Has anyone experienced low estrogen levels while being a raw vegan. Also, if anyone has any good and specific sources about the link between hormones and diet I would be greatly appreciative. I've read all the big books so I'm really looking for specifics (and yes I have a doctor, this is just more research). Also looking for info that is NOT menopause related.
This is turning out to be a fascinating topic and I am learning so much. I had no idea about any of these effects of a raw vegan diet on us women! Sounds like things just keep getting better! I will post a roundup of information this weekend on my blog (www.buellerskitchen.com) in my "girls corner" . This is where I discuss everything girly about everything I have found as I continue my mad research. I'll also include what people have shared here as well as links, books, references, etc. so we can all keep learning as there doesn't seem to be much out there on this topic. I think it'd be nice to have a bunch of resources in one place, don't you?
I've created a group called Raw Women. I hope all you ladies will join!
What I was told by my doctor is simply that when we are eating the typical American diet that blood that accumulates is toxic and dirty and needs to be eliminated( thats why I have always heard them say women live longer then men because we detox every month)
BUT when we are eating a raw vegan diet we are very clean inside and our bodies can reuse that blood and not get rid of it
Well, not really. Since I've been vegan for years and raw vegan for a few months and I still bleed a lot, there must be some piece of the puzzle that I'm missing...
This is great information Stephanie. Thank you. Being the mad researcher that I am I will have a full pot this weekend on this topic on my blog as I have found so much good information. I found this interesting information: a low-fat vegan diet alleviates women's premenstrual symptoms by decreasing estrogen production. Which explains my low levels and that they may be in fact more normal than not. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0820/is_2000_August/ai_63902637
Wow, lot's of good info. When I was 15 i became vegetarian and shortly thereafter my period stopped...for 6 years. I went to doctors and they said that it was not from any lack of fat on my body, and they said it wasn't for diet...most those years I was vegan but not raw. I was worried because I wanted to make sure that I was still fertile, so I asked the universe for my period back, and it came back after 6 years. Since then it has been pretty irregular, except in the past year it became more stable. Then I began the 811 diet and I didn't get it for 2 months, became worried, began eating cooked, heavier foods, and it came back. It is interesting to read these articles, and think that maybe this whole time my body may have just been tuning in to my natural state. Hmmmm I kind of instinctively felt that when I was younger, but didn't have any solid research to back it up, just some hearsay.
hey jenny!
whats up girl!
how are you?
im totally with you, i def feel the same way and have experienced the same!
I posted a few things on this discussion as well a while ago about my experiences on this topic and what i was taught by David Jubb when i first started going to him
pretty amazing stuff!
Hi Jenny, I tried to get to the bottom of this issue a few years ago after reading a booklet by a couple of Natural Hygienists. Unfortunately the book made many claims that are not factual. For example there are many animals that menstruate, however this tends to be covert, but our close cousins chimpanzees menstruate visibly as Jane Goodhall has observed.
So menstruation is "natural", but I suspect that the unpleasant symptoms associated with it in SAD eaters are probably something to do with ill health.
Furthermore, the endometrium contains tiny spring like blood vessels that respond to changes in hormones by breaking. Thus there is biological mechanism to endice bleeding that is not present elsewhere in the body, so to call menstruation a hemorrhage is incorrect. Hemorrages are the result of physical damage to blood vessels, and do not serve any biological purpose.
As many female athletes know, overt menstruation is not a prerequiste for fertility.
Disturbances to menstruation are no doubt due to changes in bodyfat, which is where the hormones are made.
Sure, too much fat is bad for the liver. But fat isn't per se bad for the liver, is it?
Not only in 811 but also other people say to limit the fat but maybe raw plant fat helps to flush out some stuff out of the liver?
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