I’ll get into details with links to studies in another post or perhaps in a free ebook that I’ll post a link to. Each one of these affects all of the others. If one is mismanaged, the others will compensate. The body is resilient and there’s is no need to obsess over these. However, if either is mismanaged too much for too long, the others will eventually fail to compensate which will result in “diseases” such as COVIDs/flus, arthritis, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, literally every chronic illness. In such cases, it is absolutely important to (with minimal stress) obsess over all of these.
These are The Five Things:
-
Stage IV REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, the deep and restorative phase of sleep.
-
Inputs. This includes what you eat and don’t eat including chemical residues. It also includes regular and proper fasting and everything you inhale and absorb through your skin—almost all “skincare” and bathing products are poisonous—and mucous membranes like your eyes and in your mouth. Of course, this includes all drugs including pills and injections. Almost all of the food in the grocery store is poisonous. The only healthy food comes from organically managed farms, pasture-raised/grass-fed livestock, the wilderness, and the ocean. The healthy food you eat should be as raw as possible. Most seed oils, even organically produced ones, are poisonous when ingested especially after high temp cooking (like deep frying) but some are beneficial internally and topically. Fruit oils such as olive oil and avocado oil are best for cooking, if you must cook. If you must eat grains, they should be whole, organically grown, and sprouted.
-
Radiation. Direct sunlight exposure is critical for proper immune function. This is technically an input but so very important on its own. Microwaves, X-rays, and gamma rays are harmful. Some radio waves can be harmful, too. So is some nuclear radiation.
-
Stress. While long-term stress causes immunodeficiency and thus “diseases”, short-term stress can be protective as it prepares us to deal with challenges, mitigating long term stress.
-
High intensity interval training and/or strength training. It should hurt (but not injure) and you should push through it. No pain, no gain.
That’s it. As mentioned, I’ll go into detail with citations and links (or perhaps a free ebook) on a future date.
There is a sort of “prerequisite” that greatly enhances healing and disease prevention primarily via stress mitigation but also by providing a sense of purpose or meaning which causes one to thrive maximally:
Be your spirit conscience and not your flesh.
—
Now go and do the things.
Edit: Thanks for sticky, mods! Thou art gods. :)
Also, minor edit for clarity on seed oils (much more detail to follow) and added emphasis regarding the body’s resilience.
Edit 2: Wow the shillbots (with alts?) with random/obvious bot names are out in full force! Notice they offer nothing in their pseudo-rebuttals? Still, all feedback is greatly appreciated! As mentioned, I’ll provide much greater detail including links to rigorous scientific studies in a future post.
I'm not super experienced with farming/gardening, but I'm trying to learn. Wanted to give my input on my feelings toward the whole organic farming situation and see if you think I'm on the right track, or far off.
I think the reason organic farming "simply doesn't work" is people are trying to turn their farm "organic" while still using traditional/mass farming methods. For example, you have a field of crops but instead of using artificial fertilizer you try and use an "organic" option, same with pesticides, etc. This doesn't work because well... those organic options for pesticides/nutrients tend to suck. Also, it's not how plants tend to grow in nature (you never go out to the forest and see a big field of a single type of plant just sitting there.)
For organic farming to actually work I feel one would have to mimic nature as closely as possible, for example, follow a "food forest" layout, permaculture, that sort of thing. Certain plants introduce certain nutrients into the soil, others use them. Certain plants are effective at keeping away pests, so plant those near plants that are commonly attacked by said pests. The entire system works together and plants rely on each other for what they need. I know this works because plants have been "working together" in their natural habitat for hundreds of thousands of years.
The only issue is it's hard to do this on a large scale, hence why we tend to use our large-scale industrial agriculture. I think the best bet for the future is to create a huge amount of these small-scale integrated food forests/permaculture farms. For example, instead of having a lawn that just sits there doing nothing (and half the time not even looking nice depending on how well taken care of it is), why not have a small food forest instead?