Important Updates to The Autoimmune Protocol

May 25, 2013 in Uncategorized

The Paleo Approach by Sarah BallantyneI have been diligently working over the last few days to completely update The Autoimmune Protocol page to  reflect all of the recommendations in my upcoming book The Paleo Approach. 

When I started writing my book, I decided that I would not make a single recommendation that I couldn’t back up with solid science.  I decided that I wouldn’t rely on what I’d read on other people’s blogs or in their books, but instead read the medical/scientific journal articles myself and re-evaluate every single aspect of the autoimmune protocol.  After all, I am making recommendations for some very sick people.  There’s some pretty intense pressure to get it right.

This page now reflects my most current understanding of the optimal diet for managing autoimmune disease.  There are some important updates for those following The Autoimmune Protocol so I urge everyone to have a look.

Please note that my site is in the process of migrating to a new (and a billion times better) web host because my old host can not handle my traffic (it’s a good problem to have!).  If you are having trouble viewing this page or any other post on my site, just keep trying (the migration should be happening any day now, but until then, you might see a “database connection error” during higher traffic times).   If it’s really frustrating, overnight and mornings are the quietest times on the blog so are also the most likely for you to be able to “get through”.

Product Review: Vintage Tradition Body Balm

April 18, 2013 in Product Reviews

About a year ago, I started more seriously evaluating the products that I used on my skin, hair, and teeth.  As I struggled with the autoimmune protocol, going to such great lengths to heal my body with nutrition, it suddenly became very important to me that the products I use be as natural and healing as the food that I was eating.   One at a time, I tackled my beauty products.  First, I stopped using shampoos and conditioners, then I started oil cleansing my skin, then tossed my deodorant in favor of a mineral salt spray, and more recently, I’ve switched toothpastes.  To be fair however, I didn’t start this process with any sense of adventure.  I mostly just stopped using my old products and sortof lived with the results.  Only recently has my sense of vanity caught up with me and I’ve started to tweak my natural beauty products and expand my repertoire in search not only of products that are natural but also products that really work.

vintage-tradition-body-balmVintage Traditions makes a grass-fed tallow and olive oil based moisturizer, which they call Beauty Balm.  It is scented with essential oils and comes in three different scents:  mild manly scent, pretty girly scent, and almost unscented (there is a truly unscented version as well).   I first heard about how nourishing tallow is for your skin from Liz Wolfe’s Skintervention Guide, so I was excited to try it.  I have had the pleasure of trying out all three of these scents for the last month.  As I scraped the last bit of Beauty Balm from my last jar, I decided a) I don’t want to be all out of Beauty Balm so I had better order some more, and b) it was high time I actually write a review!

Prior to Beauty Balm, I was mostly using coconut oil as a moisturizer.  The problem with coconut oil is that it takes approximately forever to absorb.  and don’t you dare think of crawling into bed with coconut oil on your legs, lest you want to permanently stain your sheets!  Beauty Balm is such a completely different experience, it’s not a fair comparison.  The feeling of the cream is rich, smooth and luxurious.  A little goes a long way and it absorbs into my skin beautifully.  It also gives my skin a very smooth texture that I really like.  It’s been particularly wonderful on my feet, but I’ve actually started using it as a full body moisturizer.  I like it as a facial moisturizer in the evenings and find that it’s a little thick for using in the morning.

I also used it on my kids, who loved it (and who sometimes say coconut oil stings, so it was nice to find something that didn’t).  My oldest daughter was having some issues with dry skin after swimming a few weeks ago.  I literally applied Beauty Balm twice and the dry skin disappeared completely.

My favorite scent is the almost unscented.  It has a very subtle scent (it really suits the name).  My oldest daughter loves the pretty girly scent, which I also like.  Neither of us were big fans of the mildly manly scent.  Okay, my daughter said it smelled disgusting, but I think that’s a bit harsh.  It smells, well, er, mildly manly.  And the smell certainly didn’t stop me from using every itty bitty bit of it.  But, because my daughter is so fond of the pretty girly scent, I have to admit, that is what I just ordered (yes, a 9oz jar this time too… )

I think Vintage Traditions Beauty Balm would be especially useful for anyone dealing with dry skin or eczema.  I used it on my healing lichen planus lesions and I think it really helped restore barrier function to my skin.  But, it’s just a lovely rich moisturizer that would be great for anyone looking for chemical-free alternatives.  Vintage Traditions also offers 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed, so you can literally try it for yourself and if you don’t like it, you can return it.

AND Special for my readers, Vintage Traditions is offering 20% off!!!!  Click HERE to check out their products and take advantage of this discount!

 

Guest Post by Faye Weickert: Healing the Skin from Within – Paleo, Gut Health, and Eczema

February 5, 2013 in Alternative Therapies, Topics for Paleo Families

Faye Weickert

Faye is a blogger at www.GreenOrganicMama.com, from the islands of the Florida Keys, where she writes about the challenges of raising an eco-conscious family and integrating a Paleo lifestyle.  She is also an independent skin care/beauty consultant for Neal’s Yard Remedies/NYR Organic; a carbon-neutral, family-owned company, specializing in all-natural products that free of GMO’s, parabens, phthalates, petroleum, and artificial fragrances.  You can read more by Faye at her blog, connect with her on Facebook, and shop her online store.

 

 First of all, I have to extend a huge thank you to Sarah, for putting together this amazing resource here at www.ThePaleoMom.com and with The Paleo View Podcast; both of which have helped so many people, like me, with navigating our health issues, together with following a Paleo lifestyle.  I will be forever grateful for Sarah’s friendship, her advice, and her insight!

 Much like Sarah, I’ve suffered through various autoimmune issues throughout my childhood and adult life, from asthma, allergies, and eczema.  Like most of us, I was seen by countless conventional doctors and specialists, put through various medical tests, and prescribed many, many medications.  The problem was that none of these recommendations ever did any more than serve as a Band-Aid solution.  Not one of them addressed the root cause.  Nobody stopped once to ask the all important question: Why?  Why was I having asthmatic symptoms?  Why was I breaking out in rashes, when I never had before.  I just kept using my inhalers, applying cortisone creams, and taking oral steroids, which just masked the symptoms.  Not to mention that each of these prescriptions carried their own side effects, too, but that’s a story for another day.  Fast forward to the birth of my own daughter, and I then took on the helplessness and frustration that my own mother felt, when my little girl broke out in a horrible diaper rash, and later, a mysterious, persistent bleeding rash on her scalp.  We ended up in the same vicious cycle.  After much trial and error, more doctors’ visits, more testing, and trying all sorts of prescription and non-prescription creams, lotions, oils, and balms, we were very blessed to finally come across Paleo.

“There is no magic cream that is going to fix eczema.”

 Before getting into what we did to heal and manage our symptoms, it’s important to understand that there is no magic cream that is going to fix eczema.  None.  And that’s coming from me, a compulsive, label-dissecting, green mom blogger, and also as an independent skin care consultant for Neal’s Yard Remedies/NYR Organic.  There are products that I’ll discuss later that can provide much-needed relief when the flare-up symptoms occur, and that can also help with the healing process, but eczema and other autoimmune rashes will continue to rear their ugly heads, if the root causes are not addressed.  Sometimes it can be an allergy, and as discussed in Episode 10 of The Paleo View Podcast, there may be a chemical sensitivity involved.  However, in the case of many autoimmune issues, the problem lies within the gut.

“All diseases begin in the gut.” – Hippocrates

 I’m a firm believer in the message that Sarah sends with this blog and in her autoimmune protocol: that many diseases begin in the gut.  For our family, we had already been living green and organic, since before my daughter was born.   We thought we were already very healthy eaters.  We had weeded out all the chemicals in the home, and made a conscious effort to use the most basic ingredients possible, both in the food we ate, and in the products we put on our bodies.  Despite all this, my daughter still developed eczema, and I continued to battle with mine.  It’s because of that reason that I’m thankful for finally stumbling upon Paleo.  It was a revelation when we found out that the grain-laden Standard American Diet, the one advocated by our health care professionals to help us be healthy, was in fact what was making us sick.  I still remember thinking what a crazy notion that was at the time (“What?!  Give up bread?!”).  It wasn’t until the second time that I heard about Paleo, before I realized that we had already tried everything else, nothing else was working, and we finally decided to take the plunge.  A year and a half later, I look back, and wish we had done this sooner!

 Paleo is all about keeping inflammation at bay, and repairing a leaky gut.  Sarah does a much better job explaining these concepts, and I highly recommend reading her very well-researched posts on these topics (start here), and pre-ordering her upcoming book on this very subject, The Paleo Approach:Reverse Autoimmune Disease and Heal Your Body.  In a nutshell, once our family got away from processed foods (especially gut-irritating grain products), we introduced probiotics to restore our gut flora, and focused on food as medicine, we miraculously began to heal.  My daughter’s head rash went away, and years later, it has never returned.  I also finally lost those stubborn twenty pounds of baby weight, and I’m also rash-free, as long as I’m diligent with Paleo, manage my stress, and take care of my body.  (After a year into Paleo, I learned the hard way what happens when a series of events caused me to stray for too long).

Caring for the Skin

 As I mentioned above, despite all the claims, there are no magic creams to make eczema go away, but there are things you can do to help relieve the symptoms and help the skin heal, in conjunction with proper eating, to reduce inflammation, and simultaneously heal the gut and the body from within.

 Anytime we’re dealing with damaged skin, it’s important to treat it gently.  As a green mom blogger, I’ve kept my family away from products containing parabens, synthetic fragrances, phthalates, artificial colors, and petroleum.  As mentioned in Episode 10 of The Paleo View, coconut oil is also one of my favorites for simple and thorough cleansing of the skin.  I’m a huge fan of Tropical Traditions, and the same five-gallon drum of coconut oil that we buy for cooking is the same stuff we use for cleansing our skin, too.

 While coconut oil is a really effective and gentle cleanser, I’ve personally found I need something more emollient afterwards, to help protect and heal the damaged skin.  After trying so many other brands of creams, my favorite products are Neal’s Yard Remedies Frankincense Hydrating Cream and on my really rough, red spots, a small dab of the more highly-concentrated Rejuvenating Frankincense Facial Serum.  Highly prized since ancient times, frankincense is an intensely-healing tree resin from the wild-growing Boswellia carterii trees found in Africa.  Neal’s Yard Remedies has stores around the globe, and is available online in Canada and the US.  If you live outside these areas, you still can find frankincense readily available as an essential oil from Amazon.

 Another great healing plant-based remedy is rosehip oil, which is used in many parts of the world to treat burn victims.[1] As with the frankincense, you can find recipes on the web to make your own rosehip oil home remedies.  Personally, I carry around little pots of Neal’s Yard Remedies Wild Rose Beauty Balm, which is a very soothing and nourishing blend of organic rosehip, jojoba, beeswax, shea butter, hemp, borage, and frankincense, too.  My daughter and I will often catch ourselves unconsciously scratching away at an irritated spot.  I’m always amazed at how quickly one little swipe of this balm calms the itch and the redness, and keeps them from coming back.  These natural remedies pair well with all of our healing efforts; inside and out.

 The important takeaways here are these points:

  1. Your skin truly serves as a picture of your own internal health.  An imbalance in the body will manifest itself in the skin.
  2.  Eczema does not manifest itself because the body is short on corticosteroid creams or oral steroids.
  3. Traditional medicine typically does not address the root cause of eczema and other autoimmune issues; functional medicine practitioners, like chiropractors, do.
  4. Healing from eczema and minimizing flare-ups requires identifying irritants and taking care of the gut first.
  5. You did not get sick overnight, and it’s going to take longer than overnight to heal.  There are no shortcuts.
  6. Our skin absorbs around 60% of what’s put on it.[2]  Choose your skin care and household products wisely.
  7. Our bodies are complex, and we are all different.  What works for one person, may not work for you, and vice versa.  Learn to listen to your body.

 With a little diligence and know-how, it’s possible to keep eczema at bay, the natural way.


[1] http://www.healingcancernaturally.com/chelating-ionizing-radiation.html

[2] http://blog.naturalhealthyconcepts.com/2012/07/16/what-toxic-chemicals-is-your-body-absorbing-infographic/

Guest Post by Angie Alt: Giving Up the Poisons

January 28, 2013 in Living with Autoimmune Disease

Angie Alt is wife, mother, world traveler & blogger. She’s also a warrior in the autoimmunity war. Angie confronts three autoimmune disorders each day, including Celiac Disease, with powerful management techniques like AIPaleo & the Paleolithic lifestyle. She blogs regularly about the emotional side of tackling autoimmunity, adopting Paleo, and how it impacts her, her family, & their way of life. You can read more by Angela Alt at her blog and connect with her on Facebook.

Nine months ago I decided to start my own personal health revolution.  I was very, very sick and tired of being very, very sick and tired.  I had tried everything, been to every kind of doctor.  Through an intensely difficult process (that often literally involved me begging physicians to help me) I had finally been accurately diagnosed, but there did not seem to be any hope for healing.  In my last ditch effort, I adopted the Autoimmune Protocol and immediately felt the sweet relief of healing beginning.

 AIP is not easy.  It is a very restrictive version of Paleo and figuring out how to prepare tasty meals with so much limitation makes it a tough transition for many.  Surprisingly, it was not a very difficult shift for me.  I attribute this to my desperation.  I was absolutely committed to regaining my health . . . basically, I felt the other choice was probably a slow, painful decline to an early end.

 I happily rid my self and my kitchen of the poisons.  As the months have flown by and my energy and strength have gradually returned, I’ve begun to think more carefully about the other places that toxins lurk.  I’ve put an incredible amount of effort into changing my diet for optimal health . . . I don’t want anything to threaten that hard-won ground.  The more I learned about it, the more I realized that most of the poison left in my life is coming from so-called “beauty” products.  Managing multiple autoimmune diseases is a delicate task; even the chemicals in my beauty routine could be detrimental.

 Sooo, a few months ago I began the process of switching to a natural beauty plan.  I started with my body soap, then I changed my body lotion and then how I approach shaving. Next I changed how I handle facial care and recently I started experimenting with my hair care.  Guess what?  I am finding it much, much harder than switching my diet.  Why is that?

 I think it is fear.  Changing the way I ate was a huge adjustment and it did affect my social life (I almost never eat out and I bring all my own food to social gatherings), but I wasn’t really worried about what people would think of me.  BUT what if people think I look bad?  Changing my beauty routine might mean that I don’t look as good (at least during the switch, while I’m trying to work out the kinks).  How can I face that possibility?  We have a powerful, multi-billion dollar beauty industry that tells us everyday that we need to achieve unrealistic standards, all of course, with the help of their products.

 It has been humbling for me to realize over the course of this journey how focused I’ve always been on some of the superficial aspects of life.  I first noticed this about myself when I began taking stock of the impact that autoimmunity had made on my outward appearance (especially in the time since 2009 when I was most intensely ill).  I found myself actually grieving the effects on my skin, my shape, and even my hair.  I decided to tackle that part of me, the one so focused on outward appearance, by being open about it on my own blog.

 I still have a long way to go in both tweaking my new natural approach to self-care and silencing the insecurity demons.  As I write this, I’m adjusting to the No ‘Poo Method and the oil slick I call my hair is calling out, “You look terrible.  Give in to the beauty industry ads.  Go back to shampoo.”  (Absurdly, in my mind, my oily hair is a nemesis being paid by the beauty industry to taunt me.  LOL!)  I’m sticking to it though.  The more my health is restored, the more I prove to myself that I am not beholden to the messages of Big Food, Big Medicine, and Big Beauty, the more confidence I gain.  And really, what is more attractive than a person glowing with health and confidence?  It is totally worth giving up all the poisons.

 (As a little motivator for ladies considering the switch themselves . . . my husband has loved my transition to a natural beauty routine.  He thinks my hair is softer & nicer to the touch and is glad to be rid of the harsh smells of alcohol-based products.  It sure helps to have such an adoring fan.)