How the Body Works
Any
soul that has a physical body should understand the basics of the body’s operation.
“Why do we eat and what happens to the food we eat?” is the question to ask.
When we understand the answer, we will begin to appreciate the nature of health
and disease.
Food
consumption is vital—most life forms on this planet need to
consume
some sort of “food” to exist and maintain expression, and most people will die
if they stop eating, although there have been a few exceptions to this rule. A
handful of individuals have consumed only air, which consists of carbon,
oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen (these elements are the sugars, fats and proteins
at higher frequencies). This scenario,
however, is extremely rare and one must be very spiritually connected to
achieve this. Personally, I have
never
met anyone who could do this, although I’ve met some extremely aware spiritual
masters and teachers.
We
eat for additional energy. We know that our cells are cities within themselves
and are conscious entities; each cell knows its specific duties. We know that
spirit—the life force, consciousness, or whatever you wish to call it —is the
inner force that holds and molds life into forms and gives it awareness.
Nevertheless, cells need an external source of energy to sustain themselves in
activity.
Most
people chew and swallow their food without thought of how or
why
it is utilized within the body. We assume that if it’s edible, it’s
useable by the body. This just simply isn’t so. This chapter will explore
the ways that the body breaks down and uses the foods we eat, and how it
eliminates the by-products of these foods.
Eating,
digesting, absorbing, utilization, and elimination are ongoing and consistent processes.
When one or more of these processes is impaired, the body as a whole begins to
suffer. It may take many years for a major symptom to appear, but appear it
will. There are always signs along the way, however, including fatigue,
obesity, excessive thinness, bags under the eyes, rashes, constipation and/or
diarrhea, to name just a few.
MODULE
2.1
The
Four Basic Processes
DIGESTION
First,
when we consume any food it must go through a “digestive” process, or a process
whereby the body breaks down the structures of the food into building materials
and fuels. The body requires these raw materials for energy to function and
also to build and repair itself.
The
breakdown of food is accomplished through enzyme action, which starts in the
mouth, where carbohydrates, sugars and fats begin their alkaline digestion. The
stomach also produces a digestive enzyme called pepsin; an acidic enzyme
released by HCL (hydrochloric acid) for initial protein digestion. The rest of
digestion takes place in the small bowel, which is alkaline in nature. When our
foods are not properly broken down, either from a weak pancreas, stomach and
intestinal tract, or from bad food
combinations,
one will experience gas formation from fermentation and/or putrefaction. The
greater the gas problems, the greater the weakness and/or bad diet choices.
The
body breaks down the foods you eat into the following: Proteins are broken down
into amino acids for building and repair material.
Carbohydrates
(starches and complex sugars) are broken down into simple sugars for fuel. Fats
are broken down into fatty acids and glycerol, for building, repair and
emergency needs.
It
is important to remember that we have alkaline digestive enzymes in the mouth
for carbohydrate and fat digestion. We have acid (pepsin) digestive enzymes in
the lower stomach for initial protein digestion. Then we have alkaline
digestive enzymes in the pancreas and throughout the first part of the small
intestinal tract to finish up the job for proteins, starches, sugars and fats.
It
is also important to understand that most of our processes are alkaline in nature.
Digestion
is the first process that must take place in a healthy body and many people
fail right here. If you are very thin or lack adequate muscle tissue, it is a strong
probability that your body has not been digesting (breaking down) your foods
adequately.
ABSORPTION
Once
foods are broken down, we must now absorb these building materials, fuels and
other components, which include: tissue salts, vitamins, tannins, alkaloids,
flavins, and the like. These components are now carried by the bloodstream to
the cells for energy, stimulation, building and repairing, or stored for future
use. Absorption is accomplished through the villi (fingerlike projections on the
surface of certain membranes) and small pores all along the
mucous
membranes of the small and large intestines. This absorption should be simple,
but most people’s intestines become impacted with a thick rubberlike substance called
“mucoid plaque.”
This
thick plaque, which develops in the GI tract, is made of gluten, mucus, foreign
protein, and other food byproducts that act more like
Glue
than nutrition!
Refined
sugars, grains, meats, and dairy products are the foods that
Are most
responsible for the formation of this plaque. This “mucoid plaque” blocks the
nutritional components of our foods from being adequately absorbed into the
body. (I have seen patients who have eliminated buckets of this “black” plaque
from their intestines.)
Most
of us fail in the second stage of food utilization to some extent
because
of this congestive mucoid plaque. Again, if you are thin,
malnourished
or lack adequate muscle tissue, a malabsorption issue must be considered.
UTILIZATION
We
must get nutrition to and into our cells. The blood system and its
highways
(the vascular system) are the transport system. Most of the
absorbed
nutrition must first pass inspection by the liver, which can create further
chemical changes, store nutrients, or pass them on unchanged to the rest of the
body for utilization. The number of processes the liver can carry out is
miraculous. It can create its own amino acids, change sugars to fats, and vice
versa. It can create or destroy.
Now
a little secret. This is where the importance of acid and alkaline
comes
in. If our body (including our blood) becomes more acidic, our nutrition
becomes anionic (coagulating). In other words, our building materials (fats,
fuels, minerals, and other compounds) start sticking or clumping together. Most
of the foods commonly eaten by humans are acid forming. Acidity, which is
heat-producing, causes inflammation in the walls of the vascular highway and
throughout the body. Lipids (fats) begin sticking to the walls of the vessels
in hopes of buffering this inflammation. But lipid bonding also causes lipid
stones, such as gallbladder and liver stones.
Cholesterol
is the most common anti-inflammatory lipid that the body uses to fight this
inflammation. When the tissues become acidic and thus inflamed, the liver will produce
more cholesterol to fight it. But that means that blood cholesterol levels
begin to elevate. Minerals too start bonding and form “rock-type” stones, which
show up as kidney stones, bone spurs, and the like. Cell membrane walls have
tiny portholes that will not allow this “clumped” nutrition to be absorbed.
When red blood cells start clumping together, blocking proper oxygen transport,
or utilization, this creates cellular starvation, which causes hypo-active
conditions of glands and organs, loss of systemic energy, loss of muscle
tissue, and finally death. Many glands supply hormones, steroids, and the like,
to assist utilization.
As
these glands become hypo- or underactive as described above, the utilization of
calcium and other constituents is affected, creating many disease symptoms. For
example, one of the jobs of calcium is to help transport nutrients across cell
membrane walls. When the thyroid gland becomes hypoactive this slows or stops
calcium utilization, which has a domino effect, causing cellular starvation.
This, of course, makes tissue even weaker and the cycle just gets worse and
worse until death. Most people fail in the utilization
of
their nutrition to some degree.
ELIMINATION
What
goes in must, for the most part, come out. If it comes out looking the same way
it went in, that’s a problem. (You should not see undigested foods, except
corn, in your stools.) When the elements in food are broken down into their
simplest forms for utilization by the cells, there are many by-products from
this process—including gases, acids, cellular wastes, undigested
proteins,
and unused material like vitamins and minerals —that need to leave the body.
The
body is always trying to eliminate in ways that we often do not
understand.
An example would be cold and flu-like symptoms, where sneezing, coughing,
sweating, aching, fevers, and diarrhea are experienced. These symptoms are
elimination processes used by the body to purge itself of mucus, parasites,
toxins, and the like. If we do not eliminate our wastes, we build congestion interstitially
(around
cells) and intracellularly (inside cells), causing further cellular
decay and death. Good elimination means moving our bowels three times a day,
urinating
adequately, sweating, and breathing properly. All of us fail in this category
to some extent or another. By correcting digestion, absorption, utilization,
and elimination we can regain our energy, build vitality and vibrancy, and live
a disease-free life.