ChangeYourFoodHealYourMoodEBook PDF
ChangeYourFoodHealYourMoodEBook PDF
ChangeYourFoodHealYourMoodEBook PDF
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Table of Contents
1. Eliminate Processed Foods and Food Toxins From Your Diet ...................................14
2. Add Whole Foods, Good Fats, and Therapeutic Foods to Your Diet ..........................15
3. Add Fermented Foods to Your Diet to Restore and Balance Your Gut Flora..............16
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You Just Want to Be Healthy and Happy
IMAGINE SOMEONE WHO IS VIBRANTLY HEALTHY AND HAPPY. Do you picture her
medicine cabinet filled with prescription drugs? Do you see her groping for her
morning coffee to kick start the day and “unwinding” every night with a glass of wine
— or three? Do you suppose she eats Fruit Loops for breakfast and Pizza Hut for
dinner?
Probably not.
The promise of a happy pill belies a seductively elegant story about brain chemistry. It
goes like this. You’re depressed because you’re missing something chemical that
influences mood in a way that leads to depression. All you have to do is take a little
capsule every day and you’re as good as new. Right?
Wrong.
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1
Myth Number 1
Myth No. 1
What we do know is that taking drugs doesn’t resolve the underlying cause. It just
creates a chemically-induced “new normal,” which is anything but normal. To make
matters worse, it is not a simple process to stop. A patient who wants off the
pharmaceutical merry-go-round may have difficulty finding an experienced clinician
to go the distance — with patience, compassion, real knowledge about how to taper
meds, and lifestyle recommendations to support a new approach. The journey back
to the patient’s original state can be so fraught that it is frequently characterized as a
relapse. The data suggest that those taking meds are much more likely to relapse and
end up worse off than those who are not.
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Myth Number 2
Myth No. 2
Antidepressants work.
A PLACEBO EFFECT OCCURS when an
inactive substance, such as water or saline,
improves a patient’s condition simply
because the person expects that it will be
helpful. Nowhere is this more true than with
psychiatric medication. Compared with
sugar pills, psych meds offer precious little
advantage:
The largest, non-industry-funded study, costing the public $35 million, followed
4,000 patients treated with Celexa, Wellbutrin, Effexor, Zoloft, or Buspar. It found
that only 3% of patients were in remission at 12 months.3
The limited upside benefit of meds comes with a hefty serving of downside risk. Like
all pharmaceutical drugs, there are real risks to antidepressants. A May 2005 Harvard
Medical School article lists a wide-ranging collection of side effects, including
1 http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050045
2 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10768687
3https://www.madinamerica.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/STAR-D%20Protocol%20with
%20Analytic%20Plan.pdf
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reduced blood clotting capacity, tics, loss of fine motor control, diminished sexual
interest, drug interactions, loss of effectiveness, and suicide.4
Meet Sara.
Sara lost her pregnancy weight in three weeks and was ready to take on
motherhood and the world. It wasn’t until nine months postpartum that
she felt like she’d been hit by a truck. She had become sluggish and
forgetful, and was gaining weight. Her hair loss exceeded the typical
postpartum strands. She struggled to have a bowel movement even
twice a week. Sara was beyond overwhelmed and knew something was
very wrong. In a 15-minute visit, a psychiatrist assured her that he knew
exactly what was up. He diagnosed her with postpartum depression and
handed her a prescription for Paxil. Not two weeks (and a couple of med
changes) later, Sara was suicidal for the first time in her life. She drafted a
letter to loved ones and planned to jump out of her window. “It just
suddenly made sense. I felt calm and certain about it.”
4 http://www.health.harvard.edu/mind-and-mood/what_are_the_real_risks_of_antidepressants
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Myth Number 3
interests in mind.
WITH 70% OF AMERICANS taking at least
one prescription drug,5 and more than
‑
Drug companies manipulate the science in myriad ways. Their studies allow for
placebo washout (eliminating those who are likely to respond to placebo before
the study), replacement of nonresponders, and the use of inert placebos so
subjects know they have received the treatment.
Psychiatric studies are four times more likely to be funded if they are positive,
and null and negative findings are rarely, if ever, published.
5http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/06/20/70-percent-of-americans-take-prescription-drugs/
56275.html
6 https://www.opensecrets.org/lobby/top.php?showYear=a&indexType=i
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4Myth Number 4
IF SO MANY PHYSICIANS ARE HANDING OUT THESE DRUGS, they must be right. If
antidepressants are such a huge problem, then more clinicians would be talking
about it and holding back on the meds, right? I wish.
Perhaps you recall that doctors used to recommend Camels and Lucky Strikes to their
patients not too long ago. This is a big and complicated topic with dynamics that are
also at the heart of many other drug-related controversies, including cancer,
cholesterol, and vaccination.
Change comes very slowly. It can take up to 17 years for large, bureaucratic
educational institutions to fully update their courses. For example, there is ample
evidence to prove that eating naturally occurring saturated fats doesn’t cause heart
disease. But that is not what next year’s doctors are reading in their textbooks.
I’m here to tell you that the only path to natural vibrancy and resilience leaves
conventional medicine behind. I believe we’ve been duped. My entire training was
based on a disease-care model that offers patients one solution — a prescription —
and no shot at real health.
7 https://www.advisory.com/daily-briefing/2013/07/26/mayo-clinic-146-common-practices-we-should-
reconsider
8 http://scopeblog.stanford.edu/2014/09/23/video-explains-why-doctors-dont-always-know-best
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The Truth Is That Depression
Isn’t a Disease, It’s a Message
Much of my writing and teaching are devoted to the compelling scientific literature
around inflammatory models of depression and mental illness. Inflammation is the
driving force behind the symptoms that we try to squash with medications.
Bodily states of inflammation — danger signaling — can translate to the brain, wreak
havoc, and:
Have negative effects on mitochondria (energy production) and apoptosis (cell death)
Impact the very sensitive feedback systems around stress hormones such as
cortisol
A recent study in Translational Psychiatry following 47 patients supports this idea that
inflammation is the culprit in depression. Inflammatory genes were upregulated in
about 75% of medication-free, melancholic depressive patients, whereas fewer than
5% were downregulated.
Read the study here.
9 http://kellybroganmd.com/article/new-psychiatry-psychoneuroimmunology/
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The Gut-Brain Connection
This is actually a bit of good news. You may think that you
were born with bad genes or low serotonin. But it’s far more
likely that that your depression is just a complex, nonspecific symptom of chronic
illness. You probably have an unhealthy inflammatory balance that is driven by cortisol
dysfunction stemming from a sick gut.
And this is good news, how? It is very good news — because we know how to heal the gut.
Key takeaways:
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Heal Your Gut to Heal Your Depression
In this ebook, I want to give you three ways that you can reduce inflammation and
optimize gut health, creating a happier body and healthier moods.
No matter what you’ve read, you should know that eating gluten provokes
an inflammatory response in everyone. In about 80% of people, it
precipitates intestinal wall changes that allow for various compounds, food
particles, and bacteria and their immunotoxic components (e.g., LPS or
lipopolysaccharides) to enter the bloodstream. In animal models, LPS is
used to induce “depression.” There are many scientific studies establishing
the role of inflammation in depression, including postpartum.
10 http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2014/04/17/psychoneuroimmunology-
inflammation.aspx
11 http://kellybroganmd.com/snippet/pigs-warn-undeniable-evidence-roundup-toxicity/
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Three Simple Ways to Start Healing
Your Moods
THERE’S MORE TO THIS STORY, and I hope you will take charge of your health by
Three Simple Ways to Start Healing Your Moods
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1. Eliminate Processed Foods and Food Toxins From
Your Diet
WHAT ARE PROCESSED FOODS, REALLY? Broadly
speaking, they are anything in a package.
Preservatives
Dyes
Sugars
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2. Add Whole Foods, Good Fats, and Therapeutic Foods
to Your Diet
ONCE YOU ELIMINATE PROCESSED
(bagged and boxed) foods with long
ingredients, you’re left with whole,
simple foods that often don’t even come
with a Nutrition Facts label:
As a start, avoid gluten-containing grains. Quinoa, buckwheat, white rice, and white
potatoes may ultimately be fine; however, most of my patients benefit from a
temporary 30-day break to really heal first before adding them back in.
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3. Add Fermented Foods to Your Diet to Restore and
Balance Your Gut Flora
PREBIOTICS AND PROBIOTICS ARE
ESSENTIAL TO GUT HEALTH. Prebiotics are
food for probiotics. Probiotics are the good
guys — beneficial live bacteria that help to keep
the ecology of your gut in balance. You
probably knew this already.
So this is what all the fuss is about. Everyone is extolling the merits of fermentation.
Fermented foods are simply probiotic foods. Long before probiotics became
available as supplements from health food stores, people in virtually all cultures
enjoyed one form of fermented food or another. And there’s no better way to
consume a rich array of healthy bacteria than to consume them through wholly
natural sources, such as:
Sauerkraut
Pickles
Coconut kefir
You’ll want to make sure they’re truly fermented (as opposed to just pickled via
vinegar). Fermented foods are delicious and flavorful. They are relatively easy to make
on your own, too. This is an easy and powerful basic step toward a happier body and
a healthier brain.
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You Have the Power to Change
Crazy, right?
But I believe you are ready to live a conscious life. A curious life. A mindful life. A life in
which you reconnect to your own power to heal, to feel free, unafraid, and well.
You can start now by making some of the changes in this ebook.
To help you get started, I’ve also included a list of seven therapeutic foods and my all-
time favorite breakfast smoothie recipe.
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Addendum 1:
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Addendum 2:
The Happy Body,
Healthy Brain Breakfast Smoothie
Addendum 2: The Happy Body, Healthy Brain Breakfast Smoothie
The KB Smoothie
Half a cup of frozen organic cherries (or other berries)
3 tablespoons of collagen
hydrolysate as a protein base
Blend!
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