Health & Wellness
It may sound counterintuitive, but people who spend more of their day having deep discussions and less time engaging in small talk seem to be happier, said Matthias Mehl, a psychologist at the University of Arizona who published a study on the subject.
"We found this so interesting, because it could have gone the other way - it could have been, 'Don't worry, be happy' - as long as you surf on the shallow level of life you're happy, and if you go into the existential depths you'll be unhappy," Dr. Mehl said.
According to a series of articles on the website Green Med Info, there are other foods in the Western diet that have properties similar to wheat, because they contain "chitin binding lectins", which are similar to wheat lectin (WGA).
Chitins are long polymers of n-acetyl-glucosamine, the primary binding target of wheat lectin. Wheat lectin and chitin-binding lectin are therefore functionally identical. Chitin-binding lectin containing foods include:
- Potato
- Tomato
- Barley
- Rye
- Rice
Even a modest reduction in consumption of these types of carbohydrate-rich foods may promote loss of deep belly fat. This could help reduce the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, stroke and coronary artery disease, as excess visceral fat (intra-abdominal fat) raises the risk of these diseases.
According to Eurekalert:
"... [S]ubjects who consumed [a] moderately carb-restricted diet had 11 percent less deep abdominal fat than those who ate the standard diet ... [S]ubjects on both diets lost weight. However, the moderately carb-restricted diet promoted a 4 percent greater loss of total body fat".Sources:
Green Med Info
Green Med Info
Green Med Info
The Plant Journal January 2004; 37(1):34-45
The Biochemical Journal December 15 2003; 376(Pt 3):717-24
Science June 17 2003; 220(4603):1290-2
Cancer Letters February 8 2007; 246(1-2):290-9
Eurekalert June 5, 2011
Which Came First - The Chicken or the Egg?
It has long been held that chronic seizures cause blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage. Recent studies have also demonstrated that BBB damage triggers seizures.We know that gluten sensitivity can cause seizure disorders. To that point, the Discovery Channel had an episode of Mystery Diagnosis that featured a young boy who responded to gluten by having seizures. Additionally, we know that gluten sensitivity can contribute to blood brain barrier permeability (leaky brain). Now add to this the fact that a leaky brain will contribute to seizures and epilepsy. Thus the circle is complete. When added together these elements create a viscous unending cycle of perpetual food induced damage.
More than 9,000 cases of the bacterial infection were reported in California last year, marking the state's biggest outbreak of whooping cough, which is also known as pertussis, in over 60 years.
Ten cases led to the death of infants under two months old, California heath officials said.
Students arriving for their first day of school in the fall will need documentation to prove they received a booster shot of the vaccine for pertussis, tetanus, diphtheria.
"While everyone is taking summer vacation pertussis is not taking that vacation," said Dr. John Talarico, immunization branch chief with the California Department of Public Health.
Whooping cough, which causes violent and uncontrollable coughing, infects 30 to 50 million people a year globally and kills about 300,000, mostly children in developing countries.
To a die-hard meat eater, there's nothing more irritating than a smug vegetarian. I feel at liberty to say this because I am one (a steak lover) and I married the other (a vegetarian with a pulpit). For me, "Do you now, or would you ever, eat meat?" has always been a question on par with "Do you ever want to get married?" and "Do you want children?" The answer to one reveals as much about a person's interior life, and our compatibility, as the response to the others. My husband Andrew's reply to all of those questions when I asked him three years ago was, "No."
Obviously, we're now married. We had twins earlier this year. And somewhere in between those two events, the answer to the third question was also re-evaluated, and the vegetarian soapbox was put to rest, too.
Yes, my husband has started eating meat again after a seven-year hiatus as an ethically motivated and health-conscious vegetarian. About a year ago, we arrived at a compromise: I would eat less meat - choosing mostly beef, pork and poultry produced by local California ranchers without the use of hormones or antibiotics - and he would indulge me by sharing a steak on occasion. But arriving at that happy medium wasn't as straightforward as it sounds. In the three years we've been together, several turns of events have made both of us rethink our choices and decide that eating meat selectively is better for the planet and our own health. And judging by the conversations we've had with friends and acquaintances, we're not the only ones who believe this to be true.
Comment: For more information on the benefits of meat, particularly fat, see this Sott link:
Everything About Fat

A bottle of the pertussis vaccine against whooping cough and a syringe are show in a pharmacy in Pasadena, Calif. on Sept. 17, 2010.
A cluster of whooping cough is growing on Long Island, with dozens of people infected by the virus.
As CBS 2's Hazel Sanchez reports, a warning was sent out as children begin to head to summer camp - a certain breeding ground for the illness.
Parents in Smithtown are on high alert, as the highly contagious whooping cough is spreading through their community.
"It's one of those diseases you don't think you'll ever hear about again," parent Rick Vollkommer said.
Donna Wilson said she's not taking any chances with her daughter, Kayla.
"She has been coughing a little bit here and there, so I'm contemplating maybe taking her to the doctor tomorrow, just to do a quick test," she said.
"We are facing a massive mental health problem as a result of our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. As a country we have not responded adequately to the problem. Unless we act urgently and wisely, we will be dealing with an epidemic of service related psychological wounds for years to come." - Bobby Muller, President Veterans for America
"The multiple nature of it [multiple tours and longer deployments] is unprecedented. People just get blasted and blasted and blasted." - Maj. Connie Johnmeyer, 332nd Medical GroupAccording to official Defense Department (DOD) figures, 332,000 soldiers have suffered brain injuries since 2000, although most independent experts estimate that the number is over 400,000. Many of these are mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBI), a term that is profoundly misleading.
At the time of his death, the child had more drugs in his body than the normal level for adults suffering from the same problems.
According to the Daily Mail:
"... 661,000 prescriptions are dished out annually in Britain to treat childhood ADHD - double the figure of five years ago. These medicines are being given to very young children - one aged just 15 months ... despite official guidelines from the manufacturer and the fact that the UK's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) prohibits their use for those under six."In the New York Times article linked below, internist Danielle Ofri also talks about the effects of depression. Her childhood friend Michael killed himself during his sophomore year of college. And just two weeks before writing the article, she called one of her patients to reschedule an appointment, and was told that the patient had been found dead in his apartment, most likely a suicide.
Comment: To learn more about The Over-Prescribing of Psychoactive Drugs to Children: A Scourge of Our Times read the following articles:
UK: 3,000 children were given unlicensed anti-psychotic drugs despite safety fears
"I think in 10 years time we will ask ourselves what we were thinking giving these children amphetamines."
Prescriptions for teens and young adults on the rise
More Children on Drugs Than Ever: Chronic Prescriptions Increase Dramatically
Drugs for ADHD 'not the answer'
SSRI's Prescribed for Autistic Children Make them Worse
In 2011, this story should be no more than newspaper history. Shockingly, though, the fight for better bread as being key to better health continues to this day.
Back then, standards of nutrition in Britain were of major concern to the government. During the 19th century, as the industrial revolution pushed millions of Britons from the countryside into the cities, the nation's diet got rapidly worse - and many health problems seemed linked to that.
"If all the drugs were thrown in the ocean, everyone would be better-off...except for the fish." - Oliver Wendell Holmes
That maxim of 19th-century American physician and author Oliver Wendell Holmes is an overstatement today, but still contains a grain of wisdom. For generations of physicians, the prevailing teaching was not to prescribe too many drugs in order to avoid unwanted side-effects and drug interactions. No longer.
Even considering remarkable technological advances - organ transplants, robotic surgeries, lasers, electronic medical records - the greatest difference in American medicine since the 1970's is the increase in the number of medications prescribed to patients today. To treat chronic diseases and control symptoms, the average American takes about 12 medications annually, compared to seven, 20 years ago. Patients who once came into the office carrying their medications in a purse, or pocket, now need a shopping bag.
Comment: To learn more about how American's are over-prescribed while Big Pharma gets rich read the following articles:
100,000 Americans Die Each Year from Prescription Drugs, While Pharma Companies Get Rich
The Silent Epidemic - Legal Prescription Drug Abuse
Prescription Drugs Kill 300 Percent More Americans than Illegal Drugs
Prescription drug deaths skyrocket 68 percent over five years as Americans swallow more pills
The Other Drug Cartel...
Many legislators in Congress still do not get it! The largest contributing factor in the outrageous cost of prescription drugs is advertising and promotion, estimated to be about 37% of the price we pay for those drugs. More money is spent on lobbying, advertising and promotion by the pharmaceutical industry than is spent on research and development.












Comment: For more information on the hazards of eating gluten and casein read the following articles:
The Addictive Opioids in Wheat and Dairy Foods
New England Journal of Medicine: Gluten Can Cause 55 Diseases
Gluten: What You Don't Know Might Kill You
Sensitivity To Gluten May Result In Neurological Dysfunction; Independent Of Symptoms