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Twelve Steps to Healthy Eating

1. Eat lots of cooked vegetables including green leafy vegetables.

2. Eat mostly cooked and warm foods where possible (with occasional salads). Use foods prepared within 24 hours when possible.

3. Eat meals on a regular schedule where possible.

4. Eat fruit on occasion only and separate from meals when possible. Slightly more fruit in the warmer months and very little in the colder months.

5. Gradually cut back on dairy or cut it out entirely. Try to limit dairy (eventually) to occasional yogurt or kefir from a natural food store. (Unhomgenized milk is preferable when used.)

6. Eat miso soup several times per week and include the occasional use of other traditionally fermented dishes.

7. Gradually eliminate foods with additives, preservatives, caffeinated products, coloring, MSG/hydrolyzed proteins, artificial sweeteners (aspartame, neotame, acesulfame-k, sucralose, etc.), and chemical names in the ingredient list that you are not sure of. Shopping regularly at a natural foods store will make it much easier to find such products. The occasional "treat" can be replaced with healthier "treats" from a natural food store.

8. Determine with some experimentation what balance of vegetables and sea vegetables, whole grains, fish/fowl, legumes, fruits, nuts, seeds, juices, herbal teas/coffee substitutes/spring water, and treats/snacks works best for you. You may decide to regularly take a concentrated food supplement or individual supplements (e.g., magnesium, calcium, B Vitamins) until your health and nutrition plan improves. Use health food store natural supplements without additives sweeteners, fillers, etc.

9. Shop for foods at a natural food store and wherever possible, purchase organic foods. If you need to, purchase staple foods via mail-order outlets.

10. Purchase natural foods cookbooks to help you with cooking techniques and recipes. Locate ethnic and other restaurants with healthy foods so you can give yourself a break from time to time.

11. Food cravings can be handled best by using holistic healing tools such as taking classes in yoga, meditation, moderate exercise and using a Twelve Stop Program (e.g., Overeater's Anonymous) for addictions. Getting small, regular amounts of protein at meals (e.g., legumes, fish, tofu, chicken, turkey, etc.) can help reduce sugar and other cravings.

12. When cooking and eating (including eating at restaurants) try to have a spirit of love and joy in your heart and serenity in your mind. Of course, this isn't always possible; so just do the best you can.

2007-04-07 00:16:21 · answer #1 · answered by Cherokee Billie 7 · 0 0

See this page for a good diet for PCOS-- polycystic ovarian syndrome. Congratulations on being smart enough to recognize that diet can affect this.

http://www.phifoundation.org/menses.html

2007-04-07 07:01:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My daughter does also. Her doctor just gave her a diet designed especially for this. If you are interested, email me and I will get it from her. She doesn't live with me so I can't give it to you right now.

2007-04-07 08:30:19 · answer #3 · answered by joaniebalonie 2 · 0 0

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