Riddle me this: Why does Paul tell Timothy to drink a little wine to ease his stomach trouble?
People with Type II diabetes or pre-diabetes are able to keep both their insulin level and their A1C in the normal range by drinking 3-4 ounces of wine per day. Doing this is a heck of a sight cheaper than the Type II diabetes meds that are around and there's no deadly side effects to drinking wine as long as you don't drink more than 3-4 ounces per day.
This is rather interesting when you consider that the pilgrims drank a lot of fermented beverages because they would get sick drinking the water.
Alcohol temporarily lowers blood sugar levels in T2. Exercise permanently increases sugat absorbtion capabilities and rate of absorbtion.
IMO using alcohol in this manner is a misleading practice. Much like covering hypertension symptoms with medications instead of addressing the stressors.
That said I'm not a T2, a licensed professional much less an expert. And managing diabetes is a marathon of self discovery and growth, so I'm not hating on you.
Fwiw I'd prefer the wine over the T2 meds any day of the week. Diet and exercise are the panacea though.
I hear you loud and clear. Until the kung flu hit the airwaves, I exercised 5 days a week. Was in great shape but had a bad diet. Working on both now. :)
Riddle me this: Why does Paul tell Timothy to drink a little wine to ease his stomach trouble?
People with Type II diabetes or pre-diabetes are able to keep both their insulin level and their A1C in the normal range by drinking 3-4 ounces of wine per day. Doing this is a heck of a sight cheaper than the Type II diabetes meds that are around and there's no deadly side effects to drinking wine as long as you don't drink more than 3-4 ounces per day.
This is rather interesting when you consider that the pilgrims drank a lot of fermented beverages because they would get sick drinking the water.
Kombucha less alcohol and moar bang. Fermented key.
Interesting, will look into this. Thanks!
Alcohol temporarily lowers blood sugar levels in T2. Exercise permanently increases sugat absorbtion capabilities and rate of absorbtion.
IMO using alcohol in this manner is a misleading practice. Much like covering hypertension symptoms with medications instead of addressing the stressors.
That said I'm not a T2, a licensed professional much less an expert. And managing diabetes is a marathon of self discovery and growth, so I'm not hating on you.
Fwiw I'd prefer the wine over the T2 meds any day of the week. Diet and exercise are the panacea though.
I hear you loud and clear. Until the kung flu hit the airwaves, I exercised 5 days a week. Was in great shape but had a bad diet. Working on both now. :)
Gymnema is natures metformin.