Laura said:
Very good analysis, Megan, our thoughts exactly...
Thanks, a few more are coming. One thing I forgot to comment about was how only one of the authors, Lierre Keith (
The Vegetarian Myth) has come such under direct and sustained attack, as evidenced by the response to the SOTT article. She clearly identified the issue of anti-nutrients in the seed heads of annual grasses, and of the earth-destroying long-term effects of agriculture (as practiced). This is the sort of thing that can wake people up, as we have experienced, even when they were already waking up. "Somebody" didn't like that, I suspect. And look what happened to her health along the road to acquiring the experience behind her book. (Dr. Atkins might be another casualty--I don't know.)
The Atkins low-carb approach, and others like it, can potentially be extremely helpful, especially if you are also aware of the anti-nutrient issues. The main problem, however, seems to be that people usually treat it like a "diet" and, even when they see results, eventually return to eating what they ate before. This, in turn, results in the approach being labeled "ineffective" and "no better than the others," and makes it easier to overlook it. Another problem, as we have seen, is that individual responses to a low-carb diet are highly varied. It is not so simple as some of the authors might have you believe, depending on how old you are and what health issues you have. The recommended "dive in" approach is not so good for many people.
Rethinking Thin, of which I am nearing the end in my reading, has been rather fascinating in its own right. I especially enjoyed the dramatic account of the discovery of leptin. If you read between the lines, you can see the pathological forces at work, guiding the outcome. It strikes me that the researchers that carry out this kind of work can be very intelligent, resourceful, dedicated explorers but they are embedded in a system that serves to largely neutralize the fruits of their labor. The results are diverted toward the search for drugs that will treat symptoms while leaving the users dependent upon them for life, and the book comes out and says as much.
For that matter, look at the almost unimaginable amount of time, money, and other resources that have been invested in researching health issues in recent decades. Yet the curtailing and sickening of the human race was carried out by conscious design. I cannot help but think that all these little discoveries we are making now (at such great expense) about human and mammalian biochemistry were well known to those who planned what has happened, a very long time ago (from our 3D perspective). No wonder the answers to the problems are so elusive. We are way behind the curve.
And speaking of mammals, I am starting to appreciate now how unbelievably complex they are. I am starting to see them as ultra-complex host organism/receivers capable of evolving (through endless "shocks") into the particular kind of "receiver" that is
us, and beyond. It is becoming more apparent as well the extent to which we are "programmable." The epigenome is highly programmable, and apparently can alter in response to nutrients and anti-nutrients. And then the brain, at a somewhat higher level, apparently can be reprogrammed by changing the interconnections between neurons (as highlighted in
Rethinking Thin).
When you think you are starting to understand something about how we work, you may only really be viewing how we work in one possible programming configuration out of many. One set of conditions of climate and dietary stress, for example. One major flaw in much of the dietary research is that it has not considered how the rules can change if you eat differently (never mind what happens if the climate changes radically). I see no reason why this principle would be confined to diet however. Food isn't our only intake. There is no telling what lies hidden that we might unlock, with sufficient knowledge and tuning.
Learn what you can while you can. Or at least that is what I am trying to do. Anything really worth knowing is going to take some work to uncover. When your health and well being depend on what you find, though, you can afford to put more than a little effort into it.