Better Health with (Mostly) Chinese Herbs and Foods
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The Age of the “Miracle Drugs" is Over!
Current major diseases - AIDS, heart diseases, degenerative diseases (e.g., arthritis and rheumatism), diabetes, cancers and obesity - are mostly the consequence of our modern lifestyle. There is no longer any disease that can be cured by "miracle drugs."
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Better Health with (Mostly) Chinese Herbs and Foods - Albert Y. Leung
Better Health with (Mostly)
CHINESE HERBS & FOODS
Much has been written about herbs. But what is an herb? In botanical terms, an herb is a plant that does not have a woody stem above ground as do trees and shrubs. Thus, mint, ginger, daisy, celery and watercress are herbs. Strictly speaking, the banana tree
is also an herb––a giant herb––because although it may attain a height of fifteen to twenty feet, it does not have a woody stem.
For everyday usage, however, an herb can be defined as in Webster's Dictionary, i.e., a plant or plant part used for its culinary, flavoring and medicinal qualities.
So, an herb can be a spice or condiment, a medicine, or a food (vegetable, fruit, grain or nut). We normally think of an herb as either one of the former, but rarely as a food. In this book, I will introduce you to some commonly used herbs that have been safely used for hundreds to thousands of years as spices, medicines and foods.
By commonly used
I don't mean herbs that only Westerners consider as common, such as celery, mint, rosemary and thyme. I also consider as common some herbs and foods used by hundreds of millions of people of other cultures, especially Chinese and East Indian, where use history is normally measured by millennia or centuries and not by generations or decades. America (both Canada and the United States) is an immigrant society, with the American Indians being the only true natives. As immigrants, we have brought with us numerous aspects of our diverse cultures. Among the most important are our foods, herbs and healing methods. We Americans pride ourselves in our diversified racial, ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Without those unique qualities, we would simply be an Anglo, an African, a Latin, a Chinese, a Japanese, a Scandinavian or whatever, and not even a true one at that.
Many, however, have forgotten this fact. They consider themselves more American than others just because (perhaps) they arrived here a few generations earlier are of a different culture. Without having any understanding or even a knowledge of our country's true heritage they look down upon the cultural practices of their fellow Americans.
This is especially true in the realm of ethnic medicines. I can't speak for other ethnic groups because I am not familiar enough with their medical practices. But I can certainly comment on how Chinese herbal medicine is being treated in America, especially in the United States. The Chinese healing system (traditional medicine, herbal medicine, acupuncture, massage, moxibition, qigong, etc.) has been around for several thousand years, and has been used by billions of people safely and effectively for all these years. Even though its terminology may be out-of-date
and often strange, it is definitely a legitimate health care system. Anyone will agree with me if he or she has taken the time to look into it. Yet, bureaucrats and some politically appointed officials in our government, without having any knowledge or understanding of traditional Chinese medicine whatsoever, are trying to restrict its practice, especially in the herbal area. What they don't know or understand they find easy to simply ban. I don't think it is simply an issue of the healing system itself, but rather a cultural and economic issue.
The bureaucrats may argue that they don't have enough safety data to allow certain herbs or formulas to be used in our foods or as medicines for general distribution. Yet they never bother to look into the matter objectively, Since the bureaucrats in charge are mostly from the same club whose members are from the drug industry and the conventional medical establishment, there is no need to look into an insignificant (in their thinking) and non-profitable (for them) system like Chinese herbal medicine or other ethnic medicines. Their attempt, if successful, would deny many of us the freedom of choice in taking care of our health. We don't want to be ill-nor be rendered more ill-by our modern
medical (sick-care) system. Rather, we want to avoid modern drugs and to stay healthy with herbs and foods of our choice, which have been safely and beneficially used for centuries
Well, then, why do we use herbs? Apart from the most obvious reason (as a spice or condiment), herbs are frequently used either as foods or as medicines. Often, in fact, there is a very fine line that separates the two. An herb can be a food or a medicine solely depending on how it is used. Take watercress as an example. It is definitely a food when normally consumed as a vegetable or salad. But if eaten with therapeutic intentions, watercress can be regarded as a medicine, such as for soothing the lungs. Frequently, we are not aware that many of our foods and spices are also time-honored medicines. These are some of the herbs that have sustained the human species and maintained its health for millennia
· · ·
In BETTER HEALTH WITH (MOSTLY) CHINESE HERBS & FOODS, I have chosen sixty herbs and foods to help better your health. They do not include herbs that are primarily medicines which do not have a food use history, or those that require considerable caution in their use. The selected herbs and foods are meant to supply certain unconventional nutrients which may be missing in our modern diets. The actions of these food herbs are mild and tend to help the body balance itself and correct any problems resulting from an imbalance. Perhaps that is the reason why most tonic herbs and foods have multiple uses, some of which on the surface may not seem to have any relationship to one another. But if the conditions are due to deficiency of certain not-yet-recognized nutrients that affect our body universally at a cellular level, correcting this deficiency would have extensive health ramifications. Nevertheless, even with foods, one of the most important rules in partaking is moderation. If you observe this rule, you will enjoy the benefits of these herbal foods with minimal unpleasant consequences.
Why do we need herbs? The answer can be academic. Using herbs is a very personal thing. If you are happy and healthy
living in this modern world of ours, with its advanced technology and convenient foods, you might not think you need herbs. Our society has conditioned us to regard routinely taking government-approved drugs as a normal thing to do. Even though you may suffer from headaches (suppressed by these drugs) or nervousness (also drug-suppressed) or other drug-suppressed or induced (and suppressed) conditions, you may consider yourself basically healthy. After all, the way we have grown up with drug advertisements everywhere, everyone must be taking a lot of drugs. You have been conditioned to believe there is a pill for every little ache or pain or up or down that you may experience. And you must be quite healthy
because you are only taking one or two of these drugs–drugs our government tells us are safe–which are heavily promoted by the drug industry and mandated by our government as the only medicines to take if we want to be healthy. In fact, you may well be healthy
in a way you have known best or been conditioned to accept as a healthy state.
Sadly, however, you may not truly be healthy, and may not know what true health is. I like to give this analogy:
If one has grown up eating chop suey, and believing that this is genuine Chinese cuisine, one is probably perfectly happy with chop suey. There is no need or reason for one to think or feel otherwise. The same is true with one's health. Why should you feel you are unhealthy if you have not had a chance to experience true health?
A lot of our everyday aches and