One of the best ways to balance your blood sugar is to eat a living/raw uncooked plant diet. Do you ever see animals in nature with diabetes? How about with low blood sugar? The answer is “no” because most all animals eat living food. The cows eat living, growing grass, the elephants eat living, growing leaves and grasses, even the lion eats living meat. The only animals that get diabetes are your dogs and cats because they are eating cooked, processed food just like you are. Just as in the study of the vegetarian diet decreases blood pressure, a living/raw uncooked plant diet not only balances blood pressure, but also blood sugar, cholesterol, triglycerides and everything else.
Other things that help balance blood sugar are:
·
Having a deep revelation of God’s love, joy, peace, hope and grace
· Seeing everything in life as a part of God’s plan to transform you into His image.
· Fixing your mind and thoughts on God instead of on yourself and on a world system of lies
· Learning to let it go and let God be God
· Do not condemn or judge yourself or others
Pan (Pancreatic Support Enzyme) (Pancreas support) Enzyme
70% of Americans do not digest the sugars and carbohydrates they eat, so they crave sugar. If you do not digest the carbohydrates, your brain keeps sending messages via the hypothalamus. “We need more sugar!” This enzyme helps you digest the carbohydrates/starches, so you can stop sugar cravings. This enzyme should be taken by every man, woman and child to ensure complete digestion of your food. You crave what you do not digest. Three things are in excess in the standard American’s bloodstream:
1.) Protein
2.) Fat
3.) Sugar
As these three go up in the blood, the pathogens (bacteria, viruses, parasites, candida and cancer cell formation) also goes up. Symptoms of Not Digesting Carbohydrates:
Crave sugar
Dry everything; eyes, nose, mouth even when you drink water
Respiratory problems-asthma
Muscle weakness
Cannot think clearly or concentrate
Person may startle easily
Difficulty swallowing
Voice changes when under stress
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on Tuesday, October 31st, 2006 at 7:52 am and is filed under Newsletter.
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