Feb 15, 2008
-
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: Gainesville, Florida
@ fluffy:
Iodized salt probably would do the trick, but I don't think it's an ideal solution. I'd recommend getting away from the white salt altogether and trying some exotic unrefined sea salts. Your body will appreciate the minor and trace minerals, and your inner culinary snob will have fun trying to see if there's any discernible difference in flavor. This does not solve your iodine issue, and neither will most multivitamins,* but I may have something for you that does.
Kelp supplements. Kelp is a whole food that's been shown to have benefits when added to the diet, so you're less likely to get dangerous levels of anything from it than with some other sources. You can just eat it if you're into that sort of thing, but rather painlessly, one tiny tablet will fulfill your daily requirement for iodine. I picked up a bottle of 200 tablets (I take one or two per day) for about three or four dollars at the local health food store, and it looks like I overpaid.
In any case, asking the doctor to determine what's wrong with you is probably a good idea. But I can't say that following his advice for fixing it is always the best solution. For the immediate future, I'd try kelping it up for a couple weeks (a slightly elevated dose of sea vegetables is not going to hurt you, though I recommend the small tabs and one with each meal instead of one big tab or something) and seeing if you feel any better.
*Iodine is a mineral, not a vitamin. Low-end multivitamins only have vitamins. So-called complete multivitamins usually have some minerals in addition to vitamins, but none of the ones I looked at had iodine. In any case, recent studies have shown no significant signs of better health in individuals taking multivitamins over those that don't. Good health begins with one's diet.
Iodized salt probably would do the trick, but I don't think it's an ideal solution. I'd recommend getting away from the white salt altogether and trying some exotic unrefined sea salts. Your body will appreciate the minor and trace minerals, and your inner culinary snob will have fun trying to see if there's any discernible difference in flavor. This does not solve your iodine issue, and neither will most multivitamins,* but I may have something for you that does.
Kelp supplements. Kelp is a whole food that's been shown to have benefits when added to the diet, so you're less likely to get dangerous levels of anything from it than with some other sources. You can just eat it if you're into that sort of thing, but rather painlessly, one tiny tablet will fulfill your daily requirement for iodine. I picked up a bottle of 200 tablets (I take one or two per day) for about three or four dollars at the local health food store, and it looks like I overpaid.
In any case, asking the doctor to determine what's wrong with you is probably a good idea. But I can't say that following his advice for fixing it is always the best solution. For the immediate future, I'd try kelping it up for a couple weeks (a slightly elevated dose of sea vegetables is not going to hurt you, though I recommend the small tabs and one with each meal instead of one big tab or something) and seeing if you feel any better.
*Iodine is a mineral, not a vitamin. Low-end multivitamins only have vitamins. So-called complete multivitamins usually have some minerals in addition to vitamins, but none of the ones I looked at had iodine. In any case, recent studies have shown no significant signs of better health in individuals taking multivitamins over those that don't. Good health begins with one's diet.
-
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: Gainesville, Florida
- Caravan Ray
- bono
- Posts: 8738
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 1:51 pm
- Instruments: Penis
- Recording Method: Garageband
- Submitting as: Caravan Ray,G.O.R.T.E.C,Lyricburglar,The Thugs from the Scallop Industry
- Location: Toowoomba, Queensland
- Contact:
That is absolute crap. Salt is salt. "unrefined sea salts" is just salt with shit in it. There is every chance that your body wont appreciate the minor and trace minerals - or more likely you will piss them straight out and never even notice them. Fucking hippy.Lord of Oats wrote: I'd recommend getting away from the white salt altogether and trying some exotic unrefined sea salts. Your body will appreciate the minor and trace minerals.
- Märk
- Churchill
- Posts: 2048
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 8:35 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, bass
- Recording Method: Presonus Audiobox 44VSL, Cubase
- Submitting as: ROTR, svenmullet, I forget what else
- Pronouns: master
- Location: Canada
Jesus Goatf-ahhh, fuck it.Caravan Ray wrote:That is absolute crap. Salt is salt. "unrefined sea salts" is just salt with shit in it. There is every chance that your body wont appreciate the minor and trace minerals - or more likely you will piss them straight out and never even notice them. Fucking hippy.Lord of Oats wrote: I'd recommend getting away from the white salt altogether and trying some exotic unrefined sea salts. Your body will appreciate the minor and trace minerals.
* this is not a disclaimer
-
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: Gainesville, Florida
STFU, you roo rancher! Shit is good for you! My celtic sea salt has magnesium in it! And all kinds of other stuff. Trace minerals are good. Your body will use what it needs, and piss out the rest. It's cool like that. But you have to put it in there in the first place. Refined salt is a great source of sodium, but of nothing else. There's a good share of perfectly nutritious stuff in my salt that yours doesn't have, in addition to all the sodium I could ever want.
Natural foods are generally better, because humans and their ancestors have spent millions of years eating them, and have spent all that time evolving into a creature suited to eating them. There is no population of humans on Earth that has been given sufficient time to adapt to manufactured and processed foods.
Natural foods are generally better, because humans and their ancestors have spent millions of years eating them, and have spent all that time evolving into a creature suited to eating them. There is no population of humans on Earth that has been given sufficient time to adapt to manufactured and processed foods.
-
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: Gainesville, Florida
- fluffy
- Eisenhower
- Posts: 11202
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:56 am
- Instruments: sometimes
- Recording Method: Logic Pro X
- Submitting as: Sockpuppet
- Pronouns: she/they
- Location: Seattle-ish
- Contact:
Cyanide is natural, and people today live way the hell longer than they ever did in 20,000 BC.
I'm not saying that natural is necessarily bad or artificial is necessarily better BUT I hate any argument that goes basically "things were so much better back in the days before medicine and science."
It doesn't matter where the trace minerals come from, be it from unrefined sea salts (which don't really have enough nutrients to even register in the slightest unless you eat enough to be fatal, or at least very bad for you) or from multivitamins (which are formulated based on science and dietary guidelines).
I'm also not expecting the vitamins to be a cure-all or anything. It's more an experiment. I do need to find a doctor eventually (I'm coming up on a year since my last physical - in fact thanks to my blogorrhea I know that my last checkup was on <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/blog/e/2007/03/13-b ... php">March 13</a>) but in the meantime I also know I'm probably malnourished due to an extremely variable diet, and it's not like more vitamins hurt (I mean, in the dose you get from a single daily multivitamin, obviously it's stupid to take more than one a day since iron and copper very quickly go from beneficial to toxic).
I'm not saying that natural is necessarily bad or artificial is necessarily better BUT I hate any argument that goes basically "things were so much better back in the days before medicine and science."
It doesn't matter where the trace minerals come from, be it from unrefined sea salts (which don't really have enough nutrients to even register in the slightest unless you eat enough to be fatal, or at least very bad for you) or from multivitamins (which are formulated based on science and dietary guidelines).
I'm also not expecting the vitamins to be a cure-all or anything. It's more an experiment. I do need to find a doctor eventually (I'm coming up on a year since my last physical - in fact thanks to my blogorrhea I know that my last checkup was on <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/blog/e/2007/03/13-b ... php">March 13</a>) but in the meantime I also know I'm probably malnourished due to an extremely variable diet, and it's not like more vitamins hurt (I mean, in the dose you get from a single daily multivitamin, obviously it's stupid to take more than one a day since iron and copper very quickly go from beneficial to toxic).
-
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: Gainesville, Florida
Well, look, I don't believe so either. I thoroughly believe in using modern medicine in a lot of instances. Just not in the cases where your medical problems stem from your bad diet, unless we're talking about an emergency situation. So do whatever you have to do, then fix the diet. Modern medicine is indeed quite nice for a lot of things. I'm very happy to have been subjected to it, so that I didn't die when I broke my arm. I'm really not a fringe whacko or anything. I'm for moderation. On one side you have a corrupt industry, and on the other, a bunch of quacks and lunatics. The answer has to be somewhere in the middle.fluffy wrote:Cyanide is natural, and people today live way the hell longer than they ever did in 20,000 BC.
I'm not saying that natural is necessarily bad or artificial is necessarily better BUT I hate any argument that goes basically "things were so much better back in the days before medicine and science."
Well, see, that's why they're called trace minerals. You don't need very much of them.fluffy wrote:It doesn't matter where the trace minerals come from, be it from unrefined sea salts (which don't really have enough nutrients to even register in the slightest unless you eat enough to be fatal, or at least very bad for you) or from multivitamins (which are formulated based on science and dietary guidelines).
The only point I meant to make about multivitamins that I didn't is that vitamin A acetate is, as far as I can tell, a substance you should avoid. Please tell me the vitamin A in yours comes from carotene.fluffy wrote:I'm also not expecting the vitamins to be a cure-all or anything. It's more an experiment. I do need to find a doctor eventually (I'm coming up on a year since my last physical - in fact thanks to my blogorrhea I know that my last checkup was on <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/blog/e/2007/03/13-b ... php">March 13</a>) but in the meantime I also know I'm probably malnourished due to an extremely variable diet, and it's not like more vitamins hurt (I mean, in the dose you get from a single daily multivitamin, obviously it's stupid to take more than one a day since iron and copper very quickly go from beneficial to toxic).
- Billy's Little Trip
- Odie
- Posts: 12090
- Joined: Mon Nov 13, 2006 2:56 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, Bass, Vocals, Drums, Skin Flute
- Recording Method: analog to digital via Presonus FireBox, Cubase and a porn machine
- Submitting as: Billy's Little Trip, Billy and the Psychotics
- Location: Cali fucking ornia
deja vuCaravan Ray wrote:That is absolute crap. Salt is salt. "unrefined sea salts" is just salt with shit in it. There is every chance that your body wont appreciate the minor and trace minerals - or more likely you will piss them straight out and never even notice them. Fucking hippy.Lord of Oats wrote: I'd recommend getting away from the white salt altogether and trying some exotic unrefined sea salts. Your body will appreciate the minor and trace minerals.
- fluffy
- Eisenhower
- Posts: 11202
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:56 am
- Instruments: sometimes
- Recording Method: Logic Pro X
- Submitting as: Sockpuppet
- Pronouns: she/they
- Location: Seattle-ish
- Contact:
So back to the previous thing b efore people started getting up in my shit about vitamins
http://beesbuzz.biz/temp/foo.mp3
Listen to my embarrassingly badly-out-of-practice (and slightly drunk) piano playing!
http://beesbuzz.biz/temp/foo.mp3
Listen to my embarrassingly badly-out-of-practice (and slightly drunk) piano playing!
- Paco Del Stinko
- Roosevelt
- Posts: 3548
- Joined: Fri Apr 07, 2006 11:20 am
- Instruments: Basic rock, at a basic level.
- Recording Method: Roland 2480
- Submitting as: Paco del Stinko
- Location: Massachusetts. God save the Commonwealth!
- PlainSongs
- de Gaulle
- Posts: 118
- Joined: Sat Dec 01, 2007 11:04 am
- Submitting as: Plain Songs for Doves & Tigers, Nu igen!
- Location: spacetime
Re: Feb 15, 2008
A day late, off the top of my head:Niveous wrote:DRC: Any new hard rock/metal bands I should try out. Today would be a perfect day for it.
Glenn Hughes: Music For The Divine
Balkandji (folkmetal from Bulgaria)
2227 (crazy punkfolkrock from Slovenia)
Fluffy - been enjoying your piano playing while finding the above links. I like especially where it gets a bit dissonant around 8:40.
- Caravan Ray
- bono
- Posts: 8738
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 1:51 pm
- Instruments: Penis
- Recording Method: Garageband
- Submitting as: Caravan Ray,G.O.R.T.E.C,Lyricburglar,The Thugs from the Scallop Industry
- Location: Toowoomba, Queensland
- Contact:
Perfectly correct. I also have no particularly strong views re artificial re natural - but I do think that all purveyors of so-called 'health foods' should be lined up against a wall and shot. The same goes for anyone that produces any product with "eco" as part of its name.fluffy wrote: I'm not saying that natural is necessarily bad or artificial is necessarily better BUT I hate any argument that goes basically "things were so much better back in the days before medicine and science."
Oatsey, you are a gullible fool. It is almost certain you are already getting more than enough sodium in the other food you eat. If you really do have some deficiency of some trace element - then get it diagnosed properly and address it appropriately. Stop giving your money to con-men.Lord of Oats wrote: There's a good share of perfectly nutritious stuff in my salt that yours doesn't have, in addition to all the sodium I could ever want.
-
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: Gainesville, Florida
- fluffy
- Eisenhower
- Posts: 11202
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:56 am
- Instruments: sometimes
- Recording Method: Logic Pro X
- Submitting as: Sockpuppet
- Pronouns: she/they
- Location: Seattle-ish
- Contact:
SO SOME USEFUL POSTING
Ken's band Parker Street Cinema is going to be on the radio live in a bit (in about half an hour), on 90.7 KALX Berkeley. For those not in the area they have an Internet stream at http://kalx.berkeley.edu/listen.htm
I'm trying to listen on the Internet but it's not working so well for me, so I guess I'll have to fiddle with my radio antenna and get it the old-fashioned way.
Ken's band Parker Street Cinema is going to be on the radio live in a bit (in about half an hour), on 90.7 KALX Berkeley. For those not in the area they have an Internet stream at http://kalx.berkeley.edu/listen.htm
I'm trying to listen on the Internet but it's not working so well for me, so I guess I'll have to fiddle with my radio antenna and get it the old-fashioned way.
- Caravan Ray
- bono
- Posts: 8738
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 1:51 pm
- Instruments: Penis
- Recording Method: Garageband
- Submitting as: Caravan Ray,G.O.R.T.E.C,Lyricburglar,The Thugs from the Scallop Industry
- Location: Toowoomba, Queensland
- Contact: