Guest guest Posted February 21, 2008 Report Share Posted February 21, 2008 Hi everyone, A few weeks ago, there was a discussion here about dealing with spouses and life partners. In the Path of Health Community, various people have written rather extraordinary pieces on this and related topics. Following is one such writing. " Him " refers to this woman's fiancée. Enjoy! Elchanan _____ Caroline J. Friday, January 18, 2008 11:41 AM PathOfHealth Re: [PathOfHealth] Transitioning Loved Ones (WAS Thoughts on " Eating " - Personal Experience (WAS: Transitioning children)) .... I am leading by example. When I gave him advice but was not stable in my transition, he, like anyone would, had trouble trusting what I had to say. One of the things that helps keep me 80/10/10 (with those few human exceptions- I'm transitioning after all Smile emoticon , is that if I do not, he will naturally not trust me. So he's another motivation for my not trying cooked foods. I also share with him how I feel when I act in different ways and how that is impacting my life. For example, I used to be tired all the time. When he met me, I slept often on the sofa. When I transitioned to raw foods, I had energy. A normal person might say I didn't have more energy than they did, but to me, not wanting to sleep and be lethargic all day was a big difference. Also, when I ate cooked foods, I had chronic PMS/cramps. Eating a vegetarian diet helped, exercising helped, but it did not stop the fact that I had intense mood swings (sadness and craziness, no anger- lucky for him!-several days a month). It would be so bad that at times I would lay on the floor and look and feel catatonic with a blanket of sadness (for no reason). When I started eating 80/10/10, I stopped this catatonic state and instead cried for reasons that would normally not make me cry (they might make me feel disappointed and sad, but I could usually get over it pretty easily and I don't cry easily/at all normally). One day, I came home crying. He's sweet, and being used to the fact that I cried for silly reasons during that time of the month, he smiled at me and said- " so what silly reason are you crying about? " I'm fortunate because looking into his smiling eyes when I'm crying makes me feel silly and I admitted that day that it was because I ate chocolate. I ate chocolate at school, my inner voice said not to, my impulsive body told me to, and the more I ate, the more I fought my body telling me it didn't like the chocolate (my tongue didn't enjoy it like it used to), and after finishing an entire bar, I had a terrible headache and felt a bit nauseated. He learned two things there- your body becomes more sensitive when you remove toxins from your life for some time and sends you messages it would not have otherwise. He and I discussed this. He thought like many that it meant that my body was growing weak. I gave him the callus analogy. When you play the guitar, your fingers form calluses and become less sensitive to both pleasure and pain. A finger without calluses is sensitive and thus better able to send the message to the brain as to what is good or not good for it (e.g. caress is good but finger might not feel it. Minimal pain is bad but finger may not be able to feel it). The stomach and body is the same way. Other reasons why he's interested: -I had two surgeries this summer (before I learned about natural hygiene) to remove two different tumors from my body. I went on a juice fast to shut down my digestive system as much as I could (or so I believed.) Because my digestive system did not work as hard, I recovered much faster than the doctors thought I would. I took none of the painkillers that they gave me (and they gave me a lot), and felt no pain. My scars are disappearing. The speed of recovery in and of itself is impressive. -I am ready to answer all of his questions and demonstrate that I am not blindly making decisions. I am being educated, I do my research, and when I apply what I learn, positive results result. If I don't have an answer, I tell him " thanks for bringing that up, I should definitely consider and research that. " That shows that I am not defensive and that I truly am open to considering all perceptions/sides/theories before making my decision. -When he feels sick (his stomach is sensitive), I explain to him why. Although he may not want to change, I do offer an explanation- if he's interested. I do not force knowledge or share knowledge he does not wish to hear right now. I hold confidence that when he will someday be ready to hear, understand, and practice leading a healthier life if I let him change/pursue his journey at his own pace. (I think this is very important. It is very annoying for someone to " mentor " (annoy you) with all this knowledge, perceptions, etc. if you didn't ask for it, are not interested in it (whether you should or shouldn't be) and when you are not ready for it. -Because he is a consultant, he cannot afford to be sick and understands that. If he's sick, there's no money to pay the bills. So when he was sick for 2 weeks, after working while sick instead of resting (actual resting, fasting, or requiring less energy from his body- e.g. eating just fruits and vegetables), he finally gave in. He ate only fruits for one day (he wasn't ready to do more than that) and physically rested for 3 days and healed. -I have learned to give him what he asks- or the healthiest closest version of it. I hope that someday he will be 80/10/10. He can't imagine being 80/10/10 now. When I told him I would transition him to 80/10/10, he got turned off the idea of being healthy. It was too overwhelming, too much for him. When he gets closer to it, it won't be a big deal to him. For now, if he's in the mood for a burger, I make him a low fat vegan burger. If he's in the mood for fried foods, I try and make him the low fat vegan version, and sometimes give him the fried one. With time, and by letting him move at his own pace, he is getting turned off of fried and less healthy foods. I think this point is also extremely important. If you try to move too fast personally or are too hard on those around you, they will fail. Some people can make the change overnight (Robby). Some people are not ready for that and if you transition them faster than they are ready for (they will become more sensitive to bad foods and their bodies, inner voices will start telling them to eat healthier and healthier until they have reached optimal), then it will be like a pendulum. It will swing back and they will binge a lot- it will look like they have gotten nowhere. Some people take years to get to 80/10/10. I keep that in mind (though secretly hope it will take less time) and trust in his body's natural ability to heal/tell him to eat and live differently. -I do not make him feel guilty for making exceptions. If he eats cheese, or fish or dairy (usually outside of the home), I ask him how he felt after it. He often/sometime admits that he didn't feel good after it. I leave it at that. He knows he shouldn't have. By not making him feel guilty by acting disappointed/sad/frustrated, by acting accepting, he does not feel the need to hide anything from me and does not feel like he is being deprived (the resultant behavior would have otherwise been binging behind my back). He is becoming more aware of the impact of food on his body and is slowly transitioning at his own pace. (FYI- he does not see himself as transitioning- he sees it as eating food that makes him feel good. He does not plan on removing fish for his diet, for example. Whether he intends on transitioning or not, he IS transitioning. I think the fact that he views himself as one who tries to eat what makes him feel good makes it easier for him to eat healthy/transition. I believe there was a gentleman in this group that refused to call himself vegan even though he transitioned to eating vegan foods. Called yourself a vegan focuses on what you are depriving yourself of. Focusing on eating simply because it makes you feel good focuses on what you actually do eat and enjoy and helps you accept the transitioning exceptions. If he focused on the idea of " transitioning, " he would be focusing on what he is leaving behind, which he does not perceive as all being THAT bad, yet). Hope this helps! Best wishes, Caroline P.S. Sorry for sending this late! I got a little wrapped up in life. Smile emoticon P.S.S. I have been frustrated that he is not transitioning faster, but then I think about myself and the fact that it is taking me time too. I have to remind myself that some people take years (which is not as bad as you may think...if it takes years for someone to transition at their own pace, and they live 80/10/10 for the rest of their lives, it is much better than them trying to speed up the process, acting like a pendulum, and never getting there or giving up). It is possible that he may at one point make an overnight change, but it may also be possible that he will need to continue seeing the long-term impact on my health to get motivated and that it will take him longer. There are no rules. I am not him- he is an individual entity/spirit/person that I love and can help guide, but ultimately the change has to come from him, from within. I have no control over him and have accepted that. I can influence him by leading by example and being available as a loving and accepting guide, but that's it. I have accepted that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2008 Report Share Posted February 22, 2008 Elachan, Thanks for sharing that post with us. I have been transitioning to 811rv since Aug of last year. I even managed more than 30 days 100%, but have only been able to maintain 90% since November. My body tells me by its physical signs, runny eyes, congested nose and usually upset stomach (I have resorted to taking digestive enzymes as a transition stop-gap measure. Not optimal;, but I don't want to give up on transitioning, but have realized I am imperfect and this is taking me a while to fight the cooked addictions). Sharing stories such as those really help. I have to say it takes Herculean (no drama there, just truth) efforts to cook for my family (I have an 11 yr old and refuse to stop cooking for him; otherwise, his dad will feed him horridly) and stay Raw. As time goes by, it becomes less of an effort, but is still trying. Thanks for the occasional blurb about succesful 811'ers. ---Monica ______________________________\ ____ Never miss a thing. Make your home page. http://www./r/hs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.