- Joined
- Sep 5, 2020
- Messages
- 3,161
- Reason
- DX FIBRO
- Diagnosis
- 02/2020
- Country
- DE
And that'd only be the ones we can test for.every new born baby already has 83 chemicals in their bodies that shouldn't be there
I live as "organic" as I can, don't drive or fly, but firstly: to play my own part well.Soil & Water Tables are already contaminated, it's clear we are already poisoned from the inside. ... So every effort we make to clear ourselves better by what we do/don't eat/drink/absorb etc, brings the words 'horse & stable door' to mind
& may or may not help our discomfort, as it seems the damage is already done so, plus we all react differently to everything.
My food, clothes and lifestyle are "natural" and simple, because they've proven better for me - processed food & synthetics would be hell for my symptoms.
I doubt them being organic makes that much difference to that, but still.
For me, the horse I need most is sort of back in the stable, kicking, the door closed.
What manages to get out, we can get quite a lot back of.
To turn the phrase around, I believe: We shouldn't close the stable door after the horse has bolted..... so that we can get it back in again. The more we believe we can't, the less we'll try - a self-fulfilling prophecy. (Self-)Motivation is #1.
I can't extract the microplastics from my body, true. Stopping using toothpaste and wearing clothes that contain them will reduce their amount by "one person" (that's precisely enough for me to do so). But that doesn't at all mean we might as well give up improving our life under these circumstances...
If you mean the worst of pollution, I do think a bit is possible, not that much.Best case scenario is, if possible & one has a long enough life span left to experiment, avoidance of the worst of it, may perhaps, help prevent exacerbating some symptoms, for some people but with huge variation amongst individuals and that, in reality, is the best we can hope for but either which way, we are going to suffer.
But it sounds a bit like "everything" / "all symptoms" - and there my experience is entirely different. Not only can I keep many symptoms under control, but I've learnt to not suffer under the remaining ones, although they are debilitating and restrictive. I'm happier, more content than I've ever been and perhaps than many people around me are. Same goes for pollution etc. - I'm extremely conscious of it, but I don't let it get me down or panic. My brain would then be a horse that's bolted. But it's calmed.
Ah, so that's what my diet's called, I'd been wondering!am not living a 'Tenko' Starvation Diet life, because I'b be very depressed & miserable about it if I did, which is dangerous for me & one has to be just as aware of one's mental health too.
True we need to balance it out. I revel in everything I can eat. The last months it's been shifting to not wanting to eat enough. So I did allow myself more, and am working at a better compromise (atm mainly by putting me above sheep & goats ).
But it's far from concentration camp malnutrition: I have constant unlimited choice.
When my mental health is dangerous for my physical health, I work on it till it isn't.
Didn't me...I may even trying 'flooding' & see if I can cope with the outcome till my body develops some tolerance, worth a try occasionally me thinks.
Well that's exactly what we are all trying: to find our own approach.There's so many unknowns about MCAS I may even discover an alternative approach that works, who knows.
Fibro too, but with a little more "agreement" (like sunkacola's advice post).
No regrets, I hope! (I've given it up, cos 1-3 days of gut pain after was never worth it.)Anyway, that's my reasoning & am sticking to it, especially as I'm going out for a meal today