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" Andrew W. Saul "

DOCTOR YOURSELF Newsletter (Vol. 4, No. 7 March 5, 2004)

Mon, 1 Mar 2004 16:15:47 -0500

 

 

To for free: dynews-

 

" The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be measured by the way

in which its animals are treated. " (Mahatma Gandhi)

 

The DOCTOR YOURSELF NEWSLETTER (Vol. 4, No. 7 March 5, 2004)

 

" Free of charge, free of advertising, and free of the A.M.A. "

 

Written and copyright 2004 by Andrew Saul, PhD, of

http://www.doctoryourself.com , which welcomes nearly a million visitors

annually. Commercial use of the website or the contents of this Newsletter

is strictly prohibited.

 

NOT EVERYONE KNOWS that I am a former dairyman who used to milk a hundred

head twice a day. Yes, yours truly was in part responsible for operating a

medium-security prison for cows. From the experience, I learned something

that I am told the native Americans learned long ago: empathy and respect

for the animals that feed you.

 

On the farm I worked at, we very much respected our cows. Admittedly, one

aspect of such respect was purely about economics. Cows are a valuable

commodity to a farmer, and really high milk producers are worth a lot of

money. You simply must keep them healthy, and that's all there is to it. We

did whatever it took. All our cows were kept well vetted, very clean, and

very well fed. Like most dairymen, we grew our own feed and made our own

silage, which is a highly nutritious, fermented stored grain. Unlike most

dairymen, we gave preventive doses of cider vinegar to cows prone to

mastitis. I put vitamin E on their teats when they got injured. Udder injury

is a fact of life for cows bred for milk production. Some of our cows'

udders were nearly three wide. I know this because I wear a 37-inch sleeve

and I had to press the side of my head against a big cow's belly in order to

reach across under her to attach the far-side teats to the milking machine.

For some cows, my reach was barely adequate.

 

I remain timid around horses, but a cow doesn't scare me a bit. On the farm,

one of my weirder jobs was early-morning cow reveille. I'd go out to a

pitch-black pasture and have to round up the entire herd for the 4 am

milking. ( " Herd of cows? " " Sure, I've heard of cows. " ) To do so, you first

have to wake the cows up. To wake them, you have to find them. They were not

hiding from me; it's just that the camo-coloration of black-and-white

Holsteins, tan Jerseys, or the occasional brown Swiss happens to make them

remarkably hard to spot long before the sun comes up. (Thank heaven we did

not have to milk any Black Angus.) I usually did not bother to take a

flashlight with me, and as a result the project could become quite

interesting. Paul Revere's midnight ride had nothing on me: I did mine on

foot. As I ran about like a nut hollering " Come, bossey! " the pattern I

traced would have looked pretty erratic to anyone equipped with infrared

goggles and daft enough to be attempting to watch. Every time I sensed

something looming in front of me, it was usually a cow. I was constantly

altering my direction like one of those toys that backs up and pivots when

it gets to a wall. Cows sleep remarkably soundly. And unlike horses, cows

very much enjoy laying down, asleep like big boulders in the night.

 

Oh, and another thing: When a cow urinates, it is time to back away, at

least if you can. If they let it loose when you are below milking them, it

is an even-money bet whether or not you can dodge the quart or two of urine

that comes roaring out like a waterfall. In the barn or the milkhouse, the

cement floor will result in a splashing that you have to see to fully

appreciate.

 

I just happen to like cows. I was eating my lunch by the pasture fence one

day and a cow sauntered over to me, looked me straight in the face at close

range, and literally said, " Moo. " It was not a question; it was a statement.

And it was not some guttural animal sound that I chose to anthropromorphize

into the word " moo, " either. The cow clearly enunciated, unmistakably. This

happened nearly thirty years ago, and I remember it like it was this

morning. " Moo. "

 

I am telling you all this to give you a taste of what really goes into your

milk. I personally choose to use cultured dairy products, primarily cheese

and yogurt. I am not much of a milk drinker, possibly because I miss the

real thing: fresh, raw milk, just hours old, right out of the farm tank.

 

FARM LIFE IS NOT ALL " OLD MacDONALD "

 

There is a largely hidden and brutal cost to milk. Although we appreciated

our cows, every one of their male offspring was marked for execution. Since

lactation follows childbirth, to obtain the milk you drink, some cow had to

have a baby. When it is a male baby, it will be killed sooner (veal) or

later (beef) or very much later (fast-food hamburger beef).

 

Years after I left farming, the dairy industry began the widespread use of

bovine growth hormones. I object to this, and have lectured for years

against it. Farmers with brains know that cows are not warm-blooded milk

spigots. You cannot get something for nothing: pushing too hard for higher

milk production means a longer teat-contact time with the milking machine,

and that means more mastitis. That is not good for the cows or for the

farmer. Increased insulin growth factor in milk, a result of the hormone

injections, is not good for people. Pharmaceutical companies and their

dubious products should stay out of food production.

 

If you are a milk user and if you possibly can, find a farmer (or better

yet, a dairy) that agrees with me, refuses to trade in medicated milk, and

will sell you the good stuff. And later in this Newsletter, I am going to

show you how to save money making your own yogurt, even if your choices are

limited to supermarket brands.

 

But first, I owe this to my many vegan and otherwise non-dairy readers: If

you are not a milk user, I am in your corner more than you might think. I am

absolutely certain that a dairy-free existence is the healthiest lifestyle

for some people. I know folks whose headaches, allergies, or other ailments

promptly go away when they avoid dairy foods, and come roaring back when

they drink milk. The philosophy of this Newsletter is, and will remain, Do

what works.

 

MILK AND MORALITY

 

One of the most influential vegetarians in history was Mahatma Gandhi. A

meat eater during a brief part of his early life, Gandhi intended to be a

complete vegetarian (vegan) and even a fruitarian, having written, " It is my

strong conviction that the human being doesn't need milk, except for the

mother's milk he gets as a baby. His diet should consist exclusively of

fruits and nuts. "

 

Gandhi's stated position on diet was an extension of his advocacy of

nonviolence far more than it was a health recommendation. To Gandhi,

violence to animals is identical to violence to humans. And in fact, life

really is all one. When I taught biology, I'd ask my students to examine the

red blood of an earthworm and the red blood of a human. Then I asked them to

tell me the difference. They could not, and the lesson began. Not only is

our DNA 98% identical to a chimpanzee, but the basic physiology of your body

is virtually identical with the physiology of a mouse, a frog, or even a

gnat.

 

Consequently, to promote harmlessness to all life, Gandhi selected the

vegetarian lifestyle, with no milk. However:

 

" Experience taught the Mahatma to include milk and its products-curds,

butter, ghee-in his diet. He had once vowed not to consume milk which, being

an animal food, could not be included in the vegetarian diet. He abstained

from it for six years. Once he fell very ill and was reduced to a skeleton,

yet he stubbornly refused to take any medicine, milk or buttermilk. When he

became very emaciated, his doctor suggested goat's milk. So Bapu (Gandhi)

began taking goat's milk, and after regaining his strength, decided to

continue taking it. " (Spirit of the Gandhian diet. Sunita Pant Bansal ,

 

http://www.lifepositive.com/Body/holistic-recipes/recipes/gandhian-diet.asp)

 

Gandhi's personal secretary, Mr. V. Kalyanam, an every-day eyewitness, has

confirmed that Gandhi ate goat's milk for lunch and again at dinner.

(http://www.hinduismtoday.com/archives/1997/2/1997-2-13.shtml Duty's tasks:

Diurnal diary. His secretary tells of Gandhi's strict routine. February

1997. See also: Gandhi, Mohandas, K. (1957). An autobiography: The story of

my experiments with truth. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.) " In his autobiography,

Gandhi admitted that his habit of drinking goat's milk " has been the tragedy

of my life. " (Robert Cohen, http://www.notmilk.com and

http://weeksmd.com/articles/nutrition/gandhi_and_milk.htm .)

 

To make it as nonviolent as possible, and " To make up for the

(philosophical) inconsistency . . . he would only drink the milk of his own

goat that he personally took great care of. "

(http://www.arfindia.org/arffaq2.htm , Section A-13.)

 

Having taken personally care of cows myself, I find more humanity in such a

humble compromise than in a strict vow inflexibly followed. I raised my

children from infancy on raw goat's milk and raw cow's milk. I think that

such foods' value, great enough to have changed the Mahatma's mind, is good

enough for me. Gandhi's mind was famously difficult to change. While the

combined might of the British Empire could not do it, truth always persuaded

him. The truth is that judicious use of dairy products, at least for some,

makes good health sense.

 

Milk is a moral issue, yes, but it is also a matter of what works. The

solution may be as simple as a nutritional-ethical compromise, like

Gandhi's, resulting in an overall decrease in consumption of animal products

and an increase in ethical farming. The US Department of Agriculture admits

that, in the United States alone, TEN BILLION animals were killed in the

year 2003. http://www.all-creatures.org/articles/ar-anag2003.html I do not

ask anyone to reduce that number to zero. Just try to lower it.

 

Recommended reading:

 

http://www.pcrm.org/health/veginfo/vegetarian_foods.html

 

MAKE YOUR OWN YOGURT

 

A quart of plain Dannon yogurt costs nearly $3.00. For that money, you can

buy a gallon (four quarts) of milk and culture it yourself. You will also

need some plain yogurt to use as a " starter " culture, and that's about it.

All you have to do is heat the milk to the scalding or " frothing " point, and

then let it cool back to room temperature or just above it, say body

temperature. Such cooling is absolutely the most important step, for if you

add your good yogurt bacteria to hot milk, they are toast. So let the milk

cool down before you gently stir in a tablespoon or so of plain yogurt. I

then place the preparation dish (I like to use glass or Corningware) into an

oven that is off, and remains off, except for the little

let's-see-what's-cooking light in the back. The heat of that lone light bulb

is just right to incubate your yogurt. Leave your culture for about eight

hours, say overnight, and in the morning put it in the 'fridge.

 

Savings: nearly nine bucks a gallon.

 

Why, that's now nearly enough to buy a gallon of fuel for your car!

 

 

RE-CULTURED MILK: A THEORY

 

On the farm, back in my pre-megadose-vitamin C days, my boss and I gave

antibiotics to sick cattle either by intramuscular injection or by an

injection directly up into an individual udder teat. In addition to my

lasting surprise that the cows generally did not try to kill us when we did

this, I also happened to notice something else. Because milk from

antibiotic-treated cows was unfit for human consumption, we milked out the

contaminated udder quarters separately and poured the antibiotic-laced milk

into a large, open green plastic trash can. There it sat, day after day,

until it eventually fermented and became something quite different: a milk

mass with the consistency of Jello, somewhat less solid than cheese but more

solid than yogurt. Waste not, want not: we scooped it out and fed it to the

ever-hungry calves. They thrived on it.

 

What happened? In plain terms, after what must have been an inhibited start,

natural bacterial activity eventually overwhelmed the antibiotics. The proof

literally was in the pudding: the only way you could get that much microbial

action in 30 gallons of milk was if the antibiotics were, effectively, gone.

 

The next best thing to taking the chemicals out of farming might be to put

the bacteria back in.

 

What about " bad " bacteria, you might wonder. Wouldn't they, too, multiply

and grow in the milk as well? The answer is, of course. But not to worry:

" Good " and " bad " bacteria are everywhere all the time. The idea that you

have to kill every germ within a fifty-mile radius is silly. What is needed

is balance. A healthy balance is maintained by nature, and is one of the

wonders of biology. Incidentally, if you are now in the process of referring

back to my " scald-the-milk-before-culturing-it " step in my yogurt

instructions (above), you are right on the ball today. That heat-treatment

does clear the slate, bacteria-wise, so to speak. But it is done for taste,

not safety. As a matter of fact, taking a lesson from our " barn yogurt, " I

used to take unpasteurized milk home and culture it without first heating it

at all. I did not add any starter yogurt, either. I just placed it on the

kitchen counter, let it go, and voila: le yogurt, a la calf. I ate this

daily and never felt better. Though they were way too little to now remember

it, my then-baby-and-toddler children ate it, too, and liked it. It tasted

different than commercial yogurt, but it was not bad at all.

 

Some anthropologists think cheese or yogurt was probably first made entirely

by accident. A nomadic person carrying a leather bag of milk about on a warm

day might have been surprised at what he found in it when it came dinner

time.

 

There may be benefits to unplanned bacterial parenthood. I raised my kids

all the way into college and they never once had any dose of any antibiotic.

 

Cultured milk products, such as cheese or yogurt, are easier for many people

to digest than fluid milk. Bacteria work milk over in a big and generally

beneficial way. I submit that cheese and yogurt, even if made from

factory-farm, non-organic milk would therefore be better than the plain old

overcooked skimmed white water that most people drink without a thought. Not

only are they easier to digest, but re-cultured milk products are, in a

manner of speaking, a raw food. The beneficial microorganisms are alive in

cheese and yogurt when you eat it. That's a raw food to me, and a good one.

 

WHY RAW MILK

 

http://www.realmilk.com/whichchoose.html

 

http://fiascofarm.com/dairy/rawmilk.htm

 

MEET YOUR MEAT

 

A straightforward and brilliant motivation for vegetarianism will be found

at http://www.zianet.com/boje/voice/pages/meet_your_meat.htm .

 

BUT BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU SAY ABOUT COWS IN TEXAS

 

The story: http://www.vegsource.com/lyman/lawsuit.htm

 

An update: http://www.vegsource.com/lyman/trial_statement.htm

 

A more thorough update: http://www.madcowboy.com/01_BookOP.000.html

 

All this pro-bovine activity by Mr. Lyman, " The Cattle Rancher Who Won't Eat

Meat, " has led me to name his http://www.madcowboy.com website as the DOCTOR

YOURSELF WEBSITE OF THE MONTH. Does this man have a terrific website title,

or what? Y'all read his Newsletter, now, hear?

 

TERMS OF NO-DEER-MEAT

 

T. L. writes: " Is eating wild venison better than eating feed-lot beef? "

 

In terms of pharmaceutical flesh-pollution, the answer is certainly yes. (It

is time to state that I am not now, or have I ever been, a hunter. I could

never pull the trigger on a deer; they are just such gorgeous animals.) Deer

overpopulation has created increasingly severe road hazards for motorists

and their families. In automobile damage alone, the annual insurance costs

of deer strikes now run into the billions. Until we either teach deer to

look both ways before crossing, or reintroduce the mountain lion, a runaway

deer population endangers the lives of people, and that cannot be justified

even by deer-huggers such as myself. I would rather have a hunter use the

deer for hide and hunger than have the deer pointlessly mangled by a Buick.

And I would much rather have a hunter humanely kill a deer than to have it

starve to death. Starving deer eat dry leaves, sticks, and even mud in their

desperate attempt to fill their stomachs. When the carrying capacity of a

region is exceeded, excess herbivorous animals either die slowly from

malnutrition and disease, or die more quickly by a predator. A skilled

hunter can be the quickest of predators. Thoughtfully utilizing the animal's

carcass, and appreciating the life it gave up, can edify those eating the

kill.

 

DOCTOR YOURSELF GLOSSARY:

 

Pescetarian: A pescetarian is a vegetarian who also consumes fish. This is

not to be confused with Joe Pesci, who is an actor who chews scenery.

 

Remember: You do not have to " udderly " give up everything animal. Just

REDUCING your meat intake saves many lives. Over 100,000 cattle a DAY are

slaughtered in the USA alone. That makes 36.5 million a year. If we all

simply cut out meat ONE DAY each MONTH, we would prevent the murder of over

one MILLION animals annually. For every additional day per month that we

refuse to eat meat, we will save a million more.

 

DOCTOR YOURSELF IN NEW MEXICO

 

I will be doing a book signing at the Coronado area Barnes and Noble

bookstore in Albuquerque on Thursday, March 4 at 7 PM.

 

Additionally, I will be on Albuquerque television that morning, at about

6:30 am, on KRQU Cannel 13's " News This Morning. "

 

If you cannot make the signing and still have a hankering for an autographed

copy of my new book, " DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works, " just go

to http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html or

http://www.doctoryourself.com/order.html .

 

MCS

 

Thanks to all readers who took the time to write in and share their

experiences about Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. I have an article in the

works on this topic. If you want to tell me what's helped you (and what has

NOT helped), please drop an email to drsaul . As always,

no product endorsements, please.

 

Privacy Statement:

 

We do not sell, and we do not share, our mailing list or your email address

with anyone. We never send out advertisements of any kind. You may notice

that there is no advertising at http://doctoryourself.com and no advertising

in this newsletter. We have no financial connection with the supplement

industry. We do not sell vitamins or other health products, except for Dr.

Saul's books, which help fund these free public services.

 

FREE SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR ALL to this newsletter are available with a blank

email to

 

dynews-

 

AN IMPORTANT NOTE: This newsletter is not in any way offered as

prescription, diagnosis nor treatment for any disease, illness, infirmity or

physical condition. Any form of self-treatment or alternative health program

necessarily must involve an individual's acceptance of some risk, and no one

should assume otherwise. Persons needing medical care should obtain it from

a physician. Consult your doctor before making any health decision.

 

" DOCTOR YOURSELF " " DoctorYourself.com " and " Doctor Yourself Newsletter " are

service marks of Andrew W. Saul. All rights reserved.

 

Copyright c 2004 and prior years Andrew W. Saul drsaul .

Permission to reproduce single copies of this newsletter FOR NON-COMMERCIAL,

PERSONAL USE ONLY is hereby granted providing no alteration of content is

made and authorship credit is given. Additional single copies will be sent

by postal mail to a practitioner or patient, free of charge, upon receipt of

a self addressed envelope with THREE first-class stamps on it (offer good in

the USA only), to Number 8 Van Buren Street, Holley, NY 14470 USA. (585)

638-5357.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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