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When I read this book by Julia Ross, it immediately made sense.
It doesn't matter how good your diet is, or how suitable for your
metabolic type, that won't help with weight loss if you have an
underlying physical problem. The
Diet Cure covers these physical reasons, and how to
get your health and your weight back on track. Combine these strategies
with the right metabolic, whole food diet and you'd be onto a winner.
Below is a review reprinted from the Weston
A Price Foundation website, which gives more details on
what the book covers.
You can also visit Julia's website at www.dietcure.com
for more reviews, some updates, information on Julia's Event Schedule,
and how to consult her. The picture on the left that appears several
times on her site is the Venus de Milo. Long considered a sex symbol,
Venus bears no resemblance to the role models we're presented with
today, but may look a lot like the shape of you or me.
There are thousands of diet books out there but this one is different.
Julia Ross does not tell her readers to limit calories, cut fats
or exercise more. Instead she begins by addressing the root causes
of food cravings, addictions, eating disorders and weight problems.
Her eight-step program begins with correcting brain chemistry imbalances,
which can cause anxiety, depression and emotional eating. She uses
specific amino acids in small amounts, depending on the physiological
profile of the patient—L-glutamine to stop cravings for sweets
and alcohol, for example, or L-tyrosine to enhance concentration.
Amino acids are the key to The Diet Cure. It’s more than
just textbook knowledge, but actual clinical experience that leads
to Ross’s claim: “They are stronger than will power
and more effective and safer for most people than drugs like Prozac
and Fen-Phen. . . . These isolated protein fragments are the miracle
foods that your brain uses to make its most powerful pleasure chemicals:
serotonin—your natural Prozac; dopamine/norepinephrine—your
natural cocaine; endorphin—naturally stronger than heroin;
and GABA—naturally more relaxing than Valium. A brain that
is fully stocked with these natural mood enhancers simply has no
need for a sugar high.”
Step Two of the Diet Cure is to replace low-calorie dieting with
a sensible diet plan that includes adequate fats and proteins. Some
of Ross’s strongest words are aimed at the whole concept of
dieting. Ross recognizes that severely limiting calories is not
a cure for the complex factors that lead to eating disorders and
weight gain. Dieting saps energy, disturbs moods, creates thyroid
problems and, ironically, often leads to more weight gain in the
long run. She repeatedly emphasizes that modern standards for thinness
are unrealistic and downright dangerous, noting that among elderly
women, the thinnest have a death rate 50 percent higher than average-weight
women. According to Ross, no study has convincingly shown that overweight
is an independent cause of health problems.
Unstable blood sugar and low thyroid function are treated in Steps
Three and Four. Step Five deals with addictions to foods that one
is allergic to, such as sugar, grains and commercial milk products.
Steps Six through Eight deal with hormonal problems, yeast overgrowth
and fatty acid deficiencies.
Ross warns her readers about the dangers of aspartame, caffeinated
beverages, soft drinks, fried foods, hydrogenated oils, iceberg
lettuce, MSG, pesticides, microwaved foods, processed meats and,
of course, refined sweeteners. In the paperback version, published
by Penguin Books, she adds commercial vegetable oils and soy products
to the list.
Finally—and most wonderful—Ross is one of the few diet
therapists to recognize that saturated fats are not villains but
vital factors in the diet and a powerful aid to both protein assimilation
and weight loss.
If we have any criticism, it would be a request in future editions
for more emphasis on some of the traditional diet principles we
hold dear—foods high in fat-soluble vitamins such as cod liver
oil; lacto-fermented foods to deal with yeast overgrowth; and bone
broths rich in calcium and magnesium to give emotional stability.
Anyone who has experienced the disappointments of dieting, or who
suffers from any type of addiction, needs to read The Diet Cure.
Thanks again to the Weston
A Price Foundation for this review.
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