Interesting thread... a lot of interesting discussions going on here.
Having been familiar with various phases of
jamie's thoughts on this matter already, it is interesting to see where he and minxx are at now.
Personally, I find the idea of
any diet to be odd. People are so
different from each other, and also from themselves at different points in their lives. How can one even think that what a growth-spurt teenage boy needs to be healthy is the same as a middle-aged woman approaching menopause?
What I think is that most people in the world are so filled up with junk that they do need to
detox and stop consuming things that are clearly fucking them up. Doing this, as well as expanding one's self-awareness, and learning to breathe and rest properly (meditation and some form energy work being key) leads one to a place where one begins to
intuit what your body needs in that moment or period of time. One becomes attracted to certain herbs or supplements for period of time, and loses interest in ones that are no longer helping or necessary... naturally, and non-rigidly.
People who talk to me about strict regimens and get hung up about exact amounts of this and that often seem to me to be misplacing their healthy focus on being a better functioning human being into very abstract and left brained thought loops. Even ones who are fans of the Tony Wright
Left In The Dark stuff often seem to not see that they are using this information in a totally left brained way. The
right brain (or even better the holistic super-conscious mind) is much more suited for leading you
in the moment towards godly health IMHO.
This means being
creative. This entails not doing the same thing day after day, but switching things up in direct response to what is going on in your body. Plenty of people are severely deficient in various essentials, and as such, get a great boost when they find a good source of whatever they were missing. They mistakenly assume that such nutritional sources (or even physical activities) are
universally good for all people at all times, though. If they formulated this thought clearly and said it out loud... they might realize how ridiculous it is.
What
I require for optimal functioning as a lifelong martial artist, entheogen user, who has had long stretches of relatively sedentary indoor work, and has traveled the world extensively... is totally different from week to week and highly dependent on where I am and
what I am doing. If I am in the tropics and scuba diving every day or doing a lot of surfing, I must eat totally different than when I am wintering in a ski resort, or wandering in damp and misty Pacific Northwest Rainforests. Even when I am stuck indoors for weeks on end, my diet will depend on whether I worked out that day, went to the sauna, spent the night tripping balls... etc. etc.
As for the whole vegan, raw food
elitism... I have mixed feelings.
On the one hand, everyone knows at least a few
truly annoying vegans who are so self-righteous and condescending that they actually manage to drive people away from veganism and give health food a bad name. Trust fund hippies who shop in trendy health food stores and only buy or eat stuff that costs an arm and a leg, and can not seem to stop showing off how amazing their fair-trade, non GMO,
totally organic, wildcrafted whatever is, while talking torrents of shit about whatever you happen to be eating at the moment... are themselves unhealthy to be around, because the feeling of wanting to throttle them is
itself toxic.
On the other hand, I don't have any problem with arrogance, elitism, and even narcissism... when it is
warranted and mixed with a healthy dose of
compassion and humility. The fact is that we are
not all equal. People who spend their days raping & pillaging are simply
not of the same value as master healers, virtuoso musicians, advanced yogis, powerful shaman or any other master.... not to the world, and
certainly not to me personally. Not even on a spiritual level. Sorry.
I find the old canard that we are all created equal to be wrong-headed. Even if it
were true (which I don't see), we certainly don't stay equal after birth.
People get mad at folks like
Usain Bolt &
Muhammad Ali because they are shameless in flaunting their greatness... but there is no doubt that they ARE, in fact,
great. To be the fastest living human being by a
long shot for going on 6 years with no sign that anyone is even approaching his level is truly remarkable. I guarantee you that Usain could outrun all the vegan fruitarians in the world even if he let them start while he wolfed down a Big Mac. Is it wrong to recognize that he is exceptional? Hell no. He should be a bit more mature perhaps, choose his words a bit more wisely... he doesn't need to talk shit about other runners etc. But this is mostly because his running
already speaks volumes.
At this stage in my life, I have little patience for this concept of rewarding mediocrity. We have no business making idiots feel smart. We should not be dumbing things down. Everyone in a competition does not deserve a freaking ribbon. We SHOULD be honoring
masters. We should shut the fuck up when they deign to speak, and listen carefully to what they have to say. And conversely, we should ignore the tripe that spills from most people's lips while they delusionally believe they are speaking wisdom... or simply run their mouths about whatever inanity currently grips their underdeveloped cerebral material.
No, my friends... we are
not equal. There are very few 13 year olds who are my equal in
anything. Those rare prodigies who are awesome in something at that age, I will happily give them their due respect. But in general, even those kids are dumb as posts on a true wisdom & awareness level. They simply don't have enough experience to have mastered themselves yet.
Godly health? Hard to say. Both of my grandmothers are in their 90's, and neither of them ate particularly well. I would say deep breathing and smiling are more powerful for health than food. Just remember: 3 min without air, 3 days without water, 3 months without food... and you are history. That is about the correct proportion of focus for health IMO.
I guess I have gone on long enough. Those are my handful of cents.
Be well peeps,
HF
"Curiouser and curiouser..." ~ Alice
"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it." ~ Buddha