moda0306 wrote:If grains are out, which I'm becoming more and more convinced you're right about, what are your feelings on fiber, including (if you think it's important) getting more of it from our other food sources? I've always belived fiber was very good for you.
I spent the past 30 years eating a big bowl of cereal every morning, so I used to believe the same thing.
Unfortunately, it appears that the conventional wisdom that fiber, from grain, is good for you appears to be nothing more than a marketing ploy from commercial grain producers — in an attempt to get us to eat cold breakfast cereals and eat more grain.
When we look at traditional cultures from the Paleolithic period (i.e. pre-agriculture) as well as traditional cultures that were documented by Weston Price and other researchers during the 1920s and 30s — we see that grains weren't needed to obtain fiber. They got their fiber from vegetables and tubers. In fact, the human species thrived for about 2.5 million years without fiber from grains.
Excess fiber from grains seems to be a bigger problem that few people fully understand. Conventional wisdom is that you need fiber to keep your colon healthy. But, if you begin to understand why fiber keeps food moving through your gut, you start to see that there is evidence that it is harming your gut in the process. The book,
Fiber Menace by Konstantin Monastyrsky, goes into great detail about the problems with fiber in grains. The book's cover is a photo of a cereal bowl full of nails. If you want a completely different perspective on the negative aspects of fiber, read the book... or at least this short review of the book:
http://www.westonaprice.org/thumbs-up-r ... ber-menace
See also...
http://www.gutsense.org (Monastyrsky's website)
Weston A. Price Foundation wrote:Fiber Menace describes major health problems that can develop from eating what's considered a modern healthy diet high in fiber from grains, vegetables, fruits, legumes and even fiber supplements. The author details how high-fiber diets produce large stools which stretch the intestinal tract beyond its normal range--eventually resulting in intestinal damage--and a drastic upset of the natural bacterial flora of the gut. The end results manifest as hernias, hemorrhoidal disease, constipation, malnourishment, irritable bowel syndrome and Crohn's disease. He also provides numerous medical references to show that high-fiber diets do not confer the benefits claimed for them.
Source:
http://www.westonaprice.org/thumbs-up-r ... ber-menace
Soaking, fermenting or sprouting your grains supposedly can minimize the destructive aspects of fiber, but I'm not enough of an expert to know if that's true or not. From my personal experience, eating traditionally soaked oatmeal was a good way to transition off of modern grains.
In my mind, modern grains are really just glorified birdseed, and it seems grain lobbyists and corporations have funded a wide range of studies to convince us to eat their birdseed.
Of course, the question on everyone's mind is... how do you poop without fiber from grains? Well, your body needs to adapt a bit. I had a little constipation when I stopped eating a lot of grains. But, it was only temporary. I was able to remedy it by eating a few raw carrots and beets before breakfast for a few days and after that it was just a matter of eating a few vegetables each day. Jaminet, also offers a few
solutions. Of course, most people would rather just eat lots of grains than adapt to a traditional diet.
Anyway, it takes a little time to adapt, but eventually you do adapt if you eat the right things.
Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.