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Medicinal
Benefits
of
Whole
Foods
For the first 5000 years
of civilization, humans relied on foods and herbs for
medicine. Only in the past 50 years have we forgotten our
medicinal "roots" in favor of patent medicines.
While pharmaceuticals have their value, we should not forget
the well-documented, non-toxic and inexpensive healing
properties of whole foods. The following list is but a
sampling of the health benefits from whole foods.
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Apple
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Asparagus
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Avocado
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Banana and
Plantain
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Barley
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Beans
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Beets
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Bell
Pepper
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Blueberry
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Broccoli
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Brussels
Sprouts
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Cabbage (including bok
choy)
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Carrot
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Cauliflower
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Celery
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Chili
Pepper
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Cinnamon
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Clove
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Coffee
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Collard
Greens
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Corn
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Cranberry
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Cucumbers
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Date
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Garlic.
Used to treat an array of ills since the dawn of civilization.
Broad-spectrum antibiotic that combats bacteria, intestinal
parasites and viruses. In high doses it has cured
encephalitis. Lowers blood pressure and blood cholesterol,
discourages dangerous blood clotting. Two or three cloves a
day cut the odds of subsequent heart attacks in half in heart
patients. Contains multiple anti-cancer compounds and
antioxidants and tops the National Cancer Institute's list as
a potential cancer-preventive food. Lessens chances of stomach
cancer in particular. A good cold medication. Acts as a
decongestant, expectorant, anti-spasmodic, anti-inflammatory
agent. Boosts immune responses. Helps relieve gas, has anti-diarrheal,
estrogenic and diuretic activity. Appears to lift mood and has
a mild calming effect. High doses of raw garlic (more than
three cloves a day) have caused gas, bloating, diarrhea and
fever in some. Aged garlic may be better than cooked garlic.
Eat garlic both raw and cooked for all-around insurance.
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Eggplant
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Fenugreek
Seed
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Flax seeds and
oil
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Fig
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Fish and Fish
Oil
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Garlic
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Ginger
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Grape
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Grapefruit
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Kale
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Kiwi Fruit
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Lecithin
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Lemon
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Licorice
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Melon (green and yellow,
such as cantaloupe and honeydew)
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Milk
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Mushroom (Asian,
including shiitake)
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Mustard (including
horseradish)
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Nuts
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Oats
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Olive
oil
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Onion (including chives,
shallots, scallions, leeks)
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Orange
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Parsley
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Pineapple
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Plum
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Potato
(white)
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Prune
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Pumpkin
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Raspberry
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Rice
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Seaweed and Kelp (brown
or Laminaria type seaweed)
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Soybean.
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Spinach.
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Strawberry.
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Sugar
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Sweet Potato
(yams)
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Tea (including black,
oolong and green tea, not herbal teas)
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Tomato
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Tumeric
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Watermelon
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Wheat
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Yogurt (use only organic
yogurt)
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