PDA

View Full Version : Can we eat raw food in the cold climate?



Analeah
12-03-2004, 02:20 AM
This is an article by Victoria Boutenko I thought was very interesting. I got it in a newsletter in my email and so I hope it is okay to post it but if not feel free to take it down.


Can we eat raw food in the cold climate? by Victoria Boutenko



This is one of the most frequently asked questions about eating raw. People commonly believe that without a bowl of cooked food on a chilly winter day they would not be able to stay warm. I know many persons who quit the raw food lifestyle because they were afraid that they would become too cold during the winter.

Let us take a closer look at this situation. Would a quarter pound of rice physically keep a 160 lbs body warm? In order to get warmed by it, one would have to fill a bathtub with warm rice and sit in it for 20 minutes.

So why do we feel warmer after consuming cooked food?

A hot meal, a cup of coffee or an ice-cold shot of vodka warm our body in the same manner. When any impure substances get into our blood through the walls of the intestines, they irritate our adrenals, the endocrine glands located above the kidneys. The adrenals immediately begin to produce epinephrine, norepinephrine and a variety of steroid hormones. These hormones stimulate our sympathetic nervous system, which is why we feel awake at first. They also force our heart to beat faster and to pump larger amounts of blood through our body, which makes us feel warm. This feeling doesnÂ’t last long and we pay a high price for it. After 10-15 minutes our body gets exhausted from performing extra work, the heart requires rest, the nervous system becomes inhibited, and we feel tired, sleepy and even colder than before. However we remember only the feeling of getting warmer after eating cooked food and repeat such stimulation again and again. This harmful practice wears the body out and by the end of the winter many people feel exhausted and depleted.

Winter after winter of eating quantities of cooked food doesnÂ’t help the human body to withstand cold weather better. On the contrary, weakened adrenals eventually wonÂ’t be able to work properly even at warm temperatures. For example, most older people feel cold even in the middle of the summer. Wool socks and sweaters become necessity to them.

Another reason why it is hard for many of us to tolerate cold temperatures is because eating a cooked food diet severely impairs our capillary circulation. According to Dr. Alexander Zalmanoff, author of “Sacred Wisdom of Human Body” (Paris, 1961) 80% of all blood in any human body is located in the capillaries and only 20% in arteries and veins. Tiny capillaries get clogged easily by unnaturally large particles of cooked food, and the blood no longer circulates adequately.

If you truly want to feel warm during the cold season, a raw food lifestyle is inevitable choice for you. During your first “raw” winter you may experience some cold due to the weakened adrenals, so put on an extra sweater, take a hot bath, or do some pushups. If you will continue staying raw, your adrenals will rest and recover, your capillary circulation will improve, your nervous system and your heart will naturally strengthen without any artificial stimulation.

In a year you will tolerate cold better than ever before. My family is going now through our eleventh “raw” winter. We do not feel any discomfort from cold. We jump in icy-cold mountain rivers year round for enjoyment. In fact that is how we celebrate Christmas and New Year’s Eve. We always sleep outside under the rain or snow. Sergei, my son, goes snowboarding sometimes wearing only shorts. My daughter Valya rarely wears socks. Igor, my husband, loves to take snow baths. We strongly believe that staying on a raw food diet has helped us to feel comfortable in any weather and not to feel the cold.

Veganmama
12-03-2004, 05:10 AM
Thanks forposting this. I get asked about this alot and also ponder really cold weatherand a raw diet as i'm from Tasmania which is Very cold. But this article seems to make alot of sense, i'll haveto think further into it

Analeah
12-03-2004, 06:12 AM
Where is Tasmania, is that in Australia? Yeah I thought the article made a lot of sense and I know from my own personal experience than I am able to go swimming in the ice cold rivers in switzerland when I am eating only raw food and don't get as cold in general.

tglasco4
12-03-2004, 08:19 AM
Thanks Analeah,

Thats definitely a keeper. That information was excellent! That explains why I am not suffering the need to eat hot foods at this time. Last night it was in the 30s here and I did pushups outside! It felt great.

Thanks again :) .

Peace.

Todd

qetta
12-03-2004, 08:49 AM
Thanks for posting that great article, Analeah! I hope by next year I'll be feeling the cold less than I do now.

SimplyRawesome
12-03-2004, 09:09 AM
What a coincidence that you should post this article now!

I spent over half my life in Florida and when the temps would dip below 70°F, I would feel like I was freezing and bundle up in a comforter with a space heater in front of me!! :eek:

I've been living in Middle Tennessee now for 4-1/2 years and have been raw for 11 weeks. Last night, I went to the store wearing a 3/4 sleeve top - no jacket. I was amazed when I got into my truck and saw the thermometer displayed the outside temp as 44°F. I would have never guessed it! Especially considering what a whimp I've always been in cold (cool) weather! I never related it to being raw; I just figured my "blood was thickening" as they say in the south. How interesting!

Thanks for sharing that Analeah. I agree with Todd, it's definitely a keeper!

Analeah
12-03-2004, 10:28 AM
Wow Todd, pushups outside in the cold 30 degree weather, that sounds like something I would do! Lately when I go out for a walk at night I feel so energetic when breathing in the cold air! Quetta, I know how cold Minnesota can get, I hope with your recent transition to raw you will become more and more resistent! Nutrimom, that is truly an amazing story especially considering you used to feel so cold when it got just below 70! Thank you all for sharing, it is so inspiring and I am glad you enjoyed the article!

ksabe98
12-03-2004, 11:20 AM
Hi, this is my first winter raw and i know that i am detoxing so i am feeling the cold right now. i am bundled up like i live in alaska or something. It has been down to the low 30's at night here and I am freezing. I am planning a trip to colorado in January and I just know I am going to be a popsicle. but I can't wait until next winter to see how it goes. I bet I will be toasty warm with no goose bumps.

Analeah
12-03-2004, 02:40 PM
Do you like ginger? I just ate some before going for a walk and I could really physically feel my body temparature rise after eating it. It's rather strong tasting though so if you don't like ginger then that is useless hehe. I don't think you'll have to wait a whole year before noticing effects and being warmer. How long have you been raw for and what percentage are you?

Mary Anne
12-03-2004, 02:49 PM
It always cracks me up when people ask me that question. Because those same people, in the summer, aren't eating foods to cool them off. What are they eating in the summer? Hot foods -- pizza, corn on the cob, hamburgers on the grill, fried Oreos, steak hoagies with melted cheese and peppers. All this stuff I see on the boardwalk down the shore. It's hot and they're eating hot stuff! LOL!

Love,
Mary Anne

qetta
12-03-2004, 02:50 PM
Good point Mary Anne!! :D

Veganmama
12-04-2004, 05:44 AM
Where is Tasmania, is that in Australia? Yeah I thought the article made a lot of sense and I know from my own personal experience than I am able to go swimming in the ice cold rivers in switzerland when I am eating only raw food and don't get as cold in general.


Tasmaina is a little island right at the bottom of Australia. i haven't lived through a Raw winter there yet but hopefully i will soon

lil
12-05-2004, 08:42 AM
I think one thing she misses is how the adrenals are connected to the thyroid. And your thyroid is what controls your body temperature.

I have a thyroid disease and I'm hypo-adrenal. I get cold very easily and once cold, it's very hard for me to warm up. However, since eating raw, I have noticed a huge difference in my body temperature. I am warmer and I'm not having as many cold-spell attacks.

If I eat cooked food - I have palpatations and adrenal rushes and I struggle more with being cold. So in that part - her article makes sense to me. It's amazing how food can impact our endrocrine system.

Thanks for the article!