Happy Healthy Gut

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Authors: Jennifer Browne

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Happy Healthy Gut


Happy Healthy Gut
is a necessary read for all. Jennifer Browne not only provides effective solutions for those suffering from digestive disorders, but provides the link between gut health and optimal health, encouraging everyone to feel their absolute best! Browne filters through all the crap (pun intended) and provides insight and education in a way that’s approachable, direct and fun to read!”

—Peggy Kotsopoulos, Registered Holistic Nutritionist
and author of
Must Have Been Something I Ate


Happy Healthy Gut
is an immensely important read for people who love food, but struggle with IBS and other gastrointestinal sensitivities. Browne offers a well thought out argument for adopting a plant-based diet as a step towards improved quality of life. This book engenders a sense of control in those trying to negotiate medical systems not well set up for managing complex symptoms where medication and surgical interventions fall short.”

—Dr. Jesse Sidhu BSc MD FRCP(C) MPH Acute and Consultant Liaison
Psychiatrist Clinical Instructor Department of Psychiatry;
UBC, Vancouver

“Inspiring and informative; Jennifer takes you through her digestive journey, while educating her readers about the digestive system and the impact a plant-based diet can have on it. I love finding a book such as this one, that brings a true recovery story into the spotlight. The masses need to know that we can become responsible for our health, natural remedies do work, and reversing disease is possible! Thanks for sharing your experiences with us, Jen!”

—Stephanie Ablett, CNP
Certified Holistic Nutritionist and Vegan Food Enthusiast
www.naturalginger.ca

copyright © 2014 by Jennifer Browne All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

Skyhorse Publishing books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or
[email protected]
.

Skyhorse® and Skyhorse Publishing® are registered trademarks of Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.®, a Delaware corporation.

Visit our website at
www.skyhorsepublishing.com

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Browne, Jennifer (Jennifer Shay), 1981-Happy healthy gut : the natural diet solution to curing IBS and other chronic digestive disorders / Jennifer Browne.

 pages cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN 978-1-62636-041-9 (alk. paper) eISBN 978-1-62873-831-5

1. Irritable colon--Diet therapy--Recipes. 2. Irritable colon--Treatment--Popular works. 3. Colon (Anatomy)--Diseases--Nutritional aspects--Popular works. I. Title.

RC862.I77B76 2014

616.3’42--dc23

            2013032405

Printed in the United States of America

Acknowledgments

T
o the massive population of people who suffer from digestive disorders: don’t give up, and don’t settle for anything less than your ideal situation. Strive for fabulous health, and you’ll get there. Be your own best advocate.

Thanks to my supportive friends and family, who, after being informed I was taking this project on, didn’t laugh or scoff at me. Not even once.

Many thanks to Judy, Kim, Kelly, Jeff, and Marie for sharing their personal experiences with digestive disaster and triumph. Your stories are empowering, and I hope they will help others.

My sincere gratitude to Ann, whose meticulous edits on this book could not be more appreciated. Thank you.

Lastly, to Seventh Avenue Literary and Skyhorse Publishing: thank you for believing in this book.

Dedication

F
or my husband Dave, who has seemingly unlimited patience with me; my mom and Ashlee, who are always quietly inspirational; my dad, whose motivation and drive did not go unnoticed, and my children, who did not seem to mind being ignored while this book was being written. (Seriously—you three are
really
good at entertaining yourselves.) I love you all.

Contents

Acknowledgments

Dedication

Preface

Part 1: The Why (The Problem)

Chapter 1: To Tame a Tummy

Chapter 2: Digestion 101

Chapter 3: The D.D. No One Wants Around

Chapter 4: Inflammation Nation

Chapter 5: Healthcare 9-1-1

Chapter 6: A Pitch for Plant-Based

Chapter 7: Filthy Food

Chapter 8: Chemically Speaking

Part 2: The How (The Plan)

Chapter 9: Get Wet!

Chapter 10: Serious Solutions for Happy Digestion

Chapter 11: Food Rules

Chapter 12: Get Healthy, Feel Beautiful

Chapter 13: The Recalibration Plan and Kick-Ass Recipes

Endnotes

About the Author

Further Reading

Index

Preface

“The food you eat can either be the safest and most powerful form of medicine, or the slowest form of poison.”
1

—Dr. Ann Wigmore, pioneer for natural health

H
ow many times have your feet been sore, yet you continue to stand? What about feeling exhausted all the time? Do you make more time for quality sleep, or just make another pot of coffee? That new mother who is still tender from delivery—is she taking the time to rest, or is she doing housework and entertaining within hours of welcoming her new baby? When you have consistent heartburn when you eat pizza, do you stop eating it, or do you simply treat your symptoms with a handful of antacids?

What about cheese, a processed bun, or a steak? Does your stomach scream at you after eating these things? If so, do you listen?

The floor is not your friend, and you shouldn’t have to cling to it every time your bowel feels like escaping the rest of your body. It’s amazing how you can live for decades before becoming aware that the direction in which your life is headed is just not good enough for you. You simply decide one day that you want your life to change,
need
it to change, and you suddenly feel that you must begin this transformation immediately.

And so you do.

I want to be clear about my objective for writing this book. After nearly ten years of moderate stomach pain due to irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), which I was diagnosed with in my early twenties, I finally discovered what makes it stop, and it took little time and almost no effort. It also worked for a handful of other digestive disorder sufferers that I was in communication with throughout the duration of writing this book. I’m not talking about drugs, radical treatments, or experimental surgeries. I’m talking about diet: specifically, a whole food, plant-based diet. By fully integrating this type of dietary platform into my daily regimen, I have improved my quality of life in ways I never even thought possible, and so have others. Together we have transformed from robots, who put up with daily digestive discomfort, to men and women who have refused a mediocre life and so began a new one, full of endless possibilities in the Land of Great Digestive Ease.

Who knew such a place existed?!

If you are living with a digestive disorder, then you already know that symptoms change, and that the individual situations that can set off bowel reactions can be unexpectedly altered, too. I know many people living with IBS, and although I’m sure what we experience is similar, it is never exactly the same, and even the triggers can change from person to person, day to day. The simple idea of food having the ability to cure all of these variations in digestive discomfort can spark considerable skepticism. However, when you consider all that entails in introducing a whole, varied, earthy, plant-based plan into your life, it only makes perfect sense that it should work.

And it does.

A key component to attaining digestive success with this plan is to acknowledge the slight, yet important distinction between the terms “vegetarian” and “plant-based.” Although both descriptions imply the ridding of animal products from your diet, one can certainly be an unhealthy vegetarian. Just because you don’t eat ground beef, doesn’t mean you don’t eat high-fat, low-nutrient food. You can’t just simply
eliminate animal products to jump on this bandwagon headed to Digestive Bliss Town; you must forgo the insanely ridiculous amount of fake products that surround us, and introduce many new foods into your life. Expand your vegetable base, discover new grains, and learn techniques for fermenting, sprouting, and juicing your food.

Adopting a new and amazing way to think about food shows that you have an active opinion about your health, and that you refuse to let digestive discomfort rule your life. It’s also about purging your poor body of all those bad foods you’ve been feeding it for years. I’m not blaming you! We live in an age of incredible convenience, variety, and availability, while also being deprived of basic knowledge regarding the subject of what our food is really composed of.

You can go to your local grocer and buy a pineapple in January. Do you know where that pineapple is from or how it got here? That chicken you might be having for dinner has come from an average of 1500 miles away, and is full of all things genetically modified, which can hardly be recognized as food. The process of getting that poultry to your plate is a procedure few of us are aware of, and, because of that, we have no idea how it might be hurting us.

This book is about teaching you, the Intestinally Distressed, how to make amazing nutritional choices that will help your whole self glow while your tummy celebrates, shouting “free at last!” We only get one body, and we must live with it for close to a century. By learning how to treat it like the temple it is, it will thank you in numerous and glorious ways, including giving you the gift of cessation of digestive pain.

What I want to do throughout the course of this book, is simply share all that I have learned as it pertains to diet and detriment, and hope that it appeals to others who have experienced, or are currently experiencing, chronic pain and/or disease, as well as those who are simply looking to make a positive change in their diet and spirit. I want to introduce to you the facts about our “western diet” so that
you can make your own choice as to whether or not you need to make a lifestyle change.

Whole food, plant-based eating is not about making it difficult to grocery shop, and the goal is definitely not to stir up frustration, so that you run straight to the closest burger joint. It’s a journey that opens your mind, changes your opinions, coyly introduces you to your own body, demands that you more closely examine how you want to live your life, and educates you how to accomplish doing this pain free. This lifestyle decision began as a quest to stop my stomach pain, but it has turned out to be an incredible force that continues to heal me in countless ways, with the absence of chronic pain being a small part of the entire mosaic. I am by no means an expert in any medical field, but I do know firsthand what this platform for better health has the power to do, and for that I am so grateful.

As a fabulous by-product of adopting a whole food, plant-based diet, you’ll learn how changing your eating habits will help you not only greatly improve your own quality of life, but also effortlessly contribute to many other causes, such as saving some animals, helping direct food back to the hungry, and improving the current condition of our suffering planet. The blatant disregard for human health that has become synonymous with farmed animal welfare is astonishing, and it is my desire to pass along important knowledge to you about food issues that are rarely discussed and/or thought about, and why these matters have plenty to do with today’s enormous influx of digestive despair.

While there is plenty of information available to the public regarding the anatomy of the human digestive tract and its tendency to be unpredictable and confusing, there isn’t enough attainable research that questions why certain components of our food might be the leading cause of digestive disorders. Issues such as genetic modification, food irradiation, chemical additives, and mass-scale factory-farmed livestock products are a few of the topics that are
discussed in this book. Doesn’t it make sense to consider altered food as a major player in the game of digestive roulette? I decided to step outside of the box in my own quest to discover what contributed to my own digestive malfunction, and was surprised by the results. Though research may be close to nil regarding the safety and long-term effects that such foodstuffs may have on our bodies, this doesn’t mean that we can’t investigate for ourselves, and start discovering now if something seemingly innocent is messing with our digestive tracts.

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