Yes, I do like that.  

One needs to convince themselves of the value of supplements they take
(why they are taking them) because it will not necessarily be apparent
that it is the supplement which is doing the good - if you can follow my
tortured sentence structure - it is easy to say 'I feel great now', but
to stop taking this or that supplement when you can't definitely connect
the cause to the effect.

I do have some philosophical problem with unending supplementation
especially such as the very large vitamin C intake of the Rath/Pauling
protocol.  I mean, vitamin C at those levels is definitely artificial
(not something that would occur naturally), and while it should be fine
to take it to correct a problem, to have to continue to take it
indefinitely, as for heart disease, implies that one has corrected a
problem allopathically rather than actually correcting or curing the
underlying problem.  Whey is a natural food product, albeit
concentrated, so I don't know if it still falls into this same
philosophical problem or not.  I tend toward preferring dietary changes
as opposed to taking refined supplements ("Let your food be your
medicine"...etc).  Any comments about the whole issue?  

I assume then that one would need to take only 1 or 2 grams of vitamin C
per day with the whey product.  What is used for the selenium?

I'll have to try to do some reading on your site.

Thanks,

Dan

-----Original Message-----
From: Duncan Crow [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 02, 2006 12:56 PM
To: Dan Nave; [email protected]
Subject: RE: CS>Matthias Rath Book

Dan, you're going to like this -- one 36-gram scoop of undenatured whey
provides 3.46 grams of l-lysine. (in the product I use) The proline you
need is derived from glutamine, which is also in the whey to the tune of
5.3 grams per serving (as glutamic acid). 

I get my clients on the whey anyway for the glutathione increase; it's
remarkable for reducing inflammation and overactive immunity, and it's
also real good for a leaner body mass index. 

Glutathione recycles vitamin C and other antioxidants too so clients
don't need to take a whole whack of C like they might if they followed
Rath and Pauling, who in my opinion missed something very important by
not evaluating the role glutathione plays ;) and incorporating
cold-processed whey and selenium into their regime. 

Undenatured whey alone has reduced cancer; the research is on my site on
the glutathione page. (address below)

Duncan
http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-references.html



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