Hi Susan, Tyler
Thanks for the clarification - and I had in indeed forgotten about Bechamp's work that AV raises - so, would this be better:
- Bacteria are not a cause of disease but instead a sign of an unhealthy environment - any breakdown they perform is actually a cleansing function.
- If one's system is healthy, naturally occurring bacteria will not thrive to the extent that they will cause problems - it is only when the individual is unhealthy that bacteria will perform a cleansing function which is mistaken as the 'disease' itself.
- Eliminating bacteria may allow an unhealthy body to continue functioning longer but eventually the body will break down because the 'disease' is still there, it is just no longer being highlighted by the presence of bacteria. This break down is what we commonly understand as chronic disease.
(effectively I'm paraphrasing what Susan said I think...)
All this said, Tyler's last point about aged cooked foods confuses me a little in that these will likely make one ill (and I assume this is because of the bacteria) so I have trouble finding an explanation that fits with the above.
I'm guessing the fact that the food is cooked makes it an unhealthy environment and this is why bacteria thrives? Also it is an unnatural environment and perhaps because of this stronger or mutated forms of bacteria thrive and your body cannot regulate this type of bacteria and, because they are stronger, they are more likely to cleanse healthy tissue? Or perhaps it's the large numbers of bacteria and these overwhelm the body's controls?
So... this makes me wonder if there is an element of acclimatisation to bacteria if one has only recently started eating raw - in that their body is likely in need of cleansing and so perhaps some care should be taken with exposure to bacteria until the body has (re)learned / is healthier and therefore able to regulate bacteria so the cleansing process doesn't go unchecked?
Apologies if I'm being over-complicated - I realise I am fairly new and therefore have quite a bit of residual fear of bacteria as a result of years of conventional thinking (& scaremongering cleaning product advertisers!) - it just seems to me that in certain circumstances bacteria can still pose a danger to humans and so perhaps should be avoided in those cases whether because they are in large concentration or of a different form to that found under natural conditions... does that sound right?