Doesn't really matter. Glyphosate has been found in the urine of most Europeans.
That’s unfortunate but understandable. While lowering any amount of pesticides or chemicals is beneficial to a persons health, I’m not as concerned about them as I use to be. As long as I can feel healthy and clear headed with what I believe makes the biggest impact on my health, I have to let the other things be as they be.
This is not to say I disregard all of it. I don’t touch sweeteners, and have been a water drinker all my life. But 15 years of going and learning through your own experiments and health experiences, you tweak what you think works best for yourself.
Raw milk, so difficult to get in many places, actually would be the one food with the highest probiotic diversity.
Funnily enough I live in a rural part of the UK, where I can get raw milk with a 10 minute drive. I did so once, but it ended up costing me £60 because I had to get my car valleyed because I brought in some cow muck, as they sell it in a building located on the farm (and the path evidently wasn’t clean, as I didn’t step in a cow pie or anything).
I had high hopes for raw milk, but alas I learned out the experience way. Whatever those raw milk websites claim about those who are lactose intolerant are able to digest it because it has certain properties pasteurised milk doesn’t, that was not my case. I drank the whole pint and had digestive problems I regret at the time (but not the newfound knowledge that came afterward though). And yet I can drink litres of Lactofree milk fine.
Diet doesn't cover everything. But supplements certainly not either.
Understood. But I’ve seen people survive on the shittest restricted foods also. Ever watch that show on BBC Three “Freaky Eaters”. There are humans out there for years only eating 1 food. Examples include Cheese, Jam Sandwiches, Chips (french fries), Crisps (chips) etc... And I say years!
Have a look here, just read the titles: https://www.bbc.co.u.../episodes/guide
That’s not to say a healthy diet or nutrition does not improve health. But these people have eaten certain bad foods for years, and yet it surprises the hell out of me how they survive, and how some don’t suffer from acne or anything.
Take me as contrary to your example. I enjoyed great health as young adult, even with not such great a diet (due to traveling a decade in developing countries), smoked and took absolutely no supplements. Though I did suffer serious illnesses, which easily could bring any other down - ie. 7 malarias, hepatitis, spondylodiscitis, schistosomiasis - I experienced my immune system super-strong at that time. Being able to handle about everything deathly without much ado.
Fast forward with the co-factor aging taking it's toll, I'm now certain all of it played a role in that final outcome after about age 40. And so much that could have been prevented, if not for my optimism and unconcernedness of youth.
Well I’ve already hit bottom with my health when I was younger. I’ve experimented with so many different supplements, steroids, and medical drugs in the pursuit of health and sex drive and whatever else.
Here are some of the things I suffered with and cured over the years, and remember I just turned 31:
Peyronies Disease
Jock Itch
Frost Bite (Twice)
Brain Fog
Weak Immune System, constantly getting ill
Mild OCD
Crippling Allergies every time I went to bed that I had to take night medicine to even fall asleep
Constipation all the time
And probably some other things I forgotten about.
But Peyronies Disease & Jock Itch are pretty incurable to a lot of people, and I understand why. Frost bite there is meant to be no cure for, as the cells have died. But with enough experimenting and time, I eventually got through all these. That doesn’t mean I’ve solved everything in my health. But I’m so much further along then when I was 18.
While taking loads of zinc, gingko and handfuls of supplements myself now, I never suffered indigestion. Could it be you just avoid an underlying issue with your digestion? And by all the unknown variables greatly exacerbate it in the long run?
No. I don’t get indigestion off the supplements. TBH I forgot to mention weed also causes this problem.
But that’s the thing, and I only discovered this later on. But while humans are similar, they are uniquly different as well, including all the complexities of their bodies. Medicine, supplements, and drugs will effect people differently, some may get side effects, while some may get the positive results they were looking for, and others nothing much happens.
I enjoyed great health without any interventions as young adult, got the final bill at advanced age. You perceiving benefits with some health-difficulties already at younger age, could amount to even a bigger bill to pay further down the road.
Well I’ve already been through hell and back with my health. That doesn’t mean I know everything, but I have a much better understand of what works for me right now then I did even 5 years back.
We all pay the big bill down the road and that’s called death. I’m more concerned on what comes after it.
Lastly I am willing to bet that in the next 6 years we’ll be seeing a lot of cures for cancer, aids, and other major diseases come out, as well as our environment and foods becoming healthier and more chemical free (and other technological advances). The World is going to change like never before, I’m excited!
Good luck to you too and thank you for your replies. Feel free to post anymore if you want to discuss anything further.