Health > CGI Healthy Life | By CGI Holistic Wellness Center
Proper elimination and strong bowels not only serve your physical health, they are just as important to your mental health. Without this healthy ecosystem in place we become malnourished, toxic, emotionally stressed or sick.
Bowel movements rarely pass for pleasant conversation, but we
also agree that the happiest bowel movements are the ones that pass easily.
Your bowel is an amazing fluid-absorbing organ. Its job is to
absorb most of the fluid (about 90%)—food, water, digestive juices and
bile—that enters it daily. Alter this fluid absorbing balance and suddenly,
constipation or diarrhea is all you can talk about.
And, just as the earth has an ecosystem, our bowels are an
ecosystem that supports and nourishes us. Proper elimination and strong bowels not only serve your
physical health, they are just as important to your mental health. Without this
healthy ecosystem in place we become malnourished, toxic, emotionally stressed
or sick.
Naturally occurring bacteria in the gut, such as Lactobacillus
and Bifidobacteria, enhance intestinal function and compete with and suppress
pathogenic bacteria, yeasts, molds and viruses. They also regulate and
stimulate immune system activity.
We are born with these friendly bacteria in our digestive tract.
Over time and throughout a person's life, our gut can become unbalanced or
overrun with bad bacteria. But you can restore balance through diet and
supplements.
Here are seven foods for restoring ecological balance and health
to your intestines:
7 Foods for Better Digestive Health
Your gut is home to around 100 trillion microorganisms.
Fermented foods such as kimchi, sauerkraut, kefir,
kombucha and plain yogurt provide your gut with trillions of units of probiotics.
Not only do fermented foods replenish friendly flora, they are full of
enzymes that help you digest your food.
2. Amino Acids
Amino acids are the building blocks for enzymes and are crucial
to good digestion. Amino acids help strengthen the immune system, purge
unhealthy bacteria and rebuild new gastrointestinal cells. When combined with
probiotics, amino acids work synergistically to detoxify and heal many
gastrointestinal disorders, from diarrhea to parasites to gallbladder disease.
Nuts, fish and eggs are some of the main sources of amino acids.
3. Chia Seed
Chia Seed |
4. Ginger
Fresh ginger root improves hydrochloric acid production, the gastric
juice that breaks down the food you ingest. Adding fresh ginger to meals, or
enjoying a cup of ginger tea after meals, can ease indigestion, reduce gas,
bloating and flatulence. Ginger can also speed up your metabolism by breaking
down fats and proteins, converting them into energy, more easily. Ginger is
also a mild stimulant and can help increase circulation.
Coconut oil and coconut water contain healthy saturated fats
that are integral to healing your gut. These types of fat are used by the liver
which immediately converts them into energy for brain and muscle rather than
storing it as fat. The lauric, capric and caprylic acids in coconut oil have
antimicrobial, anti-fungal and antiviral properties which benefit digestion.
The healthiest coconut oil is organic, extra virgin and cold pressed.
6. Fish Oil
For people with chronic inflammatory bowel conditions such as
ulcerative colitis, the essential fatty acid or Omega-3 (EPA), found in fish
oil, can help ease the symptoms. You can get your fish oil from oily cold
water, wild caught fish such as salmon and mackerel, from fish oil liquid or in
gel capsules. Fish oil is rich in both Omega-3 and Omega-6 (DHA), but our
bodies are usually deficient in Omega-3 so you will want to take a fish oil
supplement that provides a higher ratio of EPA to DHA in the smallest doses.
7. Bone Broth
Bone Broth |
This is not intended as medical
advice. Consult your physician or registered dietician before beginning any
diet or supplement program.
by Kim Alyce Steffgen
No comments:
Post a Comment