Aloe Vera

By Dr Peter Atherton MB. ChB., D.Obst.R.C.O.G., F.R.C.G.P.

What is Aloe Vera?

Aloe Vera, often called the Miracle Plant, the Silent Healer, the Burn Plant or even the Medicine Plants, goes by many names which have survived the 4000 or so years during which this amazing medicinal herb has benefitted mankind.

A History of Healing

George Ebers in 1862 first discovered its antiquity in an ancient Egyptian papyrus, dated 3500 BC, which turned out to be a collection of herbal remedies. Other researchers have since found it was used by both the ancient Chinese and Indian cultures. Greek and Roman physicians such as Dioscorides and Pliny the Elder used it to great effect and legend suggests that Aristotle persuaded Alexander the Great to capture the island of Socotra in the Indian Ocean to get its rich supply of aloe to heal his wounded soldiers on the return from their successful campaign into Persia in 333BC. The Egyptian queens Nefertiti and Cleopatra also rated it highly as a beauty therapy.

Although there are over 200 species of aloe, there are probably only four or five with medicinal properties. Of these, Aloe Barbadensis Miller, (also know as Aloe Linnes and Aloe Vulgaris), is the most potent. It is the only one entitled to be known as aloe vera or the true aloe.

Aloe vera is a succulent, looking rather like a cactus but it is in fact a member of the lily family related to onions, garlic and asparagus. When mature, the inner gel can be harvested, preserved and bottled to produce a product that is as near to the natural plant juice as we can get.

To benefit from aloe vera, the gel can be taken internally for its nutritional anti-inflammatory and immune balancing effect. It can also be combined with other ingredients to produce topical creams and lotions to nourish and improve the quality of the skin.

For a product to work properly aloe needs to be the principal ingredient.

Look for a product with a substantial aloe vera content.

Inside The Leaf – ingredients

Which Type of Aloe? – inner leaf gel

Why Does It Work? – nutritional elements

Where Does It Work?- prevents injury to epithelia tisues

How Does It Work?- promotes cell growth

Forever Living Products

Founded in 1978, and operating in over 150 countries, Forever and its affiliates have become the largest grower, manufacturer and distributor of aloe vera and bee products in the world. Avoiding the use of herbicides and pesticides, our patented stabilisation process ensures our aloe vera is essentially identical to the inner leaf gel. And because we are not dependent on any other supplier, we can guarantee the quality of our aloe.

For more details on Forever Living Products contact Julie Allfrey on 07850001919

Email: julie@teamja.flppro.biz
www.teamja.myforever.biz

The reason why you shouldn’t worry about a common complaint By Ray Collins

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  • Does obesity ring your bell?
  • Don’t let the media get carried away about our waistlines
  • Why making three small changes will make all the difference

Obesity – the scourge of the modern age we are led to believe.

But let me ask you a question.

Are you too fat?

Interestingly about 95% of you will say yes, in the same way that Dr Pavlov’s dogs started to think about dinner when a bell rang.

You see we are conditioned to think of ourselves as being overweight.

And by the same dogma also unfit.

Something else I’m prepared to have a small wager on as well. (When I say small I’m talking a wine gum rather than anything financial you understand!)

I’m willing to give odds that someone has assessed your Body Mass Index (BMI) and found you wanting.

You’ll have been in the overweight or obese sections of the pretty coloured graph and an earnest look will have crossed the face of the health professional as they ask you to consider your lifestyle.

Ring any bells, as the good Dr Pavlov may once have said.

Well I want to introduce a new concept to you that might just save you fretting and worrying about that bit of mid-life spread that sits over your waistband.

It’s time we all celebrated ‘fat and fit’.

This concept isn’t a new one, what with the BBC making a big fuss about it in 2012 when a study was published by the University of South Carolina.

Basically they concluded that being overweight didn’t pose a health risk per se.

Over half the 43,000 people in the trial were in fact metabolically healthy and were at no greater risk of developing heart disease, diabetes or other problems than those of an ideal weight.

They also found that you can be thin and unhealthy as well.

Last week the Daily Mail reported that the research had been repeated with over 30,000 obese patients…

…and found the same results.

The danger of the spare tyre

I don’t want to give you the go ahead to start eating gut busting fry-ups and mountains of chocolate though.

Because there is something else you need to understand about these studies.

What the experts found was that the key to health wasn’t the waist size of the individuals but their level of activity.

Where someone was taking a more active approach to life it dramatically changed the level of risk.

A brisk twenty minute walk every day was more likely to give you benefit than a two month starvation diet, if you wanted to avoid diabetes.

Which is an interesting thought if you look at the way the newspapers and our GPs focus purely on our Body Mass Index to evaluate risk… and ultimately a life of drugs.

The irony of how obesity and associated health problems is reported was not lost on me when I looked at page 4 of the Daily Express from August the 13th this year.

The main headline was ‘How to shed middle-age spread’ for an article about how ‘a podgy tummy can be a killer because it is packed with bad fat’; a second self explanatory piece entitled ‘NHS spending £2.2m a day on prescriptions to treat diabetes’ was next to it…

…then right underneath an advert from Waitrose for their full fat ice creams!

Each of the products in the ad carried enough calories and fat to provide for about a quarter of your recommended daily intake.

Sheer hypocrisy!

Batter the nation for pigging out on rubbish food and then costing the taxpayer millions to treat their ‘fat disease’ whilst raking in a few thousand pounds from a supermarket who want us to buy nothing of any nutritional benefit.

On one page everything that is wrong with how the world treats food.

How to make a change for the better

There are three things that will make a difference for every single person no matter how fat or thin we are.

First, a change in how we approach food; second, a bit of sweat and third, don’t rely on a quick fix from the GP.

So food; forget the fad diets and magical cures and think more about fresh, wholesome and natural food.

Just this week scientists in Copenhagen found that a diet rich in fresh vegetables and fruit, foraged herbs (including dandelion leaves) from the wild, lots of fish, less meat and more game was healthier than even the Mediterranean diet.

We don’t need to get all Bear Gryles about this though, just increase the fresh element of your daily intake – and the fresher the better.

If you know someone who has an allotment or a well stocked garden ask if you can buy from them – get carrots and potatoes fresh from the ground not ones that have travelled halfway around the world and been sat in a warehouse for a month.

Try local wild meats such a pheasant, pigeon and venison.

Most butchers stock it and you’ll be surprised by how cheap and tasty it is – if you are lucky enough to live in the country speak to the local farmers, they’ll be glad to drop a brace of birds off for you for the price of a pint.

Choose natural ways to prepare your food to ensure that the goodness stays in, things like making gravy from the roasting pan juices returns both flavour and essential nutrients back to the meal.

Next, the need to exercise.

As the studies showed, the size of your waist isn’t the critical factor, it’s more about getting the blood to pump.

Walking is THE best exercise in the world. A good twenty minute walk every day is all that we need to get our bodies in better shape, but if you can manage an hour then the rewards are multiplied ten fold.

Swimming is another low impact way to boost your health, even if you take a float into the pool and kick your legs to get around you will be doing yourself so much good.

Just doing the gardening will get the pulse quickened.

None of these things need to involve gyms, lycra or personal trainers so don’t let the media tell you how to exercise – simple is best.

Lastly, don’t go looking for a quick fix.

Heart medications, statins and pain relief all come at a price to your health as I wrote about last week, so avoid them if you can.

There are some brilliant natural ways to change your metabolism that I’ve written about before like lemon juice, Bergamot orange extract and honey, garlic & vinegar so make use of these without taking unnecessary risks with prescription drugs.

Above all, don’t look down at your body with worry or disgust – delight in your skin and celebrate your still beating heart.

Keep a smile and a laugh close by, after all happiness is by far and away the best medicine.

Yours, as always

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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Discover the shocking truth about GPs on the take By Ray Collins

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Big Pharma gets put in the dock again
Is it right that a GP gets money for pushing drugs? Definitely not!
Could this common drug be at the heart of a new bribery scandle?

Big Pharma have been riding roughshod over common folk for decades.

Making huge profits from their products and doing their damndest to oppose any other approaches to healthcare other than pills, pills and more expensive pills.

But just occasionally their despicable tactics get found out and this week we saw one of their number have had their collars felt.

Britian’s biggest drugmaker has been asked about their conduct and, once more, been found wanting.

Basically, and not to put too fine a point on it, they have been bribing doctors to sell their products.

In the last three years they have faced the same charges from activities in the UK, China, the US and now Poland.

A BBC Panorama report has uncovered the story about 11 doctors and a senior GSK employee being hauled up in front of the courts in Poland with the prospect of many years detention more than likely.

More than that this prosecution of key employees could also see the entire group being challenged under the UK Bribery Act and US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act – and that has got the fat cats all of a fluster.

This isn’t the first time that they have been in this situation.

A series of bribery and corruption allegations have been circulating since early 2010 but it doesn’t seem like the wrist slaps they suffered as a result have made much difference to them.

Maybe a proper financial and legal sanction will stop them in their shoddy tracks.

Here’s how their little scam works.

When doctors become salesmen, no-one benefits

The prospect of a drugs rep arriving at your local GP’s practice with a brown envelope stuffed with cash is perhaps an idea none of us would be comfortable with.

However, the subtle way the drugs companies work with doctors means the end result is very much the same.

You see, as a reward for pushing out their version of an asthma drug the GSK country managers pay the GP for delivering conference papers on their behalf.

A nice little earner you might say, with the details of how it works coming to light because of a bit of whistle blowing by an ex-employee.

A former sales rep for GSK in the Polish region of Lodz, Jarek Wisniewski, said: “There is a simple equation.  We pay doctors, they give us prescriptions. We don’t pay doctors, we don’t see prescriptions for our drugs.”

In the BBC report he is further quoted as saying:

“We cannot go to doctors and say to them, ‘I need 20 more prescriptions’. So we prepare an agreement for them to give a talk to patients, we pay £100, but we expect more than 100 prescriptions for this drug.”

“It’s a bribe”, Mr Wisniewski said, confirming that although on paper the payments were for educational services, the doctors understood very clearly that they must produce a certain number of prescriptions in return.

It was exactly the same tactic used by the company in China in 2013 when a £300m scandal was uncovered involving a network of over 700 middlemen and travel agencies, to bribe doctors and lawyers with cash and even sexual favours.

In 2012, GSK paid $3bn (£1.9bn) in the largest healthcare fraud settlement in US history after pleading guilty to promoting two drugs for unapproved uses and failing to report safety data about a diabetes drug to the Food and Drug Administration.

And if they are doing it in those regions you can be sure it is happening right across their organisation – even here in the UK.

I echo the call from Ben Goldacre in 2013 after the Chinese scandal broke where he said:

 

“Doctors should be responsible for declaring their own conflicts of interest on a simple register, ideally run by the General Medical Council, in the same way MPs do. If we believe these payments and this free education are ok, then we should tell our patients with a polite notice in the waiting room.”

This would mean we would see who has been putting the money up for our doctors and could then reasonably decide if we were being advised to take drug X rather than drug Y on medical or financial grounds.

Which brings me to my pet hate. Statins.

The true numbers from statin trials

Earlier I said I supported Ben Goldacre in his stand against drug company bribery in our GP clinics, but not everything he says is good news.

A few weeks ago I told you about the dodgy report he had put his name to supporting the wholesale prescription of cholesterol lowering statin drugs to everyone over the age of 40.

I am absolutely against the indiscriminate medication of the general population in this way, but the drug pushers say that the science shows that anyone with a greater than 10% risk of a cardiovascular incident will benefit from daily statin use.

Of course the first question is ‘how do I know if I have a greater than 10% risk of heart trouble?’

Well if we are to believe the hype, that accounts for all of us over the age of 40, especially if our blood pressure is a bit high, or our cholesterol levels a touch strong or even have blood sugar that occasionally spikes.

Just about everyone then!

Then I listened to a BBC Four programme that put those numbers into context…

…using the simplest of mathematics they showed that even if we did all take statins one  person in every 140 would be prevented from having a cardiovascular problem – this is known as the Number Needed To Treat.

Most experts in this area agree that if this number gets above 100 then the justification for a drugs use is questionable – so why are we being urged to take statins then?

Maybe this is further evidence that the companies who stand to gain are working in more devious ways once again.

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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Do you constantly judge everything around you? Are you finding it hard to relax? Is your perfectionism affecting your happiness?

Liz Almond pictureIf yes, read on…..

Being a perfectionist is just plain tiring.  You live life constantly judging everything around you by your standards.  When things don’t measure up to being good enough in your eyes, you start criticising what you are judging and trying to make it better.  The problem is, you are judging yourself by these standards too.  For example, let’s say you have a client and the session has not gone the way you would have liked.  You start beating yourself up about it and thinking about how you could have made it even better.  It doesn’t even occur to you that your client has to take responsibility for their success of the session.  Maybe they needed to take more action to make the session work for them, but instead they just sat back and let you do all the work.  Or worse case scenario, they were a perfectionist too and whilst you were judging them, they were judging you!  Who is right in this case!!

The problem is, the more you are judging others and yourself, the more you are putting out vibes that you are not good enough and also putting people off around you as they feel that they just can’t live up to your standards.  This has certainly been a problem for me in the past.  I loved cooking for my friends and having dinner parties, but when it came to my friends returning the favour, they were afraid to cook for me! In the end, I had to always host the party and my friends would pay for ingredients!!  The sad thing is, I love being cooked for and I never expected anyone to cook to the same standard I did.  (Me judging them, without realising it) I had been professionally trained which is why what I presented for dinner looked fab but the fact is, my friends were comparing themselves to me and telling themselves they were not good enough.  I never believed this to be true, but no amount of coaxing would change their minds.

Remind yourself…When you are comparing yourself or others to anything, this is a recipe for disaster and leads to unhappiness!  The key thing to remember is that there is no such thing as something that is perfect.  If a group of people were looking at a person at a network, or at the work of a colleague, or even the school play, what each person sees will be different.  They are filtering the information they are seeing based on past experiences and events.  Have you ever been to an event with someone, where one person thought it was fab and another thought that it was awful.  This is because they are filtering information through their minds and making a judgement.

So what are you judging and how are you judging them? How hard are you judging yourself? Are your standards just too high, so no one, including yourself can meet them? Are you isolating yourself by how you are reacting to life?

The key to happiness is to compare yourself and things/people around you to nothing.  See things for what they are and purposely act non-judgmentally. Learn from everyone you meet. Smile at everyone regardless of whether they have a posh car, are fat or thin, big or small.  Remove the prejudices of the past.  Live in the present and enjoy every moment as if it is your last.  Life is for living, not worrying about whether you are good enough.  Celebrate you and keep learning and growing and you will have a happier life.

Liz Almond

Health and Wellbeing Coach

Insightful Minds

liz@insightfulminds.co.uk

07815 904848

www.insightfulminds.co.uk

Here’s the case for real foods rather than superfoods

 

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  • Devious practice by those we trust is putting lives at risk
  • Here’s the case for real food, rather than superfoods
  • Revealed the harsh truth of corruption that goes right to the top

We are being conned by the food industry.

It’s a drum I keep banging in the hope that somewhere, somehow it will make a difference.

But those who make billions of pounds each year from providing us with our daily sustenance just aren’t playing fair, and they control the media…or so I thought.

In last Saturday’s Guardian magazine I was heartened to read that I’m not alone in my quest to have simple, honest and unadulterated food back in our shops.

One of their journalists, Joanna Blythman, went undercover in the food industry and discovered that even something as simple as a fruit salad has been messed around with to help bring a greater return to those who sell it.

You can read her full article here but one thing that really caught my eye was a brief translation of what the food label says, and what it really means, for example:

Added vitamins One-dimensional factory versions of natural vitamins found in whole foods: ascorbic acid (man-made vitamin C) is usually synthesised from the fermentation of GM corn, while artificial vitamin E is commonly derived from petrol.

Soluble fibre A healthier-sounding term for modified starch, which is widely used to reduce the quantity of more nutritious ingredients in processed foods, and keep down manufacturers’ costs.

‘Packaged in a protective atmosphere’ Food that has been “gassed” in modified air to extend its shelf life. It delays what food manufacturers call “warmed over flavour”, an off-taste that occurs in factory food.

Beef/pork/poultry protein Collagen extracted from butchered carcasses, processed into a powder and added to low-grade meats. It adds bounce, increases the protein content on the nutrition label and, combined with water, is a substitute for meat.

The sharp practice of inventing positive sounding phrases for some of the most heinous food crimes is nothing new, but when you consider that minced up goo is legally being added into premium branded meat products to increase the profit margin such fairy tales have to be stopped.

Who could ever believe this to be a good idea?

Clearly no-one with the health of their customers in mind; am I alone in asking for a return to good old-fashioned food preparation and retailing, a degree of honesty in the way the ingredients for our daily meal are presented to us?

I just want some unsullied carrot, a bold bright potato or two and a clean local lamb chop so that I can be healthy and happy too.

Real foods not superfoods

Back in the early 1990s an author called Michael Van Straten published a cookbook called “superfoods” and probably coined one of the most overused terms in food marketing.

Everywhere we look there are claims of some strange berry or fruit being the elixir of life itself and that a daily dose will cure us of all ills.

Over time many such foods have been placed upon a pillar of health, and rampant claims for their power bandied across the media, often with a shrill endorsement from a tame actress or health guru.

I have always been deeply suspicious of all of these claims and endorsements as I don’t believe any one thing can be that good for us.

Balanced and varied meals are the key to good health as they provide the full range of nutrients and natural stimulants that our bodies need.

When I wrote the Natural Food Wisdom pack I did so to celebrate normal food.

I wanted to show that all food is good, but only if it is pure, natural and in as raw a state as possible – so I listed out 56 individual everyday food items and showed how they contributed to a healthy life.

There were no wild and wonderful berries, just plain old broccoli, cabbage and a very surprising overall winner for the healthiest food to eat (if you haven’t already got a copy make sure you complete your home health library here).

I think it is about time that truly healthy, local produce is given the respect it deserves.

For too long we have been subject to big corporations messing with our food, hiding potentially harmful ingredients within it like high fructose corn syrup, or just adding in goo and garbage to boost their profits.

Why isn’t more being done to stop this?

The harsh truth about those we trust to protect us

The Times was one of the newspapers which broke the scandal earlier this month of how government health advisers are actually on the take from food companies.

They reported how scientists on the board which provides guidance to ministers receive hundreds of thousands of pounds each year from brands such as Coca-Cola and Mars.

One of these corrupted experts, Frances Rawle – head of policy at the Medical Research Centre – tried to placate investigators by saying “We ensure that all research we fund is free of any influence from those with whom we collaborate”.

Well, I for one do not believe you. I think you are up to your stinking necks in collusion, sleight of hand and misdirection. And the nation’s health is all the worse for it.

And nuts to everyone… is this the true language of politicians?

On Valentine’s Day the Independent carried a report that a new food scandal was about to hit us which was more serious than the horsemeat crisis.

The story said that peanuts and almonds were being used in place of cumin seed and other aromatics to bulk up commonly eaten pre-prepared foods…

…a tactic that could have dire consequences for any unsuspecting allergy sufferers who consume the finished product.

A failed cumin harvest has made the spice more expensive, and this is being used as a justification for mixing in other ingredients to keep the food affordable.

But once again it has nothing to do with consumer demand and everything to do with bumping up the profit for business and retailers.

A report published this week about how peanut allergies could be countered by feeding nut extracts to babies as young as four months, made me think.

Whilst I suspect that this would prevent too many people getting allergies nowadays you have to ask why peanut allergies are becoming increasingly common – I don’t remember my mum cramming a bag of KP’s finest into my mouth as a kid, yet I don’t have the problem.

Rather than the issue being one of underexposure for infants could it be that the rest of our lives sees an overexposure?

For how long have unscrupulous manufacturers been using peanut products to bulk up their wares? I suspect for the last 15 years, which would tie up with the rise in childhood allergies.
By phasing in exposure from a very young age they hope to counteract the issues later on.

I suspect this to be yet another example of profit centred meddling in our diets.

A crying shame that no government has got to grips with it – because there are too many of those in power who have their snouts firmly in the trough.

Yours, as always

Ray Collins

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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Stop messing with my food! – by Ray Collins

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  • How do you make a woolly jumper?
  • Discover the role played by a monk in the story of genetics
  • The real dangers of genetic engineering

Dear Sun City 50 Plus Club members,

We are surrounded by a new breed of mad scientists who have the opinion that anything they want to do is fair game, no matter how abhorrent the outcome.

For anyone who is worried that I might have found out that we are about to see strange new creatures walking in our fields, please rest easy – but don’t think it might not happen.

You see they have already begun to mess about with plants in similar ways that would make a cross between a sheep and a kangaroo seem sensible.

Last weekend I woke to the radio telling me that I would soon be able to buy a tomato with the antioxidant properties of a blueberry.

I was genuinely interested as I have long been a fan of the health benefits of tomatoes and blueberries, and thought they might have discovered a traditional old variety with hidden properties.

But, no the next speaker was a scientist who told me that they had succeeded in changing the genetic code in a tomato so that it accepted inserted genes from a blueberry.

I began to imagine a version of Dr Frankenstein laboratory with a tomato and a blueberry strapped to a bench with curly wires running between them, and the mad cackling of a wild haired madman as he throws the huge power switch that sends genes from one to the other…

…I used to watch a lot of Hammer Horror films as a kid!

Despite the image such genetic meddling gives me, I happen to believe that by affecting the way organisms work can only have catastrophic effects.

Let me explain why.

Sweet peas and ancient monks

The father of modern genetics was no scary scientist but a gentle old monk.

Back in 1865 Gregor Mendel was to be found in his greenhouse and garden with a fine haired brush lifting pollen from one sweet pea plant and using it to fertilise another.

He was acting like a bee in carrying the male gamete from the stamens of one plant to the female carpels of the next – a completely natural intervention.

From his work he identified how inheritance worked and how some traits are dominant and others only express in certain circumstances – all from chronicling how his pollen transfer affected the colours of the flowers on the plants.

Mendels work was gentle, natural and devout. The science he used was basic and completely safe to the plants, him & other humans and the environment of the planet.

He would never countenance trying to place sweet pea pollen into a tomato plant, because he simply knew that interspecies reproduction didn’t work, that was how nature intended it.

It might seem a little picky of Mother Nature but each species is designed to breed only within itself, or with very close relatives.

So, in the wild it has been reported that Donkeys and horses interbred, and this was encouraged by humans to create stronger and faster pack animals – but that should really be it.

Other close relative crosses have seen tigers and lions mix (Tiglon), camels and llamas (Cama) and even a disastrous attempt to create more manageable bees by crossing those from Europe with an African species… the result was killer bees – really aggressive bees that attack on sight!

And that alone should be a warning to the scientists involved with interspecies work.
I’m not suggesting that crossing a tomato and a berry would result in a salad that wanted to rip your throat out, just that the outcomes are not predictable and often are an affront to nature.

The growing risk

In the development of all species there have been jumps in evolution, even our own where the latest evidence shows that Homo sapiens (modern man) met with and bred with the Neanderthals.

Imagine the scene…

…it is a serene and warm night on the savannah, a rich mammoth stew is bubbling over the campfire, the effects of fermented fruit juice is beginning to make the atmosphere heavy. Urgs face was softened by the soft light of the fire as it played across his rugged features and incredibly high forehead, Naarg lay her head onto his hairy shoulder and…

Enough of the Mills and Boon I think!

The problem is that the introduction of a ‘new’ species into the gene pool created issues for the children of this coupling.

They were less fertile, they had problems with their digestive tract and suffered from debilitating fatigues (so suggest the anthropologists and psychologists who have been working on the project – I don’t know how they discovered this as diaries from the period are somewhat lacking!).

There was a benefit though, it seems that our forebears had an improved immune system which protected them from the pestilence that eventually wiped out the Neanderthals themselves – strange thing genetics.

And here lies the crux of my concerns. If we start to mess about with genetics either by naturally crossing species which have some affinity, or worse by forcing genes into places they shouldn’t be we run the risk of creating much bigger problems than a few bees that like a bit of aggro.

At the start of this letter I said I was excited by the prospect of an old variety of tomato being discovered that was rich in antioxidants, but in reality why shouldn’t I just have a beautiful tomato salad, maybe with a nice piece of grilled mackerel, and then follow it up with a bowl of fresh blueberries (if they were in season at the time)?

What is the obsession with ‘fast food’ and ‘one stop’ nutrition, the joy of food is in variety and difference.

Yours, as always

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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You can receive Ray’s ‘The Good Life Letter’ regularly by contacting him on his website.

Now wash your hands! How a good sandwich is made

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  • Discover why outrage from a daily newspaper is misplaced
  • Here is the truth about the horror within your sandwich
  • Are you happy living where even cheese isn’t really cheese?

Oh for pity’s sake people let’s get a bit of realism here can’t we?

Last week the Daily Mail had an expose of a factory in Nottinghamshire where pre-packed sandwiches are made – and the horror that the workers didn’t wear gloves.

Rather than have the workforce donning plastic or rubber coverings the owners insisted on clean bare hands.

Amazingly there was an uproar about this, with claims that no-one should be eating sandwiches that were being made in such unhygienic conditions…

…really, that’s the reason not to eat a shop bought pack of sandwiches!

Back in 2005 I told you about the anti-salt campaigners, CASH, declaring that these products should carry health warnings for the salt content alone.

The advice is that an adult should eat no more than 6g per day, yet the Waitrose sausage, egg and bacon pack contained 4.17g, the Tesco all day breakfast not far behind on 4g and even the nation’s favourite cheese ploughman’s from Boots wading in at 3.5g.

Surely this was something to get upset by rather than the potential state of someone’s fingernails.

The health risks from pre-packaged sandwiches have been highlighted in several newspapers, with The Times featuring the headline ‘Cheese and pickle sandwich and a heart attack’ in 2009 and a Which statement from the same year reporting that ‘apparently healthy options’ such as chicken are not as good as they seem, with a herb chicken and rocket sandwich from Pret A Manger containing the same levels of fat as a Big Mac burger.

Again the level of public outrage was barely more than a tut and shake of the head.

As a nation we consume over 2 billion shop bought sandwiches each year in the UK amounting to around £4 billion of revenue (interestingly the revenue from the sales of cookbook and recipe books accounts for a mere £90 million by comparison).

Now that is big business, and it is growing as more of us seek out a quick and satisfying lunch that we eat at our desks.

The lunch hour is a thing of the past, and even making your own sandwiches is less popular now than it has ever been.

But you really should know what it is that you are eating.

The horror within

Once you begin to look into the factory-made sandwich business you realise that a grubby fingernail and too much salt are just the tip of the iceberg.

How does blood gel, wheat starch and chemical colourants sound as a filling for you?

Understandably you might not choose that over a nice ham sandwich, but guess what, they are one and the same thing.

By combining blood plasma proteins, starch, flavourings, colourants, a raft of preservatives and shredded pork fat, allowing it to set then slicing it really fine, you would have ‘reconstituted meat’.

This is what you will see on the ingredients panel of a pack of sarnies.

The British Sandwich Association (who else would you turn to for the statistics!) say that the most popular sandwich filling in the UK is chicken, followed by cheese and with egg a distant third.

If only we could rely on them being what they say they are.

WARNING: If you love a chicken sandwich look away now!

Most cheap chicken is of the reformed type. By that I don’t mean it was once a chicken who made bad life choices then found its place back in society…

…I’m talking about birds (including guts, bones and feet) being minced, pushed through a sieve, slaked with salt, steamed to plump up the mixture then placed into moulds to ‘form’ a breast portion.

This is then sliced and mixed with a gloop containing yet more salt, high fructose corn syrup and starch to make the popular coronation chicken filling.

Mmm race you to Tesco’s for that one!

Even cheese isn’t safe

You would think that a nation of artisan cheese makers like Britain would be fiercely proud of our industry…

…but the quest for increasing profits overrides national sentiment!

Rather than use whole milk to make curds that are then left to mature for weeks and months, the alternative is to mix oil in with the milk, add yet more starch and compress the mixture to make processed ‘cheese food’ in a matter of hours.

None of this sounds appetising when laid out in this way, but pack it up in a pretty box, sit it in a refrigerated display case and hear the tills ring.

We should be thankful that there are no rubber gloves in the sandwich factory because the chances are they would end up in the mix as well – perhaps the most authentic and tasty part of it!

Sadly our society now seems to accept poor quality food as standard and is happy to fork out the huge prices for it.

Rather than get up a little earlier and cut up a nice box of fresh salad, pull together a proper ham sandwich and an apple for the grand price of about a pound, many folk prefer to queue at a shop, pay five times as much and get ‘meat gel’ and salt laden starch.

Daily Mail readers I encourage you to be reviled by the sandwich factory, but maybe not for the reasons you thought you were.

Yours, as always

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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You need to understand the power of green thumbs

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  • Don’t miss out on this simple home solution to getting the best food
  • Have you been a victim of food fraud and fakery?
  • Why you should NEVER trust a label

 

After a few days in Devon with friends and family I was pleasantly surprised when I returned to Chez Collins.

Over the weekend much had happened in the garden.

My potatoes were breaking through the ridges, the summer cabbages had flourished and the broad beans were racing away after just a few warm n’ wet days.

A sight to behold.

I don’t care whether you have a full sized allotment, a few places amongst the flower borders or a window box, there is no joy greater than seeing healthy vegetables growing.

Well, actually the greater delight is the one where you pick your crop and eat it fresh from the soil…

…there truly is no better feeling.

Knowing that the minerals and vitamins are at optimum levels, taste and texture maximised and vibrant colours adding to a visual feast on the plate make a few hours of caring all worthwhile.

Of course we shouldn’t overlook one other major benefit.

I am a man who works hard for my pennies (believe me these letters don’t just write themselves you know!) and I like to keep them in my pocket for as long as possible.

Handing over my hard earned cash at a supermarket till fills me with dread – and it looks like thousands of us have been seriously ripped off when we do so.

Let me explain how our big shops are offering discounts but still earn more than they would normally, plus are destroying our countryside in the process.

Misleading Multibuys & Shameless Shopping Subterfuge

The consumer magazine Which? has revealed that shoppers who think they are being savvy by seeking out special offers are more likely being ripped off than saving money.

Supermarkets advertising huge savings are actually breaking the law by creating the illusion of thrift, and I hope the full weight of the law is brought to bear.

A few examples featured in the Times on May 19th such as Hovis bread being sold by Asda at a special price of £1… the problem is that before the price offer was announced the loaf cost £1 anyway!

Others such as Tesco selling a box of 100 Twinings Tea Bags for £4.40 then putting the price up to £4.49 when they reduced the pack size to 80 bags.

Two for one offers featured a lot in the rip off list, especially when the sellers claimed that the goods were priced at a much higher level than they were before the offer period, for example our friends from Asda again with a Robinsons fruit squash previously available at £1 each being sold as two for £2.50 (as they claimed it was previously available at £1.59 each!).

It shows that the general public is being dupped at every turn by the big businesses that now control food supply in the UK.

There is legislation to prevent this type of retailing fraud but it rarely gets applied due to the complexity of enforcement – and that is why they get away with it.

But the lengths they go to in their drive for profits don’t just stop at straight fraud, they think nothing of forgery either.

Why you should NEVER trust a label

It seems there’s been an upsurge in fake “organic” meat, fish, fruit and veg across the country.

Labels changed… big black marker pens used to blatantly lie on market stall packaging… sneaky loopholes exploited to bend the truth… that kind of thing.

And this criminal deceit is everywhere.

Shoppers have been duped into buying fake free range eggs that were actually factory farmed. This means we pay double what the Continent pays for similar eggs.

Organic Scotch Beef was found to be poor quality beef from South America… “wild” salmon was found to be as wild as a pet gerbil… “corn fed” chicken was found to be nothing of the sort.

But you can see why the rogue traders have moved in.

A chicken worth £2 can fetch £10 when you stick on an organic label. Steak that sells for £10 per kilo can fetch as much as £29.59 if it’s “organic”.

A lot of people are making a lot of money by taking advantage of our desire to eat good food.
It’s not easy to find a solution, either.

I usually come up with a specific tip for you to follow though when I moan about a big health issue.

But in this case it’s tricky.

I mean, what can you do when food manufacturers lie to you on the packet? How can we tell?

All I can say is that, if you can, try and buy fresh British produce from farmers’ markets, bona fide organic retailers, and good, traditional markets.

I realise this is sometimes hard for people to do. But check out this email I got from a friend of mine who reads the Good Life Letter and whose father is in the farming business.

“Supermarkets are bleeding farmers and producers dry. In a few years our dairy farms will be broke and we’ll be net importers of milk.

“We should stop buying fruit, veg and meat from the supermarkets, use farmers and normal markets instead.

“In many cases, I think it’s cheaper and a whole load tastier than supermarket stuff and when you get home there’s none of that packaging to get rid of so it’s much better for the environment too.

“It’s really satisfying to sit down to a meal knowing that more of the money is going back to the farmers and producers as opposed to lining the pockets of monopolistic supermarkets.”

Do your own thing

What all this adds up to is quite a shocking level of blatant profiteering by the food retailers.

Right now they are driving farmers and growers out of business, promoting poor quality and fake foods and then charging us a premium price by sleight of hand.

Looking out over my growing crops I feel strongly that we should all do more for ourselves.

Take any chance to grow a few salad leaves, a fresh tomato or two, even just a bit of cress on damp blotting paper will make a difference.

I wrote the two books that make up Natural Food Wisdom because I passionately believe that we have to regain the control over our food – I urge you to take a positive step today.

Yours, as always

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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Do we need proof before we open our minds?

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  • A group of GPs finally take the blinkers off – more than you’d think
  • Here’s an angry scientist that should get his facts straight
  • A powerful and natural homeopathic remedy for all men to try

I truly believe that when a new GP qualifies they are given a stethoscope, a black bag and a set of blinkers.

It seems to be that every doctor is a passionate believer that the only cures available are pharmaceutical or surgical.

Anything else is pure quackery in their book.

The fact that healing has been an art for many years before Hippocrates roamed the earth, and long before each doctor swore allegiance to his philosophies, seems to have slipped their minds.

Damning statements about how ineffective/dangerous/unscientific any approach to healthcare that doesn’t involve a prescription pad or a scalpel are pushed out into the media on a regular basis.

But, some recent information provides a glimmer of hope that some of the old guard are finally beginning to open their eyes to ‘alternative’ medicine.

A recent survey of GPs found that around half of UK doctors are offering access to ‘therapy outside conventional medicine’, including osteopathy and acupuncture.

In addition the records show that there are 900 GP members of the British Medical Acupuncture Society and an even more surprising 400 who are active members of the British Homeopathy Society.

Why surprising you may ask?

Well of all the alternative therapies this is the one that has attracted most criticism, not least because it is a preferred therapy for our Royal Family.

And that really winds up some of the great and good of the medical profession.

Discover the homeopathic option for this major health concern – click here

An angry scientist…but one that needs to get his facts straight

In the leafy corner of Exeter lies the domain of one Edzard Ernst.

This academic is something of a poster boy for the pharmaceutical industry as he is an outspoken critic of alternative or complementary medicine…despite holding the title of Emeritus Professor at the University, and even once was Professor of Complementary Medicine at the University of Exeter.

You’d think that would make him a force for good wouldn’t you? Unfortunately he is anything but, and this week launched yet another promotion for his memoirs by attacking Prince Charles over his support for integrated medicine.

The vicious nature of Prof Ernst’s attacks on the heir to the throne knows no limits, and in less benevolent times would have seen the foolhardy academic spending time in a deep and painful cellar.

The basis of his ire is two-fold:

A government funded guide on homeopathy for patients which was produced in 2013 as part of an initiative by Prince Charles
The Smallwood report, again commissioned by Prince Charles, which suggested greater access to complementary therapies in the NHS might lead to widespread benefits.
Both of these reports were hardly glowing in their consideration of alternative approaches but did say that there were good reasons to remain open minded.

This waved a red rag to the bull, and Prof Ernst wasn’t slow on the charge.

And all because there’s no SCIENTIFIC proof that complementary therapies work.

The fact that there’s anecdotal proof, and that real people have made real progress using complementary therapies isn’t worth a stuff in his myopic world.

Even when someone tries an alternative therapy and makes a FULL recovery from a terrible illness (after having been written off as a hopeless case by the mainstream), that’s STILL not enough to convince these blinkered doctors that maybe… just maybe…complementary therapies are worth considering.

Unless some scientists can explain WHY this progress has been made, in a series of formulas and flow charts, then the therapy is rubbish and shouldn’t be encouraged.

Can you blame me if my cornflakes go everywhere when leading doctors support such a narrow-minded view?

Of course we ALL want to understand WHY something has worked. That way the therapy can be replicated and improved upon.

But surely the most important thing is that it works?

The whys and hows are secondary.

To dismiss complementary therapies that have helped people overcome many, many ailments, just because some boffin can’t figure out the exact mechanism of action, is madness.

After all, what is the primary role of a doctor? To help us and cure us, or to tell us HOW he’s curing us?

“I’m sorry Mrs Smith, I know that by giving you this tiny green leaf your arthritis pain would be gone in an instant. But I don’t understand how it works, so I’ll just lock it away in my drawer and give you these manmade drugs instead.”

How would that make YOU feel?

I know how I feel… angry. Angry and let down yet again by the mainstream’s intolerance of anything they don’t understand.

Or anything the major drugs companies can’t make money out of.

Take a leaf out of Prince Charles’ book and discover a much maligned approach to health

Basically we shouldn’t write anything off just because we don’t understand it.

A challenge for all of us

I have chosen to consider homeopathy for one condition in particular and have selected a trusted partner to help me develop a solution that we can all try safely… or at least 50% of us can.

I apologise to those of the fairer sex, but I have decided to challenge the grumpy ones out there.

The sweary, grumbly and whinging folk at the other end of the settee…you know who you are chaps!

Unless you have been away on a trip to Mars you can’t have missed the focus being applied to the prostate – with prostate cancer now being predicted to affect one in eight men in the UK.

But it is not just cancer that affects this walnut sized gland at the base of our bladders, there are several other conditions that we need to take note of such as:

  • Benign prostatic hyperplasia or BPH, means your prostate is enlarged, but is not cancerous.
  • Acute bacterial prostatitis usually starts suddenly from a bacterial infection.
  • Chronic bacterial prostatitis is an infection that comes back again and again.
  • Chronic prostatitis also called Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome (CPPS), is a common prostate problem which can also cause back pain.

Given that the male of the species is typically loathe to take their health seriously I want to REALLY encourage each of you to consider taking the homeopathic approach to better prostate health.

And if you won’t do it for yourself maybe your better halves can act for you. (Ladies, you will be doing him more than a favour by getting him to think about his prostate.)

This special homeopathic preparation isn’t claiming to be a cure for cancer or anything outrageous, merely a natural and gentle way to deal with some of the effects of ageing, and potential precursors of one of the conditions listed above.

I won’t make myself popular with Exeter’s professional cynic, but the Good Prince might applaud this approach.

I’m certain that any of you that try it will also be converts to this gentle and natural health approach.

Prostate Relief – a homeopathic treatment approach to better male health

Yours, as always

Ray Collins

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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Before the epidemic strikes you must read this… by Ray Collins

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•  Looking ill might just make you worse
•  Find out why the latest health scare is pure junk
•  Big deal, it’s only your health being put on the bottom line

 

“Oh you don’t look so well!”

What’s your natural response to someone saying this?

Do you raise yourself up to a swagger and say, “I’ve never been better; in fact I am positively perky.”

Or, more than likely do you say, “Really? Well I have been under the cosh a bit.”

It’s an interesting fact of human psychology that when we are told we don’t look in rude health we tend to feel unwell.

Of course if we are suffering from something major or worrying the very last thing we want to hear is that we look like we’re at death’s door.

Speaking to a GP at the golf club the other day he said that it was an absolute no-no to start telling patients that they looked sickly… even if they were completely green around the gills.

The premise being that by re-enforcing the problem it makes it more difficult to cure.

So, what in the name of all that is holy is going on with the medical profession of late?

Anyone else come across the term pre-diabetic being used?

This phrase has entered the medical lexicon of late to describe someone who may have blood sugar, blood pressure or even cholesterol levels slightly higher than normal.

This strikes me as just plain stupid – and many much stronger words as well.

Pre-Diabetes – the new health scare

Just think about this for a minute.

Right now it is pre-lunch as I write this, which means I haven’t had my sandwich yet and so I feel a little hungry.

No doubt at a dinner party this weekend I may enjoy a pre-dinner drink (or two!) at a point prior to tucking into my meal, bearing in mind that I won’t have even tasted a morsel of it by then.

On my trip to Portugal I expect the captain of the aircraft to make a series of pre-flight checks whilst we are still on the ground and well before we reach our cruising altitude of 34,000 feet.

My point here is that this concept of PRE- happens well before something occurs, and sometimes could mean that the event doesn’t occur at all.

So, PRE-Diabetes doesn’t make any sense at all.

Researchers state that labelling millions of people in this way merely turns healthy people into patients.

John Yukin, emeritus professor of medicine at University College London agrees, saying that doctors would be better off telling everyone to eat better and exercise more rather than putting them into a spurious medical category.

Having been given this moniker doesn’t help, especially when you consider that within a normal population there will be perfectly healthy individuals who happen to have higher readings than the arbitrary ‘normal’.

“Pre-diabetes is an artificial category with virtually zero clinical relevance,” continues the good prof. “There is no proven benefit of giving diabetes treatment drugs to people in this category before they go on to develop diabetes, particularly since many of them would not go on to develop the condition anyway.”

So, why are we seeing this diagnosis being used?

Should we be surprised?

If a state of human health can be given a label it is usually for one purpose only…

…to coral a pool of potential drug users.

By labelling a group and implying that they have a medical need it affords a ready market for the nice boys and girls employed as pharmaceutical representatives to create a glossy PowerPoint presentation for GPs.

Their counterparts in the marketing team can do a similar job for lazy journos by issuing crafted press releases that write their stories for them.

Let me give you an example of how this works –

From: Diabetes – How GSK is making a difference (a promotional leaflet for GP’s)

‘Another area of research is pre-diabetes, a condition where blood sugar levels are higher than normal but not yet high enough to be diagnosed as diabetes. Pre-diabetes is a key stage in the development of type 2 diabetes and more than 300 million people worldwide are thought to have pre-diabetes.’

Just look at how they quickly identify pre-diabetes as a condition and one that heralds full blown diabetes as a result.

You can imagine how the headline writers would take this information to create a major health scare…

‘300 Million at risk as the obesity crisis worsens’

This is the real danger with this obsession of creating a diagnosis, but if we take the information and use it more positively then we can do good.

The real deal on national health

In an editorial in the British Medical Journal they said that rather than turning healthy people into patients we should use available resources to change the food, education, health and economic policies which have affected so many people.

I could not have put it better myself.

For many years I have banged on about the problems caused by the lack of food technology at school, the decline in home grown and home cooked meals and the domination of our food supply by supermarkets and major food companies.

The real food issue is not that we are eating too much, but that we can’t avoid eating badly.
Having access to the information we need to source and cook healthy meals is constantly being denied to us as big bucks come to the fore.

When you pick up any newspaper or watch the TV news the blame is always put on the consumer choosing to eat fatty, sugary fast food – but the truth is that many have no choice.

Bad food education, bad economic policy and bad health programmes have all been made worse by big company profiteering.

If we do look unwell then it is the global money men who have made us sick.

How much pleasure would there be in being able to say to them, “Your business doesn’t look very healthy, in fact I think you have developed a really nasty syndrome from which you’ll never recover.”

Maybe that particular diagnosis was the cause of the head man at Tesco leaving this week…
…he didn’t look well in the newspapers did he!

Yours, as always

Ray Collins
The Good Life Letter

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