Our toxic body burden

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We are toxic soup! How much of a burden to our bodies are the chemical toxins that find their way inside of us?

A journalist for National Geographic decided to explore his own body chemical burden and was shocked to find out what and how many toxic chemicals were inside him, considering he lived a pretty "clean" life, in his opinion! And he was pretty surprised to find out that the chemical that was present in him in the greatest quantity was flame retardant.

After much thought, he figured it was from frequent air travel. According to the Fitzgerald Report, as of 1998, there were over 75,500 synthetic chemicals registered as appearing in processed food, consumer products, industry and agriculture. And since that time there have been about 2000 chemicals added to the list each year.

Chemicals are so much a part of our life these days, that we rarely give them a second thought.  We eat chemicals in the form of colourings, flavourings, preservatives, emulsifiers, thickeners, sweeteners, hydrogenated oils, transfats, inter-esterified fats, pesticides, herbicides, fungicides etc., and chemicals designed to make us want to eat more.  We apply chemicals on our skin, hair, underarms, teeth and nails to clean, moisturize and polish, protect from the sun’s rays, or to look and smell nice.

We bathe in water that frequently is contaminated with chlorine and fluoride.  (If you put it on your skin you are drinking it). We frequently store food in plastic, which usually have endocrine disruptors like phthalates and BPA in them – especially bad news if those foods are microwaved in that plastic!

We wash our dishes with toxic dishwashing detergent, and wash our clothes in toxic laundry detergent. Many of our household cleaners are very toxic and have toxic vapours that we breathe.

Many of us take over-the-counter medications or pharmaceutical drugs, which our livers then must detoxify. (Have you looked at the ingredient list on cough syrup??? Hydrogenated oils, colourings, artificial sweeteners – a virtual toxic soup!)  Even synthetic vitamins, especially those targeted to kids, are full of sweeteners and colourings. 

Many of us have mercury amalgam fillings, which leach mercury into our systems.  We cook with Teflon, which leaches PFOA into our food and into the air.  Then there is that new car and new carpet smell – not healthy!  And many of us have jobs involving chemicals on a daily basis. 

Walking down the street we are inhaling air filled with car exhaust and other chemicals.  And many of these chemicals stay in our bodies for a very long time.

Toxicologists will say that the amount of a particular chemical  in the food etc. is too low to cause any problems.  Maybe so if you look at each chemical individually.  But the fact is that they spray up to 19 different pesticides on a field of strawberries!  How exactly do they interact?  And how do those 19 pesticides react with the other chemicals in the food / drugs we consume, and the chemicals we inhale or absorb through our skin? 

It is really no wonder that we are a toxic mess, and why rates of cancer have climbed so dramatically over the last 100 years.  And no wonder our poor liver is having a heck of a time coping in its detox duties, and may not have much left to help our hormones function properly, leaving our bodies in a chronically stressed state!

Even today, with the crunch in health-care playing out all around us, our chemical-laden life is not even on the radar as reeking havoc with our health.  And Canada’s Food Guide is actively promoting toxic food by suggesting we choose oils like canola, corn, soybean, and sunflower, which are rancid on store shelves due to the heat used in the processing, or soft margarine, a manufactured, unnatural fat over butter or lard!  It makes me crazy.

I won’t get into the problems that our chemical mess is causing the other living creatures that share this planet with us – needless to say the news is downright scary, especially with respect to fish.

Although we can’t come close to controlling all the toxins we are exposed to, to me it makes sense to do all one can in this regard, not only for our own health but also for the health of the planet.  Choosing organic, unprocessed food, environmentally-friendly cleaners, using over-the-counter drugs sparingly, doing what is possible through lifestyle modifications to reduce the need for pharmaceuticals, and using quality non-toxic skincare products can help a lot.

I have been using organic virgin coconut oil as my moisturizer for the last two years – seems to work fine for me.  Coconut oil may be expensive as a food, but wow, is it cheap as a moisturizer!  And no one yet has commented that I smell like a coconut!

The National Geographic article is very interesting. Make sure you check out the photos too. And I found the Hundred Year Lie website to be very fascinating reading about how the economic interests of processed food industry, medical/pharmaceutical industry and chemical industry have successfully shaped the notion that synthetics are safer than their natural counterparts.  (No, margarine is NOT healthier than butter!)

Related Tips
Environmentally friendly kitchen clean-up
Teflon is hazardous to our health
Mercury, a strong nerve poison
Which plastic water bottles don’t leach chemicals?
Nanotechnology and you
Processed food is taking over our supermarkets
Water Fluoridation, boon or bane?
Fats, the good, the bad and the ugly
Coldfire


Rapp, D. MD Our Toxic World: A Wake Up Call Environmental Medical Research Foundation, Buffalo NY. 2004.

Dadd, Debra Lynn Home Safe Home Penguin Putnum Inc. New York, NY 1997

Steinman, D. and Epstein, S. The Safe Shopper’s Bible: A Consumer’s Guide to Nontoxic Household Products, Cosmetics, and Food Wiley Publishing, New York, NY 1995.

Blaylock R. MD Excitotoxins: The Taste That Kills Health Press, Santa Fe NM, 1997

Farlow, C. Food Additives: A Shopper’s Guide to What’s Safe & What’s Not (2004 Revised Edition) USA, 2004.

Pawlick, T. The End of Food: How the Food Industry is Destroying Our Food Supply–And What We Can Do About It Barricade Books, Fort Lee NJ. 2006.
Fitzgerald, R. The Hundred-Year Lie: How Food and Medicine Are Destroying Your Health Penguin Group, New York NY. 2006.

Rogers, Sherry MD Chemical Sensitivity USA, 1995.

Rogers, Sherry MD Detoxify or Die USA, 2002

Cutler, A. PhD Amalgam Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment : What You Can Do to Get Better, How Your Doctor Can Help Sammamish WA. 1999.

Kirby, D. Evidence of Harm: Mercury in Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic: A Medical Controversy St. Martin’s Press, New York, NY. 2005.

Copyright 2007 Vreni Gurd

www.wellnesstips.ca

4 Comments

  1. Leela said,

    December 14, 2008 @ 10:49 am

    I go to a gym in Toronto (Roland Semprie) that sells Isotonix supplements, and I have been taking this ORAC supplement that seems to be having amazing health benefits – my allergies have disappeared, I have more energy, my eyesight is better, I sleep well, etc. Is it because these are antioxidant supplements? Have you ever heard of them before? They are working amazingly in the meantime for my general health, but I’m curious about the long-term benefits, and how it affects toxicity.

  2. Pat said,

    March 17, 2010 @ 12:24 pm

    I’m new to your ezine and I appreciate the opportunity. I’m a little surprised, however, because all of my life I was under the impression that butter had about the same consistency, nutritional value and affect as eating vaseline. Is it that it’s the best of the worse or have I been mislead? I’m surely not a cynical person, but for me, this stuff is a big deal especially when air, water and soil are polluted and probably worse than imagined.
    Also, how does one detox their body outside of the glorious job that the liver, etc are doing. A friend has been diagnose with type 1 diabetes by traditional doctors, my holistic doctor says no way, but doesn’t seem to be able to commit time to explore the reason for the crisis for resolution and/or reversal. Are you able to point us in the proper direction, beginning with a total body detox, then adrenal gland and pancreas healthy foods? Maybe somewhere in your endeavors or expertise you’d be able to assist. Thank you

  3. Vreni said,

    March 22, 2010 @ 3:16 pm

    Hi Pat,

    Butter is a very healthy food – I suggest you look at the http://www.westonaprice.org site for more information on the healthfulness of butter, pasture raised meats and eggs, if you haver further questions after going through the “EAT” section on my website.

    Type 1 Diabetes in caused when the body is unable to produce enough insulin. It is not well understood why this happens, although I did write an article about it. http://blog.wellnesstips.ca/blog/?p=74. If inflammation is the root cause of type one diabetes, it is worth avoiding processed foods, which tend to inflame the body. I know that one can easily reverse type 2 diabetes with diet, but not type 1 as far as I know.

    Our livers are very good at detoxifying us if we don’t overload it with processed food, and eating a clean diet will go a long way towards being a detox program. We can’t do much about the air we breathe as we go about our lives, but we can control a lot of the chemicals we may encounter by choosing our cleaning and skin products carefully. Chlorella does a good job of taking heavy metals out of the body, and you can always try an over-the-counter cleanse, although I think they work mostly by forcing a change in diet.

    Hope that helps.

  4. Silas Sibley said,

    June 9, 2013 @ 8:29 pm

    Practiced for centuries by many cultures around the world — including ayurvedic and Chinese medicine systems — detoxification is about resting, cleaning and nourishing the body from the inside out. By removing and eliminating toxins, then feeding your body with healthy nutrients, detoxifying can help protect you from disease and renew your ability to maintain optimum health.-‘”;

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