Archive for February, 2012

Eating To Live or Living To Eat

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

I would be hard pressed to say how many times my uncle admonished my cousins and me, “You should eat to live. “We were a hungry bunch and, as far as I knew, we were following his advice. We were eating to live.

When the visiting missionary spoke in Church one Sunday morning, he tried to give us a glimpse of life in Africa. He tried to bring home the plight of certain tribes who were facing severe food shortages. He looked us over, and after a dramatic pause asked, “How many of you are starving?”

Only one hand went up. It had been a long time since breakfast and I wasn’t sure I would last until dinner time when this missionary would stop talking.

My parents’ and grandparents’ generations were good cooks. In all the catalog of sins, none were more unforgivable than offending the cook. My cousins and I knew this by instinct. When there were Church dinners, and we would go through the line, we would always pause at my mother’s pan of brownies. When we moved on, the pan was empty. We would congratulate ourselves on having done one good deed at least.

Over the intervening 50 years, my ideas about food have changed. So has my understanding of what my uncle meant. Now it is not so much a question of taste, but “what does this food do to or for me?” I want to be able to feel life flowing to my cells from the foods I eat. I want to facilitate my body’s ability to heal and repair itself. It is important to me to know I am providing my cells with a complete package of the nutrients they need to function properly now and the nutrients they need to build functional replacement cells for the future. I want to eat foods that are alive and impart life to my cells. I can now say that I eat for life.

In my experience, there is no food that does all this like Simplexity Health’s Aphanizomenon flos-aquae (AFA algae) and their algae based supplements. Contact me for my recommendations for foods and supplements that help you achieve your health goals.

Put Your Mouth Where Your Money Is

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

One of the questions people sometimes ask me when they read the information about the nutritional blue-green alga I sell runs, “Do you really believe this stuff?” Perhaps my business would be better if I could answer those questions with the thoughts I come up with later. So today I am giving you the I-should-have-said answer before you ask me the question.

We have a saying here, a challenge to would-bes, that says, “put your money where your mouth is.” In other words, let us see some action rather than just talk.

The funny thing is that I have seen that happen. I have watched people express their desire to achieve better health, more energy, greater mental clarity, etc. They purchased the products that would help them achieve their goals. And there those purchases sat in the original box, not even opened.

These people were willing to believe. They were even willing to buy what was necessary. But something happened on the way. Somehow their belief was not enough. Their actions were not enough.

Many invoke “belief” as the basis for participation in some activity. But David, the psalmist, cites “experience” as the basis for his song of praise (Psalm 34). He does not invite others to “belief.” He said, “O taste and see that the Lord is good…” (verse 8).

So no, I don’t have to “believe all this stuff,” It is not an exercise of credulity. I have experienced the reality by turning our old saying on its head. I have put my mouth were my money is.

Ellis Hein