posted on Aug, 20 2022 @ 11:29 PM
a reply to:
tamusan
Most of the genetic diseases have triggers that increase the risk of the disease becoming a problem. If the people do not consume the triggering
food, the disease is not yet a disease, just a susceptability.
Paragraph 5 of this article is pertinent.
www.sciencedaily.com...
If you have autoimmune disease risk, you sure in the hell do not want to eat a lot of foods that boost immunity, because feeding foods that increase
replication or stimulating the immune system to fight something that you might not be in risk of getting can trigger it to build too many cells that
can attack your own body. This might be the reason I get a cytokine storm from the flu and DTAP shot. This immune system going berserk when I get
those vaccines is why I should definitely not get the covid vaccine too. Did I have bad reactions to early childhood vaccines...don't know, I wasn't
paying attention when I was young. I also have my immune system over react from bad slivers or ingrown hairs....which sucks.
I took a class on metabolomics years back and another on epigenetics and those classes stated precisely that genetics and diet selection are connected
to keep genetic diseases from expressing themselves, but there was not yet enough research to narrow things down. Foods contain multiple chemistries
and ancestral diet does make a difference. Whole families are sick all the time because they do not eat the foods that keep them healthy...Hint,
sometimes foods they call super foods actually make these things worse, and lots of times cooking veggies helps to reduce the risk of a disease or
condition forming.
My cousin who had the lupus had a small farm and they ate lots of tomatoes, which can cause histamine levels to go up which can increase the risk of
lupus becoming a problem. The tomatoes were used in spaghetis and with pastas which is a double whammy. I have problems when I eat tomatoes more
than once a week, the wife doesn't have much problems at all with tomatoes...I love tomatoes, but should not eat them very often and do screw up
occasionally and get little sores on my forehead and some other parts on my body. I identified this years ago when I had a big pile of tomatoes and
ate lots of them. I never ate tomatos very often when we went out and ate at restaurants, the wife ordered those kind of dishes, I ordered fish and
chips or maybe a fish sandwich or a plain burger...gave up eating ketchup fifty years ago, never knew why I quit eating it, just did. Burger king was
my first fast food choice, get it your way, no cheese and only lots of onions on the burger. McD's burgers were gut bombs, they just seemed to sit in
my stomach for the rest of the day...something to do with something in the bun I think.
My cousin died about twelve years ago, he was aware he had Lupus for about maybe ten years before that. No doctors ever mentioned anything about diet
to him. The thing is that tomatoes are touted as a super food even though they can cause some Chronic problems if you eat too much.
edit on 20-8-2022 by rickymouse because: (no reason given)