More About Mucus Than You Ever Knew You Wanted To Know!
Extract from the excellent
book "The pH Miracle"
by Dr. Robert O. Young and Shelley Redford Young
Although we tend to associate it with
head colds and worse, mucus is, in fact, a normal secretion.
It is a clear, slippery substance the body makes to protect
the surfaces of membranes. One way it does that is by coating
anything you ingest, even water. So it also engulfs any toxins
you happen to take in, and in doing so it becomes thick, sticky,
and cloudy (as we see when we suffer from colds) to "trap" the
toxins and escort them out of the body. Most foods Americans eat most often cause that thickened mucus.
They either contain toxins or break down in a toxic way in the
digestive tract (or both).
The worst offenders are dairy products,
followed by animal protein, white flour, processed foods, chocolate,
coffee, and alcoholic beverages. (Vegetables do not cause the
formation of this sticky mucus, which is just one more reason
to feature them prominently in your diet.) Over time, these
foods can encrust the intestines with thick mucus and the fecal
material and other debris it traps. This slime is bad enough
on its own before you consider that it creates an environment
that also promotes the growth of negative microforms.
Emotional stress, environmental pollution,
lack of exercise, insufficient digestive enzymes,
and absence of probiotics in the small and
large intestine all contribute to the buildup of that slime
on the wall of the colon. With buildup, transit time for materials
passing through the lower bowel increases. Low levels of fiber
in your diet, slow it still further. As the gooey mass begins
to stick to the wall of the colon, a pocket is formed between
the mass and the wall, which is an ideal home for microforms.
Material gradually adds itself to the slime, until much of it
stops moving altogether. The colon absorbs what fluids are left,
the buildup begins to harden, and the home for unfriendly organisms
becomes a fortress.
Heartburn, gas, bloating, ulcers, nausea, and gastritis (irritation of the walls of the intestines
due to gas and acid) are all a result of a gastrointestinal
tract overgrown with microforms. So, too, is constipation,
which in addition to being an unpleasant symptom causes more
problems and more symptoms. Constipation often shows up as,
or comes along with, a coated tongue, diarrhea, cramps, gas,
foul odor, intestinal pain, and various forms of inflammation,
such as colitis and diverticulitis. (We've all heard the remark
that a self centered person thinks their "stuff " does not stink.
The solemn truth is, it is not supposed to! If it does, that's
Nature hammering a warning on the door.)
If mucus causes respiratory problems ... check this page for help
Mucus
Clearing Diet
Excerpt
from "North American Diet"
Not All Mucus Is Bad
Healthy mucus is a clear, slippery, lubricating secretion, used
to protect mucus membranes along the digestive, respiratory, urinary
and reproductive tracts. Unhealthy mucus is cloudy, thick, and
sticky. Mucus is secreted to stop irritants, pollutants, or carcinogenic
compounds, created by putrefying, undigested food residues. It's
like a blanket of protection. Certain foods such as milk and
bread cause an increase of mucus secretions. These foods have
large protein molecules (casein and gluten) which are difficult
to digest and are more prone to putrefaction, and may be toxic
or an irritant to the body. For many, bread and milk cause sinus
congestion.
Mucoid is a mixture of large gelatinous particles, which has a sticky
or jelly-like consistency. The word mucoid encompasses the terms
mucin, colloid, mucoproteins and glycoproteins. Mucoid is caused
by many toxins, pollutants, food additives and allergies. Mucoid
can be present in any body tissue but is most commonly associated
with the respiratory system, gastrointestinal tract, lymphatic
system, uterus, vagina urinary system and the joints.
Cartilage in a joint contains mucus membrane cells which secrete
a clear slippery mucus to keep joints lubricated. When mucoid-forming
substances are present, toxic mucoid builds
up deposits within the joint.
Mucoid within the body tissues, drains into the lymph which filters waste from the intercellular fluid. The blood absorbs 90% of this cellular waste fluid and the lymph absorbs the other 10% composed of the larger waste particles. The lymph glands contain one-way valves, lined with muscle tissues that behave like pumps. If an overload of mucoid from the cells accumulates in the lymph and is not cleansed from the system, it can become stagnant and prone to infection.
Dr.
Robert Gray, a nutritionist, determined, through intensive
testing that certain foods are mucus-forming and others are mucus
cleansing.
The foods shown to cause the most mucus are:
Dairy products, white flour,
sugar, eggs, peanuts and fats.
Making Cell Food From Cells
The
relationship between mucus and diet is not a new theory. In 1912,
Dr. Arnold Ehret released a book called, The Mucusless Diet and
Healing System. He discusses in great detail, the mucus-forming
effect of various foods. Ehret theorized that all disease is caused
by a clogging of the tube and membrane structures within the body
due to a build-up of restrictive mucus.
Foods that form mucus have a glue-like bond, tightly holding their molecules together. In milk, it is casein, in wheat, rye, oats and barley, the glue-like substance is gluten. The dictionary defines gluten as a tough, sticky mixture of plant proteins, obtained by washing out the starch from wheat or other cereal flour and used as an adhesive and thickener. These glue-like bonds require strong stomach acids for digestion.
Lack of chewing and poor food combinations make it impossible for the stomach acids to properly dissolve the bond between these molecules. After digestion, many food particles are still too large to be used by the body. In a short time, the oversized, partly-digested food particles start to putrefy and are coated with mucus to prevent further putrefaction while still in the intestine.
Eighty percent of all absorption takes place in the small intestine. Only 20 percent is absorbed by the stomach and large intestine. The stomach performs very little absorption because the gastric contents are so acidic. The entire gastric epithelium must be devoted to mucus production. Without mucus to protect the stomach, ulcers would develop in a few hours. Within the duodenum (small intestine) the submucosal glands produce copious quantities of mucus. This mucus contains buffers that elevate the pH balance.
The more acid forming the food, the greater the amount of mucus secreted.
Imagine
a drain, clogged with human hair, dust, old soap and pieces of
decaying food, all forming a sticky mass of rotting waste that
cannot be removed. The medical names labeled for these diseases
are diverticula, colitis, stricture, prolapsus, hemorrhoids, worms,
yeast infection, chronic constipation, colon cancer and appendicitis.
Removal of clogged waste allows the human machine to work again.
But, unless there is dietary change, the symptoms will simply
return.
Without the natural, sponge-like properties of fruits and vegetables, intestinal diseases will continue to abound, especially amongst the elderly.
Grapes and citrus fruits are some of the greatest mucus-cleansers. They help the body to remove mucus and toxins, supplying vital nutrients in the correct balance for rejuvenation and healing.
The most powerful method of removing mucus from the intestines and mucoid from the organs and lymph glands is the combined cleansing effect of a non-mucus/mucoid-forming diet and fasting.
Factors
Which Increase Mucus
Note from Four Winds Nutrition
Did you know? The average American child
will eat 1,500 peanut butter sandwiches by the time he or she
graduates from high school!
Peanuts, even in their purest form (think: just cracked from its shell), are inherently one of the most mucus forming foods out there.
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