Monday, 23 July 2012

Birthday Beauty - Shakeela Dawood!



One inspired and enlightened being, my gluten-free gal, Shakeela. Her poise and persistence in educating the masses about the negative effects of gluten on our lives is unshakeable. In my darkest hours, her positvity lightens me. Through the cravings and the backslides, she is always there to offer her smile, a warm embrace and guidance back to a healthy life.

Having Shakeela in my life has been a blessing and I am honoured to be going through this journey with her.

Great accomplishments require great people. Educating a nation about their health is a great task that Shakeela has embraced whole heartedly. We know she will have a significant impact and change people's lives by making them aware of their health and a new way of living.

Happy happy birthday to the beautiful & inspirational Shakeela!

 

Wednesday, 11 July 2012


Enjoying a gluten-free diet


ND Gluten 2
INLSA
Gluten-free does not mean a diet with no treats, as Lucille Cholerton demonstrates with this cake made with tapioca and potato flour. Picture: Zanele Zulu
While most of us had hardly heard of gluten a few years ago, going gluten-free has become a trend these days with increasing numbers of celebs crediting their toned bodies and vibrant smiles to ditching gluten-containing carbs.
And while this diet may add the glam factor to some, in reality, there is nothing sexy about a gluten allergy or intolerance.
Kloof nutritional counsellor Lucille Cholerton should know.
She has become an expert on the subject – through personal experience and 20 years of research, and has written a 600-page book Spotlight on Gluten (Strategic Publishing), that has received praise from several local doctors, as well as those with an interest in the subject.
Cholerton believes that gluten, a rubbery protein found in wheat, rye, barley and, to a lesser extent, oats, could be at the root of many health problems, from minor irritations such as runny noses to devastating conditions such as multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis.
Her first encounter with gluten and its effects occurred 20 years ago when her mother was diagnosed with Crohn’s Disease, an auto-immune inflammatory bowel disorder.
nd gluten
“She was told to avoid seeds and nuts, which she ate very rarely, and I felt it had to be something she was eating on a regular basis that was causing this digestive problem,” says Lucille.
With no internet to surf in those days, it meant library research, which is where Cholerton found a possible link to gluten.
“I learnt that gluten could be the cause of many symptoms – all of which my family had, ranging from “glue ear” in babies to colic, nasal problems, asthma, anaemia, tingling and numbness in fingers or toes, a speech stammer, depression, constipation, hyperactivity, lactose intolerance, rheumatoid arthritis, irritability, headaches, migraines and behavioural problems, among others.”
Cholerton also noticed that when she ate bread, she suffered extreme indigestion. She consulted a dietitian who suggested eliminating gluten for two weeks and then, over the next two or three days, eating as much gluten as she could.
“The experiment changed my life for ever!”
Firstly, her sinuses dried up. After living with a drippy nose for 40 years and being treated with sprays, drying-up meds and sinus scrapes, it was a huge relief, she said.
Disappeared
Her headaches and migraines disappeared. After following a gluten-free diet for several months, she managed to avoid another sinus scrape, a hip replacement and eliminate her symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis.
It was also the start of healing of her three children’s health issues, including glue ear, stammering, vitiligo, allergies, anaemia, colic and more. By following a gluten-free diet, the family progressed towards glowing health. It also set Cholerton on a path of investigation into gluten sensitivity, a hereditary condition.
In those days, eating gluten-free was not as easy as it is today, with supermarkets, pharmacies, health stores and some bakeries now carrying yummy alternatives. But Cholerton was determined to provide gluten-free foods for her family (though her husband does not have gluten sensitivity) and to spread the word about what she believes is a simple solution to some of the biggest health problems facing the world today.
She established the Gluten Intolerance and Coeliac Support Group in 1995 and became a resource for people in South Africa and abroad. She trained as a nutrition counsellor and her journey and knowledge is condensed into her comprehensive book.
“The disorder should really be diagnosed in childhood but if it is missed, people can suffer for many years from unexplained symptoms when something they are eating every day could be the cause of their ill health.”
She stresses however that there are many people who can eat gluten with no ill effects and a gluten-free diet should only be followed after a professional diagnosis of gluten allergy or intolerance. Gluten sensitivity leads to many symptoms – mild in some, severe in others.
You should continue to eat gluten-containing foods before a blood sample is taken for the test, otherwise results will be inconclusive, she says.
One of the most dramatic finds for Cholerton was the suspected link between auto-immune diseases and gluten.
An auto-immune disease occurs when the antibodies or T-cells produced by the body attack its own tissues in error. They can affect connective tissue, both red and white blood cells, glands and major organs.
More than 20 auto-immune disorders are thought to be linked to gluten sensitivity, according to researchers, including Addison’s Disease, type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia, Graves’ Disease (thyroid), multiple sclerosis, lupus and many more.
“I believe that anyone diagnosed with an auto-immune disease should be screened automatically for gluten antibodies,” says Cholerton.
The book covers in detail the effects of gluten in sensitive people on bowel complaints, digestive system disorders, digestive cancers and lymphoma, endocrine abnormalities, gynaecological disorders, migraine and headaches, metabolic disorders, neurological symptoms and psychological disorders.
“Could there be a link to Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, epilepsy, stroke and macular degeneration?” asks Cholerton. Many researchers in Europe and the US believe this to be true.
She has also seen dramatic improvements in children with autism. The landscape is huge.
Of course, there are those who are concerned about eliminating mainstream foods such as bread from the diet, but Cholerton says there are so many alternatives to gluten-containing foods – instead of bread and pasta, think rice and potatoes.
Recommends
At parties, children can have sweets, ice-cream, jelly and chips but not the cakes and biscuits.
She recommends that at the first sign of sensitivity to any of the four grains, people should ask their doctors to test them with the specific screening tests for gluten antibodies as well as tests for wheat allergy. After that, they should try the elimination diet.
Durban general practitioner, Dr Garth Brink, says in a foreword in the book: “While this book is not armchair reading, it is a useful resource for those who wish to learn more on this subject, whether a sufferer or not.”
That it is.
***

Wednesday, 4 July 2012



It’s been over a month now, that I’ve been sitting and staring at a blank page and all I get is blah! I feel like Blankman’s  girlfriend……………I think I must have writers block. Then I realized….


….I am definitely not a writer and I’m rather grateful for spell check.  I am not a foodie or writer of recipes, except I know I love to eat. However I have my moments when I feel like Ratatouille when he tries to explain to chubby grubby brother what it’s like is mix two different flovours and you end up making one magical flovour.


Yes I really understood how he felt…….


 I am not of a medical profession but what I know comes from others, reading, my own experience and now google. I am definitely not a health or fitness expert and I take rather average photos. I love to paint  but I’m no Vincent van Gogh(though didn’t he have temporal lobe epilepsy as well).

When I started writing, I didn’t know where I was going with this, but when I read it again it felt like I was complaining or whining about myself, then trying to pat myself on the back.

Hmmmmmm what is wrong with us. I’ve notice this in many a woman over the years, as I deal with number of woman on a daily bases.  We want things to be perfect or what we think perfection is. We can never be satisfied about the things we’ve done or accomplished.  There always seems to be a fault hiding somewhere that only we seem to notice.

(Why I am not pretty enough, not thin enough. Why don’t I have bigger breast. I want to be blond, no I wish I was a brunette. Why didn’t I accomplish x by this date, time or age… why doesn’t he love me(er..because you don’t love yourself)…. The list does go on and on. And I’ve truly heard it all.)

Always looking for imperfection 


 Now I really do love to paint but I’m sure I've been driving my art teacher batty. I’m always trying to get things picture perfect. If I don’t, then I’m annoyed with the world.  And my teacher always has to remind me “ it’s a painting not a photograph and perception is different for anyone.” I am generally like this with everything I do in life, I get annoyed, then frustrated  with myself then I start getting anxious. I get I mixture of knots and butterflies in my gut. And I can’t seem to eat or I eat junk.

I seem to have had this behavior since I was a kid, according to my mom. My clothes, underwear, socks and shoes had to match at all time. And I never liked my clothes been dirty even though I liked playing in the dirt. I now realize, for me it’s this crazy behavior of perfection that causes me to have anxiety attacks. If I look back at all the problems I’ve had, from an ulcer at 16 to my epilepsy , one of the underlining causes are stress and/or anxiety.  I’m not saying anxiety over perfection caused every problem I have, but have noticed the pattern. And for me there is no denying it.

PERFECTION IS A MATTER OF PERSECPTION. This is what I come to strongly believe. If you believe you’re a terrible cook you will always be one.

I believe the word perfect should be redundant. There is no such thing…………..


This is What we should be doing...love yourself 

SD