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| Feed Your Cells and they will keep you healthy |
Running on Empty
You
may feel full after eating but your cells may still be hungry. There are many
types of cells in your body and while one group of cells may get all the
nutrients they need, another group may not get good nutrition.
The
cells in different organs in your body can have different nutritional
requirements: heart cells need lots of protein, vitamin E and minerals such as
magnesium and selenium. Lung cells need
a lot of vitamin A; cells in a woman’s reproductive tract need high levels of
the B vitamin folic acid. In men, zinc is important in preventing prostate
trouble. Our genetics also play a role
in determining what our cells need. You
may see that heart disease runs in one family and not in another family. Why? What is really happening is that the
heart cells in the family with disease have a greater requirement for one or
more nutrients than heart cells in the healthy family. By learning about the nutrients that each
cells needs and by looking at your family history you can find out what you
really need to have well fed cells.
One
thing that all our cells need is energy. You can only get this energy if there
are good amounts of vitamins and minerals present in your food – these
nutrients act to unlock the energy in the food and carry it to the cells. Toxic substances – in our food, in the air
and water get into the body and can harm the cells because they create what is
called “free radicals”. These free radicals destroy the cell membranes – the
protective covers of the cells -- unless the cells are protected. The vitamins and minerals called antioxidants
give you this protection: Vitamins E, C and beta carotene and the mineral
selenium are examples of antioxidants.
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| Inside your cells |
Slowing Aging
Antioxidants
do something else that is very important: they slow down the aging of cells
(and therefore slow down your aging). We’ve all seen those little brown spots
on the skin that increase as we age. Some people have more than others. What
are these spots? They are the result of
going for years without enough antioxidants.
When free radicals destroy cells they produce a brown pigment that you
can see as these spots on your hands and other areas of your body. There are
some brown spots you can’t see: they are inside your brain, in the testes and
in the heart. In the brain, these spots
cause the brain cells to lose their function resulting in senility. No one has to become senile as long as they
feed their brain cells.
Nutrients
are important if you don’t want your skin to sag, your bones and joints to get
out of alignment or your teeth to get loose.
It is connective tissue that prevents these things from happening. To make strong connective tissue we need good
supplies of protein, iron, vitamin C and the amino acid called lysine. If we can hold our bones in place properly
with strong connective tissue we won’t get arthritis and back and knee pain. If
our teeth are firmly held in place by healthy connective tissues we won’t get
gum disease.
So
there is more to good nutrition that a full stomach. By giving your cells what they need to thrive
you can look forward to more years, with a better quality of life. This blog, Everything Healthy will help you
achieve your optimal health so stay tuned.


well written and informative. thank you! could this be why people have food cravings even after they have eaten because their cells need more nutrients?
ReplyDeleteYes, you are right. People do have cravings because they are missing nutrients but they don't always crave the foods that have the missing nutrients. People who eat too much may not get the nutrients they need if the food is missing what their cells need -- so they keep eating. The best thing to do is eat a well balanced healthy diet to get the missing nutrients.
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