Whilst reading Detoxification and Healing by Sidney Baker I came across a reference to an earlier book, three years earlier, The Circadian Prescription by Sidney Baker with Karen Baar, the ideas resonated with me so I bought the book.
A few ‘taster’ quotes from the book.
Something our Paleo-ancestors knew and understood well.
As well as getting back in touch with nature, the book indicates when to take food and supplements, it covers overcoming jet-lag and dealing with shift patterns. I can recommend the book, and I’m already putting certain parts of the information contained in the book into practice.
A few ‘taster’ quotes from the book.
In the past, food was thought to be a source of the protein, carbohydrates, and fat needed for energy as well as a provider of other nutrients, like vitamins and minerals. But food is also information.
Remember what the C’s said about playing together in tune in an orchestra?!?… For now, to optimize your circadian harmony, you need only remember that the work your body does in the morning requires raw materials that are provided by protein and that nighttime chores need carbohydrates.
You can’t really hear the music of the orchestra that is your body. But science tells us that there is a sequence, a beat, a rhythm. When you’re healthy, members of the orchestra play in harmony; when that harmony is missing, health deteriorates. Eating is the single most important activity in which you engage where timing is important. That’s why diet is the cornerstone of the Circadian Prescription.
What does all this have to do with rhythm? These plant-derived nutrients [phytochemicals in flaxseeds and certain other foods] permit animals to stay in synchrony with the seasons. You are healthiest when you live in harmony with the cadence of many rhythms. Circadian rhythm is the most obvious, but other examples include the monthly menstral cycle as well as the yearly rotation of spring, summer, winter, and fall.
Something our Paleo-ancestors knew and understood well.
So far I’ve described two different rhythms related to diet. The first is circadian rhythm, which is directly connected with your need for protein in the daytime and carbohydrates in the evening. The second rhythm, indirectly linked to the phytonutrient content of certain foods, is the cycle of the seasons. Regardless of the time of the year, these phytonutrients contain information that is healthy for your reproduction system.
But life revolves around a multitude of predictable rhythms. All vital bodily functions are rhythmic. They are ultimately anchored in the earth’s rhythms, most notably the day and night cycle, the lunar month, the seasons, and the year. I say anchored because the earth’s rhythms hold us in an inescapable embrace; our connection to them is fundamental.
When various rhythms in your body are tuned to eachother just as your diet is tuned to the day and the night cycle, you achieve rhythmic integration. In this state your body is in balance, and you suffer when the rhythms fall out of synchrony. (Syn mens “together” and “chrony” means ‘in time,” so synchrony means “together in time.”) Rhythmic disintegration is poisonous.
As well as getting back in touch with nature, the book indicates when to take food and supplements, it covers overcoming jet-lag and dealing with shift patterns. I can recommend the book, and I’m already putting certain parts of the information contained in the book into practice.