Well, that’s sort of critical :-).
But to why I’m posting: I haven’t read the books or the websites, but
I’ve been “researching” alternative and other medicine on the web for
the last few months, and ER4YT seems to be one of the least trusted
of the alternative approaches, also in the alternative community, and
also one of the most peripheral. There are a lot of approaches that
have slowly manifested themselves as having something going for them
over the years, and reappearing in serious advice given (liver and
gallbladder cleanse being among them), but ER4YT smells bad. It’s
something completely of its own, having no logical place in neither a
holistic picture nor a scientific one. One naturopath said that most
of her clients who had tried the blood-type diet had not benefitted
from it, and those who had improved had apparently done so because
they have become more conscious about their diet. The blood types
also crosscut metabolic types and special needs for people caused by
chronic diseases. There are so many foods to avoid or accept that
there’s a fair chance of being allergens among those avoided. When
people benefit from foods that should have been avoided, or avoid
food they could have benefitted from, they tend not to notice it,
only noticing that they get better when following the diet. The
result seems to be astrology-like, yes.
— Helge
digestion question–Brian
October 29th, 2004 · 1 Comment
Tags: liver cleanse
1 response so far ↓
1 miles_80 // Oct 30, 2004 at 12:45 pm
There is a guy on another group who swears by the ER4YT diet and says that it
has most definitely benefited both his and his wife’s health. Personally I
agree that we are all so different and have many different needs according to
our health and age.
Marianne
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