Vibrant viewers,
on this week’s
Healthy Living,
in part one
of a two-part series,
we’ll learn some of
the key principles
of diet and nutrition
from Dr. Jay Sutliffe
of Chadron State College,
Nebraska, USA.
Dr. Sutliffe is
a registered dietician
with a background
in health education
and public health.
He is a popular speaker
at health expos
and conferences
and is an advocate
of the vegan lifestyle.
Given the seemingly
endless array
of food choices,
some feel it is a challenge
to know which are truly
the foods that can
keep our bodies strong
and full of energy.
Dr. Sutliffe first discusses
the C Reactive Protein
level as an indicator
of health status and
why this measure shows
that always selecting
natural, plant-based foods
is vital to keeping healthy
and active.
The C Reactive Protein is
a protein made in the liver
in response to
inflammatory conditions
in the body.
It’s a better indicator
than even cholesterol
to see the likelihood
or the possibility of us
having a cardiovascular
event, and so
the C Reactive Protein
is measuring
how much inflammation
we have actually
within the arteries.
And so
when we have this check,
what we see is if there’s
an elevated condition.
What we can do is we can
change lifestyle factors
to actually bring
the C Reactive Protein
level down and bring
our inflammation down.
Now inflammation is also
synonymous with cancer,
diabetes, and any of
the arthritic conditions,
because when we become
inflamed internally
it starts narrowing off
the blood flow in the body.
In some of
the clinical studies that
we’re currently doing with
some colleagues of mine,
we’re actually looking at
using a plant-based
lifestyle to lower
the C Reactive Protein.
In our preliminary
findings right now
we’re finding that
the plant-based lifestyle
is a major benefit
in bringing the
C Reactive Protein down
in the short-term,
even as little
as two to three weeks.
When we take in an
animal- based protein diet,
we’re finding that a lot of
the sulfur containing
amino acids are causing
an inflammatory response
in the body.
When you eat foods
of plant origin,
that have plant proteins,
they’re typically very low
in sulfur-containing
amino acids,
and so automatically
that’s starting to
help reduce the amount
of inflammation
within the arteries.
Dr. Sutliffe now describes
the importance of keeping
steady blood glucose
or sugar levels,
our body’s primary source
of energy.
An improper diet often
pushes the amount
of blood sugar out
of normal range
possibly leading to
serious chronic conditions
like diabetes,
a disease that can cause
kidney failure, blindness
and necessitate
limb amputations.
Now the key, is how
we can get it to stabilize
until it’s not bouncing
up and down.
The best way to do it
is to eat unrefined,
plant-based products
called carbohydrates.
And so what we find is
that when we eat
plenty of fiber,
and we eat the food
in its natural state,
that we’ll have smooth
blood sugar levels,
and not spiking
and bottoming out.
The other thing
we want to do is
we want to make sure
that every day that we’re
stimulating the muscles.
We’re stimulating
the muscles because
the muscles will then
be able to absorb
or regulate
our blood sugar levels
at a more even pace.
And so we find that
diabetics a lot of times
are inactive, and
they tend to gain weight,
and we all tend to seem
to be less active as we age.
So the diabetics especially
need to make sure
that they’re including
not only aerobic exercise,
but they’re also doing
resistance training
where they’re actually
stimulating the muscles
to actually take up
more of the glucose,
so that the muscles
become like sponges after
they’ve been the exercised,
so that they actually
take up the glucose
more readily and
metabolize the glucose
in the cells.
Many who suffer from
mood swings
seldom think of
their possible link
to dietary intake
and blood glucose levels.
A lot of times
when people are eating
a lot of refined foods,
especially
processed carbohydrates,
a lot of packaged foods,
we’re finding is
that really raises havoc
with blood sugar levels,
and a lot of times
it starts out right away
in the morning.
If we eat a rushed breakfast
that’s very low in fiber,
our blood sugar may
rise up dramatically with
a corresponding response
where it starts
coming down dramatically
when insulin is released,
and the glucose levels
start to drop in the blood,
and then the body says,
“Eat something,
eat something.”
So if we eat some more
processed foods,
low in fiber,
and we start this process
all day long, that directly
affects our moods,
and a lot of times
we have mood swings,
depending upon where
our blood sugars are at.
It’s really taking us more
on a roller coaster ride
throughout the day,
and it’s based upon
that we’re eating
too many processed foods,
especially when
we start out that way
in the morning.
So what I recommend
people do is
they start off the day
eating some good fruit,
and just eating fresh fruit.
And if they can’t have that,
then maybe
some frozen fruit, maybe
putting it in the blender,
and using some bananas
and some different things,
maybe making
a smoothie of that nature.
Eating some
whole grain cereals,
or I’ve even seen
in some situations
where we’ve been
working with patients
that are diabetics,
we’ll actually put them
on a diet where
we include legumes,
like some beans right away
in the morning.
We’ll soon be back
to learn about how
our arteries deteriorate
over time when we
consume animal products.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Healthy Living
on Supreme Master
Television
featuring our talk about
important principles
of diet and nutrition
with Dr. Jay Sutliffe, who
is a vegan public health
and nutrition expert.
Arteriosclerosis or the
hardening of the arteries
is a global
public health crisis,
with many people suffering
from this condition.
As we’ll hear in a moment,
arteriosclerosis develops
as we consume
animal products
over time and thus
is a preventable disease.
As we look at
the leading causes of
death in the United States,
we see not only
the United States, but
worldwide, heart disease
is the number one cause
of death.
And when we look at
heart disease, it’s
very low in the countries
that are relying more
upon plant-based diets
that are unrefined.
When we start
adding in more and more
animal protein,
what we’re finding is
that we are taking in
more saturated fat
and more cholesterol.
And when we take in
excess amounts
it seems to spill over
into the blood and start
clogging up the arteries
and developing
a condition which
we call arteriosclerosis.
As time goes along,
and as we age,
we start depositing
more and more fat, more
and more triglycerides,
more cholesterol
along the arteries,
and it makes
the vascular system,
in a sense, coated with
arteriosclerosis,
making the arteries stiffer
and less pliable.
And so the first sign
that we typically see
is that the person’s
heart rate may start
to go up a little bit,
and also we see that
the blood pressure rate
starts to go up, because
it’s forcing the blood
through stiffer arteries.
We start seeing elevated
triglyceride levels,
elevated cholesterol levels,
elevated LDL or
low density lipoproteins,
are elevated
in the blood stream.
And so these are signs
that arteriosclerosis
is developing.
This is something
that starts up very young,
but may not really
show up in a person, and
they may not be aware of
it until late in life, and
the first warning may be
that they may have
a heart attack or a stroke.
So the first thing
we want to look at again
is how much saturated fat,
how much cholesterol
we’re taking in,
and how much trans fats.
Saturated fat is typically
any fat that is solid
at room temperature, and
when we look at trans fats,
we look at fats that have
what we call hydrogen
added to them, and then
we have to look at
what cholesterol is;
cholesterol is
a waxy substance
that’s basically found
in all animals, because
it’s made by the liver.
So when we have
the combination of
trans fats, saturated fats
and cholesterol,
and we’re taking those
in large amounts,
we have a higher risk of
arteriosclerosis developing.
Even if we exercise,
we’re still having
extra fat in the blood,
depositing in the arteries
and causing this condition
we call arteriosclerosis.
So the best way
to deal with this is really
when we start looking at
basically plant-based diets,
we start seeing that
immediately most of the
saturated fat is minimized,
and then we also see that
cholesterol’s only found
in animal products.
So if you cut
the animal products
out of your diet,
you automatically
will be reducing
all your cholesterol
that you’re taking in.
And then thirdly
the trans fats, basically
they are processed foods
with hydrogenated oils,
and so when we
minimize those together,
when we eat an unrefined,
plant-based diet,
we see that the risk
of cardiovascular disease
dramatically drops
in all human beings.
What happens
to the food we eat when
it undergoes digestion
and absorption in our
gastrointestinal tracts?
Dr. Sutliffe explains
how fiber is our friend
in making sure
our cholesterol levels
are minimized.
When we start eating fiber,
especially soluble fiber,
the fiber that we find
in legumes,
the fiber that we find
in some of the grains,
when it’s eaten in our diet,
it goes through and it
actually starts absorbing
in the intestinal tract any
cholesterol and bile acids
that we have
in there during
the digestive process,
preventing the cholesterol
from going
from our digestive tract
into our blood stream.
And so the fiber will take it
and bind it and
actually take it out and
dump it into our stools.
So we actually
take the cholesterol out
of the body with the use
of fiber-containing foods,
especially
the soluble fibers
that act like sponges
in the digestive tract.
Our sincere thanks
Dr. Sutliffe for your
wonderful health advice
such as explaining
the advantages
of the vegan diet and why
avoiding animal products
and processed foods
maximizes our wellbeing.
Next Monday
on Healthy Living
we’ll hear more of
Dr. Sutliffe’s nutritional
recommendations and
learn how he advocates
healthy lifestyle changes
in a community
outreach program.
My name is Jay Sutliffe,
and I’m assistant professor
at Chadron State College
Be Veg,
Go Green
2 Save the Planet!
For more details
on Dr. Sutliffe,
please visit
www.CSC.edu
or
www.FullCircleofWellness.com
Joyful viewers, thank you
for being with us on
today’s Healthy Living.
Next is
Science and Spirituality,
following
Noteworthy News.
May we all
forever enjoy lives
filled with vitality
and happiness.
Energetic viewers
welcome to
Healthy Living
on Supreme Master
Television.
Last week
Dr. Jay Sutliffe who is
an assistant professor
at Chadron State College
in Nebraska, USA
advised us about
how to avoid increasingly
common chronic illnesses
through a plant-based diet.
Dr. Sutliffe is a vegan
registered dietician who
teaches classes on topics
ranging from
general nutrition to
international food policy.
His research interests
include disease prevention
and veganism.
Today, in the second and
final part of our interview
with Dr. Sutliffe,
we’ll learn more
about how
simple lifestyle changes
can reduce a common
digestive disorder,
lower the risk
of cardiovascular disease
and prevent cancer.
But first Dr. Sutliffe
talks about
why preventive medicine
is so important
and why starting life
with healthy habits is best.
So many times
we’re running to and fro.
We’re running fast,
we’re trying to get here,
and we’re
sacrificing health
for convenience foods
and a convenience lifestyle.
So I think
if we could work together
with schools, colleges
and workplaces,
that comprehensively
we can help reduce the risk
of diseases later in life,
but also if we could get
these children started out.
Because we find
that a lot of children
when they’re born
they have an aversion
to eating a lot of
animal based protein,
and a lot of times
they have to
acquire those habits.
So if we could
start helping out families,
substitute a lot of their
animal based proteins
with plant based proteins
earlier on and actually
giving them cooking classes
and cooking skills
and recipes and
community supported
types of programs,
I think that we’d have
greater longevity,
and I think that’s
where we have to go with
our health care today.
We have to start looking
at a prevention model,
rather than
a treatment model.
Let us now learn about
a condition commonly
known as heartburn
and what
Dr. Sutliffe recommends
to relieve this condition.
I’ve been running into for
about the last 10 years
on an increasing rate,
what is known as GERD,
Gastro Esophageal
Reflux Disease
or commonly
what we’d call heartburn.
So, when somebody
has heartburn,
the first thing I look at
is their meal patterns.
So what we find is
that people are no longer
eating three meals a day,
and not eating
between meals.
We find people possibly
eating all day long
and are doing something
we call grazing, as similar
to what cattle do.
In fact,
Ninety-seven percent
of Americans
snack on a daily basis.
I tell people
that the first thing
they want to start doing
is when they eat their food
they want to make sure
they’re chewing it very,
very thoroughly so that
you don’t need liquids
to get the food down.
The second thing
I tell people to do is
minimize the amount
of liquid that they’re using
with their meals.
Because it’s diluting
the stomach acids
in the stomach.
And then the third thing
you want to do is
you want to make sure
that you’re
spreading your meals out
four to five hours apart.
We find that when we crowd
those meals together,
the food sits in there
and the undigested food
gets mixed in with the food
that’s partially digested.
A lot of times the food
starts to ferment
and it’ll start
to regurgitate back up
into the esophagus and
start burning that lining.
And then the last thing
we want to do is
we want to make sure
that we’re not lying down
after we’re
eating our meals.
Because when we lie down,
that delays digestion and
the food tends to pool
and actually
in the upper portion
of the stomach
it has more of a chance
of actually regurgitating.
If you start
eating your fruit in
the middle of your meal,
at the end of the meal,
fruit digests so quickly,
that if you eat it
on top of the meal,
that it’s basically delayed
in its digestion
and it could ferment
and actually cause
an acid reflux condition.
So I tell people,
if they really want
to fine tune their system,
they probably need
to eat fruit alone
or at the beginning
of the meal and
waiting 10 or 15 minutes
before they eat
the rest of their meal,
because the fruit digests
so quickly.
Each year
over 12 million people
across the globe
are diagnosed with cancer
and 7.6 million succumb
to the disease.
How does a plant-based
diet help prevent cancer?
The number two cause
of death
in the United States
is cancer.
We’re seeing
a lot of work being done
with antioxidants,
and anti-aging medicine.
And when you start
looking at anti-aging
compounds that have
a lot of anti-oxidants,
phytochemicals
and other nutrients
that have been shown to
reduce your risk of cancer,
you find that the majority
of them are found
in plant-based products.
And I think the best thing
that we can do is that,
we found this
from the nurses’ study,
where they surveyed
over 80,000 nurses
and they found those that
ate at least one serving
of green leafy vegetables,
and a good vitamin C
source every day,
had a dramatic reduction
in cancer rates.
Fresh fruits, tomatoes,
strawberries, even potatoes
have a lot of vitamin C,
and of course,
the whole citrus family.
So, green leafy vegetables,
and a good vitamin C
source every day
are some of the best things
you can do to
reduce your cancer risk.
We will now pause
for a brief message and
soon return with more
of Dr. Sutliffe’s thoughts
on cancer prevention.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Healthy Living
on Supreme Master
Television
featuring our talk about
important principles
of diet and nutrition
with Dr. Jay Sutliffe, who
is a vegan public health
and nutrition expert.
Another simple
lifestyle adjustment that
Dr. Sutliffe recommends
to keep cancer away
is monitoring
our emotional state
and taking steps
to release stress.
Another area
that we start looking at
when we’re talking about
cancer prevention,
we see that there’re
so many chemicals
in our body,
and the connection
between our body
and our mind is
a real intimate connection.
When we start
looking at situations
where people are in
a very stressful situation
or their emotional health
is being compromised,
we see that it also affects
the physiological make-up
of the body, creating
hormone imbalances,
and actually may be
even setting the stage
for different conditions
such as depression
and cancer,
and even possibly
some of the dementia
that we’re starting to see.
So we see that
a lot of times people will
stuff different emotions
in their body.
They will not
allow themselves
to have an outlet.
And I really
encourage people
to try to create
an inner circle of friends,
where you have
different people
that you can share
different situations with,
and that you actually
have like-minded people
that you surround
yourself with,
that have similar beliefs
and health habits.
It can restore your health
and your mind and
be greater emotional health
and tie in with your
physical health as well.
Dr. Sutliffe has
some advice
on food preparation with
an eye on maximizing
the nourishment we get
from plant-based foods.
Microwave ovens have
a tendency to cook foods
very, very quickly
and it’s a very volatile
cooking method where
the molecules in the food
are vibrating
against each other.
When we cook on high heat,
and we in a sense
“zap” our food
with high heat like that,
the nutrient content
really starts to drop.
And so minimize
the amount of heat that
we’re applying to our food,
only lightly steam
our foods, and make sure
that, especially the fruits
and vegetables,
if we are cooking the fruits,
we want to minimize that.
If we are going
to cook the vegetables,
just lightly steam them
and consume them
as soon as possible
after they’re cooked.
How about
nutritional supplements?
What is Dr. Sutliffe’s
opinion on these items?
Okay, now a lot of times
people ask me about
what vitamins or what
mineral supplements
or different
dietary supplements
they should be taking.
I say that we should
always be looking at
trying the best
that we can do
with our dietary intake.
If we can minimize the
amount of
supplementation that
we’re using, and look
primarily to our food
and getting the best food
we have available, possibly
even organic foods
or foods grown
without chemicals that
are good for the Earth,
and also good
for the nutrients
and good for the soil,
we would be
eating our foods
straight from nature
and trying to get
most of our nutrients
from our foods.
Nature makes
our vitamins best
in the right distribution.
Dr. Sutliffe shares
this concluding message
to remind us of
the intimate connections
between physical health,
the power of life-promoting
vegan foods,
our overall mental outlook
and inner peace.
The last thing
I’d like to say is
a lot of people think that
nutrition is important,
but being a nutritionist
I think very few people
really understand
the power of what we put
into our bodies
on a daily basis.
And when we look at what
we’re doing every day,
what are the habits that
we’re practicing every day,
we need to put in foods
that are really life-forming,
life-generating.
And when we look at
processed, dead food,
that really doesn’t
give us any vitality.
When we look at
our relationships,
when we’re not honest
with people, we’re not
honest with ourselves,
if we could deal with
our anger issues,
and we can deal with
our failures,
we could celebrate
our victory more.
When we look at
our holistic life,
when we actually address
the spiritual nature
in our lives,
I feel like we all have
a God-shaped void
in our lives.
Until we bring God
into our lives and
we have peace with God,
then we have a difficult time
being at peace
with our fellow man.
But when we look at
what we’re eating,
how we’re living, how
we’re looking at people,
when we look at the way
we’re thinking,
I’ll just challenge you to
start evaluating your life,
to celebrate your victories,
to deal with you failures,
to be at harmony with God
and your fellow man.
And I think you’ll have
greater longevity
and you’re going to have
greater peace of mind
and you’ll have
a greater existence here
while we’re on this Earth.
Our appreciation
Dr. Sutlffe, for sharing
your deep knowledge
on how we can keep fit,
feel great, and
have tremendous vitality
through a vegan diet
and by remembering
to make spirituality
and emotional stability
a part of our lives.
For more details
on Dr. Sutliffe,
please visit
www.CSC.edu
or
www.FullCircleofWellness.com
Splendid viewers,
thank you
for being with us on
today’s Healthy Living.
Next is
Science and Spirituality,
after Noteworthy News.
May we all enjoy life’s
magnificent abundance
and vigor
through Divine blessings.