Detoxification
What is it?
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Detoxification is the term used to describe
the process your body goes through to get rid of toxins. Detoxification
symptoms - both physical and mental - may appear when you alter your
lifestyle by starting something new, such as changing your diet or
exercising, or by discontinuing a current habit, such as eating
chocolate or drinking coffee. These symptoms include headache,
stomachache, cough, diarrhea, skin eruptions (rash), clogged sinus, and
fever, as well as feeling rundown and irritable. The symptoms may be of
short duration and slight irritation, or they could last longer and
cause you considerable discomfort.
Because these symptoms are the same as those
that show up in certain illnesses, changing your diet or lifestyle can
result in misunderstanding: If I am doing something that is supposed to
be good for me, why do I have these symptoms? Why do I feel worse, and
not better? Understanding this apparent contradiction is perhaps the
first, and most important, hurdle you must get over when making a
dietary or lifestyle change.
If you consider this contradiction carefully,
however, it is easy to understand. Think of how you might have
experienced this on a short-term basis. If you do not get regular
exercise and then play some softball with your kids, the next day you
might feel bad - tired with sore muscles. This is your body reacting to
something that it is not used to doing. You can see the same thing when
you stop a regular activity; if you are a soda drinker and stop drinking
soda for a while, you may notice that you have less energy and you may
even have a headache. When you change your diet or lifestyle, the same
thing happens; your body reacts to the change.
Why does this happen?
As we live, toxins accumulate in our bodies.
Some of these are due to our diet and others are due to the environment
around us. Of course, our lifestyle also fits in - if you smoke or use
alcohol you are accumulating even more toxins.
When you make a change in diet or lifestyle,
through stopping a bad habit or eating better, your cells begin to
eliminate the toxic substances. Before finding the exit, however, the
toxins are released into the bloodstream and are carried through the
circulatory system.
This transportation and elimination may result in
headache, diarrhea, or constipation, and often toxins are eliminated
through the skin, resulting in rashes or skin problems (especially if
you are prone to such problems). You may also feel a lack of energy,
especially if you are eliminating meats from your diet. (The protein
found in meat is more stimulating than that found in vegetables.) You
may also find that, with the absence of toxins, you absorb substances
more easily. Thus, the sugar and caffeine in a soda might really set you
off.
In a nutshell, we could say that the body
always goes for quality, and when the food coming in is of higher
quality than the present tissue, the body will discard the present
tissue because it wants to make room for tissue created by the
higher-quality food.
How severe are the symptoms and how long do they last?
How long the symptoms last and how severe they
are depend on your lifestyle before making a change and how quickly you
make a change. If you have a diet heavy in red meats, for example, and
become a vegetarian overnight, you might have severe symptoms for a
time. If your lifestyle changes are gradual, the symptoms could be less
severe.
The duration of the symptoms might not be
linear; there is a greater chance that they will come in cycles. At
first you may feel great and then experience some detoxification
symptoms. After the initial toxins are flooded out, you will feel good
again, if not better. However, the body “goes deeper” and finds more
toxins to eliminate; the symptoms may reappear again, and after more
toxins are eliminated, you will feel better yet. As things progress, you
will find that the period of symptoms is shorter and the period of
well-being greater.
What can I do during this period?
The hardest thing for many people to do is
accept that they are not sick and realize that the body is cleansing
itself. Once you get beyond this psychological barrier, the rest is
easy. The most important thing to
do can be summed up in one word: Rest.
Rest, and let the body do what it needs to. If
you have the luxury of staying home, do so! If not, cut back on social
engagements and perhaps even cut back on any exercise you are getting.
Give your body as much energy as possible to do its job. Eat light foods
that are easy to digest - consume fruits and vegetables and drink plenty
of water.
Suggested Reading
-
Swope, Mary Ruth, Ph.D.
Green Leaves of Barley. Phoenix, AZ: Swope Enterprises, Inc.
(1990): 199-202.
-
Malkmus, George. God’s
Way to Ultimate Health. Edison, TN: Hallelujah Acres Publishing
(1995): 183-186.
-
Krohn, Jacqueline, M.D., Frances Taylor, M.A.,
and Jinger Prosser, LMT. Natural
Detoxification. Point Roberts, WA: Hartley and Marks Publishers,
Inc., 1996
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