Summary:
While the old adage
that says, “you are what you eat” may be a bit exaggerated, the
food, water, and other substances we consume can have profound
effects on physical, mental, and emotional wellness or illness.
Evidence continues to mount up suggesting that the food we eat have
powerful effects not only physically, but psychologically as well.
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“You are what you
eat” ---- this often-used phrase has come to describe the belief
that a person's totality, including his health, appearance, mood, and
thoughts, is shaped by the food he eats. Anthelme Brillat-Savarin
wrote, in Physiologie du Gout, ou Meditations de Gastronomie
Transcendante, 1826: “Dis-moi ce que tu manges, je te dirai ce que
tu es.” meaning “Tell me what you eat and I will tell you what
you are.” In an essay entitled Concerning Spiritualism and
Materialism, 1863/4, Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach wrote: “Der Mensch
ist, was er ißt,” which translates into English as “man is what
he eats.”
Actually, neither
Brillat-Savarin or Feuerbach meant for their quotations to be taken
literally. They were merely stating that that the food that one eats
has a bearing on one's state of mind and health. The actual phrase
didn't emerge as part of the common English language until some time
later. In the '20s and '30s, the nutritionist Victor Lindlahr, who
was a strong believer in the idea that food controls health,
developed what he called as the Catabolic Diet. The said diet was
accepted and gained some adherents. Lindlahr's theories became so
popular that even advertising was shaped by his nutritional dogmas.
A 1923 advertisement for beef released through the Bridgeport
Telegraph had the following message: “Ninety per cent of the
diseases known to man are caused by cheap foodstuffs. You are what
you eat.”
To some, the old
adage, “You are what you eat” may be a bit exaggerated. Still,
many studies have shown that the food, water, and other substances we
consume can have profound effects on our physical, mental, and
emotional wellness. Evidence continues to mount up suggesting that
the food we eat have powerful psychological effects.
For starters, there
are clear connections between mood and food that are rich in folates
like green leafy vegetables. A 1997 Harvard study supports earlier
findings that show a link between folate deficiency and depressive
symptoms. The study revealed that low folate levels can interfere
with the antidepressant activity of the selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors (SSRIs). A Tufts University study of nearly 2,948
individuals found that those who met the criteria for a lifetime
diagnosis of major depression had lower serum and red blood folate
concentrations than those who had never been depressed. Those with
dysthymia had lower red blood cell folate only. The authors of the
study recommend folate supplementation during the year following a
depressive episode.
A case study from
University of Alaska best exemplifies how food intake affect the
people from the North Pole region. This happens when various
populations change from their traditional means of consuming and
procuring food to steak and lots of junk food. Though the traditional
diets of circumpolar people vary from region to region, the menu
generally draws from marine mammals, fish, hoofed animals,
fur-bearing animals, birds and their eggs, plants, and berries. These
food are rich in nutrients, with high levels of protein, omega-3
fatty acids, and antioxidants, while low in carbohydrates. However,
radical changes in their diet occurred after establishing contact and
engaging in trade with Westerners. Obesity, diabetes, and
cardiovascular disease were virtually unknown to the frozen North.
The introduction of fat and carbohydrate-rich Western diets made
previously unrecorded diseases to the North Pole.
A recent case study
also found that rates of depression, seasonal affective disorder,
anxiety, and other mental illnesses are on the rise in circumpolar
regions, especially among non-isolated populations. Suicide rates
have increased seven-fold in many northern populations over the past
several decades. The authors of the case study acknowledge that the
combined decline in mental health and the disappearance of
traditional diets in circumpolar people make a direct connection
between diet and mental health in these people a very real
possibility.
“You are what you
eat”, the phrase got a new lease of life in the '60s Hippie era.
The food of choice of the champions of this notion was macrobiotic
wholefood and the phrase was adopted by them as a slogan for healthy
eating. The belief in the diet in some quarters was so strong that
when Adelle Davis, a leading spokesperson for the organic food
movement, contracted cancer that later killed her, she attributed the
illness to the junk food she had eaten at college. Indeed, you are
what you eat and believe it!
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