Diabetic Diet Not The Only Factor in Diabetes

Poor dietary habits are an obvious contributor to diabetes (and less than optimum health).

Yet a lousy diabetic diet isn’t the only contributor to diabetes. In many instances, your medications are quite often the greatest concern of all. Your body immediately recognizes them as the toxic chemicals they are. Drugs are typically designed to override important bodily functions in order to suppress symptoms.

Only when we begin employing natural organic substances that our body instantly recognizes as beneficial, can true healing possibly take place.

It’s important you understand that the symptoms we may experience are an important part of our body’s communication system, (or its cries for help), and thus symptoms should never be suppressed with any drug!

If it weren’t for pain or discomfort, how could we possibly know when a problem exists, or when it is finally resolved? If we were not somehow alerted when a concern exists, the condition would gradually continue to worsen, although we would obviously be totally unaware of the fact.

That is exactly what we are doing when we resort to symptom-suppressing drugs, which basically makes a bad condition even worse. Unfortunately, when medications suppress or mask the symptoms of our health problems, we soon forget that a problem ever existed, thus allowing the problem to continually worsen undetected.

When you take insulin or other diabetes medications to “control” your health problems related to this disease, you’re not addressing the root problem(s) that caused your diabetes in the first place. In fact, as you’ll discover very soon in this book, they actually slowly make matters worse, by blocking your body’s natural healing powers.

That’s why virtually all diabetics will progressively be prescribed more and more medications in an attempt to “control” their diabetes. It just becomes an ever-escalating (and losing) battle.Medications are notorious for creating other uncomfortable symptoms (side effects), which normally results in one or more prescriptions for additional medications (basically the domino affect). Drugs not only create many side effects, but in the process they also deplete many important nutrients critical to our health. The more medications you are relying on, the greater the risk will be.

Virtually every doctor has in his/her office a very large textbook called the Physicians’ Desk Reference (PDR), which lists prescription drugs, their potential side effects, and their many interactions with other drugs (and occasionally even some foods or natural supplements). Yet they hardly ever refer to it. That’s one big reason why most doctors don’t know any of this critical diabetes information (other reasons are listed elsewhere on this website).

- Trevor N.

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