Fruits and Sunshine
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Fruits and Sunshine
Hi All,
wehn I eat lot´s of fruit I always feel a very strong desire for sunshine!
I´m now trying Wai's diet for the third time and, yes, it comes back again, the ultimate desire for sunshine. Unfortunately here is no sun in Germany and I´m dreaming the whole day of my last trips to tropical places. It´s a feeling like starving.
Has anybody here made similar experiences?
Obviously bananas and mangos beam me back to ... our original homeland!?
If I eat dairy (the worst of all foods for my body) I really dislike sunshine... This can´t be a coincidence. Addictive dairy as a consolation for people kicked out of sunny paradise...
Terence
wehn I eat lot´s of fruit I always feel a very strong desire for sunshine!
I´m now trying Wai's diet for the third time and, yes, it comes back again, the ultimate desire for sunshine. Unfortunately here is no sun in Germany and I´m dreaming the whole day of my last trips to tropical places. It´s a feeling like starving.
Has anybody here made similar experiences?
Obviously bananas and mangos beam me back to ... our original homeland!?
If I eat dairy (the worst of all foods for my body) I really dislike sunshine... This can´t be a coincidence. Addictive dairy as a consolation for people kicked out of sunny paradise...
Terence
Before the diet I really loved rainy days, as they kept me inside and they were relaxing and calming. I found it enhanced my calmness and I enjoyed reading, playing music and doing something pleasant.
After the diet, the urge for sunny days increased to like never before. Not that I didn't like sunny days, but I definitely felt a need for some sunshine each day. So I do believe you and sympathize with you!
After the diet, the urge for sunny days increased to like never before. Not that I didn't like sunny days, but I definitely felt a need for some sunshine each day. So I do believe you and sympathize with you!
A few years ago I found a book about sugar metabolism. The author describes the strong relationship between temperatures, sun's radiation and metabolic changes in humans. Very interesting. Every winter I have to cut out tropical fruits of my diet to avoid imbalances in my feelings. 'Cold' fuits like apples and berries are ok, in small amounts.nick wrote:Before the diet I really loved rainy days, as they kept me inside and they were relaxing and calming. I found it enhanced my calmness and I enjoyed reading, playing music and doing something pleasant.
After the diet, the urge for sunny days increased to like never before. Not that I didn't like sunny days, but I definitely felt a need for some sunshine each day. So I do believe you and sympathize with you!
Due to my strong desire for sunshine I have decided to leave Germany. Hopefully this will happen this year.. Everything is prepared now.. Yeah.
Terence
Wow. I REALLY envy you!avo wrote:Hello?!? This is why I moved to Florida!
After travelling a lot, my favourite now is Portugal, which is only 2.5 flight hours away, so that I can hold up some business in Germany.
Avo, are there many raw foodists in Florida? I have heard that raw food is now very common in California.
Regarding raw food, Portugal is still deep Stone Age. hehe. And it´s my aim to change this.
Terence
I'm not exactly in the hippest part of town, but I have met lots and lots of organic foodies, and yes, several raw foodists. It is so easy to do here, there are plentiful farmers markets, stands, fleamarkets, etc. Most supermarkets here have very nice produce sections as well. Don't get me started on the fish... one could drive to the pier 10 minutes away and catch spanish mackerel when ever they feel like it. Also, lots of decent sushi joints and fish markets.
If you are considering Florida, I am moving (once again) in about a year. You could buy my place (small bungalow), but there are plenty of others for sale, nothing is really selling right now. I'm thinking South Carolina or Nevada/Arizona. Maybe Texas. I still got a year to think about it...
If you are considering Florida, I am moving (once again) in about a year. You could buy my place (small bungalow), but there are plenty of others for sale, nothing is really selling right now. I'm thinking South Carolina or Nevada/Arizona. Maybe Texas. I still got a year to think about it...
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- Location: CA
Avo, you should cozy-on up here in sunny California! I currently live in Los Angeles, but I frequently go up north to visit 'wine country' every summer...it's soo nice and relaxing up there. Los Angeles is just getting waaay too crowded for me, but luckily I have my secret escape in the summer . BTW I lived in South Carolina for a few years in Lady's Island, very comfy indeed
Everything we touch turns to gold...then to sh_t
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- Posts: 274
- Joined: Sat 13 Sep 2008 22:47
sun exposure
Ah; now the health administrators have declared that tanning salons are as dangerous as arsenic and other toxins; I wonder if they will stay open in the US.
I have wondered (aloud) on this board about the power of sun in terms of bone health and mood. There is a non-quantifiable element of course, of 'feeling good,' that cannot really be calculated or strategized.
However, for the winter, I am wondering about the indoor lights that stimulate proper circadian rhythms and are not really about sun/UV exposure on the skin. Do they address part of the mood problems from lack of sunlight? Are they a poor substitute, for, say, outdoor time supplemented by short spells in a tanning salon when the weather is so stormy and snowy that going outdoors is more difficult? Circadian rhythms, when properly functioning,imply the perfect balance of the serotonin/melatonin cycle.... But again, the full complement of raw/healthy cholesterol, time outdoors (which undoubtedly can never be fully replaced by indoor lighting); proper diet without HCAs/beta-carbolines, etc, are all part of it. However, for one part of the equation, I am not sure if indoor small-scale circadian lights are better or worse than a tanning salon. Does anyone know?
I have wondered (aloud) on this board about the power of sun in terms of bone health and mood. There is a non-quantifiable element of course, of 'feeling good,' that cannot really be calculated or strategized.
However, for the winter, I am wondering about the indoor lights that stimulate proper circadian rhythms and are not really about sun/UV exposure on the skin. Do they address part of the mood problems from lack of sunlight? Are they a poor substitute, for, say, outdoor time supplemented by short spells in a tanning salon when the weather is so stormy and snowy that going outdoors is more difficult? Circadian rhythms, when properly functioning,imply the perfect balance of the serotonin/melatonin cycle.... But again, the full complement of raw/healthy cholesterol, time outdoors (which undoubtedly can never be fully replaced by indoor lighting); proper diet without HCAs/beta-carbolines, etc, are all part of it. However, for one part of the equation, I am not sure if indoor small-scale circadian lights are better or worse than a tanning salon. Does anyone know?
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- Posts: 274
- Joined: Sat 13 Sep 2008 22:47
sun exposure
i agree, and I plan to spend as much time outdoors as possible (it's not hard to do so, as it feels so good, even in the cold)...
I read somewhere that cold (darker) places with abundant and longlasting snowfall are actually better in terms of the light problem because the snow reflects so much of the light.
The snowy place I live is like that. There is virtually no melting after the snow has fallen for 5 months or more; it is piled high all winter-- no place to go.
I read somewhere that cold (darker) places with abundant and longlasting snowfall are actually better in terms of the light problem because the snow reflects so much of the light.
The snowy place I live is like that. There is virtually no melting after the snow has fallen for 5 months or more; it is piled high all winter-- no place to go.