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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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Introduction<br />

Finally, have a basic understanding of and consider carefully a few other things before placing much s<strong>to</strong>ck in<br />

what you read:<br />

• Is the study longitudinal (covering a long period of time)?<br />

• Was it double-blinded, which means that neither the researcher nor the subject knows which of multiple<br />

therapies the person is receiving?<br />

• Was it placebo controlled, meaning that some subjects received a placebo (sugar tablet) instead of the<br />

supplement or drug?<br />

• Was the research published in peer-reviewed journals (often, though not always, ensuring more<br />

scientific analysis)?<br />

• How big was the sample size? Bigger is better, and although case studies (with only a few subjects) are<br />

interesting, without further research, you shouldn’t bet the farm on findings of those kinds.<br />

The more you read and study, the more confidence you can have that the very important decisions you make<br />

about how <strong>to</strong> fuel your body are sound. This book undertakes <strong>to</strong> synthesize the research and best practices from<br />

around the world, leading <strong>to</strong> dietary practice that is simple and achievable and cus<strong>to</strong>mizable for your personal<br />

dietary needs—a direct route <strong>to</strong> optimal health.<br />

How Do I Get My Kids <strong>to</strong> Eat Right?<br />

This may be the #1 question I am asked, and it’s also the one I care about most. It’s therefore worthy of dealing<br />

with right here, before we even get started. Tackling <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong> is a worthy goal for anyone, and<br />

you can make these changes whether or not you have children, and whether or not they live at home.<br />

But one of my greatest passions in life is <strong>to</strong> help parents understand the importance of excellent nutrition early<br />

in life and implement strategies <strong>to</strong> achieve it. So if you have children at home (or are close <strong>to</strong> people who do),<br />

this is for you.<br />

I have found dietitians <strong>to</strong> be often useless and sometimes harmful in what they teach mothers about nutrition.<br />

(Truth-seeking dietitians do exist, however, and higher education in nutrition is improving steadily.) Keep in<br />

mind that these are the folks designing the menus in school and hospital lunchrooms. (Enough said?) It’s not<br />

their fault: they are taught curricula heavily influenced and even written by the wealthiest industries in<br />

America: the dairy and meat conglomerates.<br />

My experience is that dietitians feel their main job is <strong>to</strong> push milk and dairy products, because they have been<br />

taught that these products create strong bones and teeth. I spoke with a dietitian recently who had never heard<br />

of any of the ingredients in Appendix A (whole-food sweeteners and other whole, organic, and raw products<br />

you can find in health food s<strong>to</strong>res). She taught in a class I attended that getting your child <strong>to</strong> drink “flavored”<br />

milk is a great idea. By that she meant hormone- and antibiotic-contaminated milk with pink chemical dye and<br />

plenty of sugar added.<br />

Many dietitians also believe that <strong>to</strong> get protein, you need <strong>to</strong> eat plenty of animal flesh. When I was growing up,<br />

the government-sponsored “food pyramid” pushed two servings of meat and four servings of dairy daily!<br />

Fortunately, thanks <strong>to</strong> an overwhelming, virtually undeniable body of research pointing <strong>to</strong> disease prevention<br />

being in the form of plant foods such as vegetables and whole grains, a very slow, positive shift is taking place<br />

at the policy level. (The powerful meat and dairy industries still, however, have far <strong>to</strong>o much influence on<br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong> 11

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