jenniferbourdier

author

The Basics

  • Name: jenniferbourdier
  • Email

jenniferbourdier’s Recent Comments

  • Click here to view comment in original post

    Eat fermented foods!

    What about eating naturally fermented foods during the winter?  All you need is an airtight glass or other container, fresh veggies or fruits, sometimes some salt and a little bit of time.  No freezer required!  And, it's a great way to get probiotics naturally!  

    p.s. You can also turn to nature's greatest gift:  oxygen, and dry your foods, even meat if you eat it.On Umbra on freezing local foods posted 4 years ago 3 Responses

  • Click here to view comment in original post

    have you heard of lactose/glucose intolerance?

    lactose and glucose intolerance are the canaries in the milk and wheat mine shaft.  milk and wheat (and most other cereals including corn) are toxic and the proof is all over.  milk is made for baby cows so that they grow dumb and fat.  wheat has been modified and manipulated to such an extent that it has 21 chromosone pairs which are un-concassable by our enzymes.  these foods are not human, they are not fit for consumption.  

    check out the site www.seignalet.com if you're willing to keep an open mind, otherwise, go on eating like the rest of the herd.  but don't call me when you get sick.On Franzen in The New Yorker posted 4 years, 2 months ago 5 Responses

  • Click here to view comment in original post

    depression

    the guy would be an even better writer if he stopped eating wheat/cereals and all milk products.  he can eat rice, buckwheat and sesame and everything else (natural) under the sun.  and he should not cook his food higher than 212F.

    but the real point is that cereals other than the three mentioned and animal milk are proven to cause depression (and 91 other modern diseases, but we won't go into that here.  name a disease, i'll tell you if it's on the list).

    this cure for depression is much more green than taking prozac.On Franzen in The New Yorker posted 4 years, 2 months ago 5 Responses

  • Click here to view comment in original post

    paper or drastic

    I can tell you that using recyclable diapers is having an affect on global warming.  We produce clearly 50L less of trash a week and though we use more water and nuclear powered electricity, we're polluting the water with organic matters and natural soap and we bought a super-efficient washing machine.  And when I see what happens to that high tech thin gel liner when you put pampers in water (it blows up into a slimy mass 10 times it's original volume, so just think of those diapers in a landfill when it rains) I'm convinced that this is greener to put up with the extra time and work involved.  On Umbra on personal actions that make a real difference posted 4 years, 2 months ago 11 Responses

View All
Advertisment
Advertisment