During light exercise, this jumps to as much as 200 kCal/hr and, during heavy physical work, to 500 kCal/hr. Under normal conditions the human body is only 11 percent efficient as a heat engine. This means that 89 percent of the metabolic heat output shows up as increased perspiration rate, increased respiration, and slightly elevated body temperature " pg 135 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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