I think about this a lot, because I eat 100% raw organic, but I look around and see all the people in their 40s, 50s, 60s, etc, who are doing just fine without worrying about food at all.
And then of course in a lot of cases when you look closer, they're not actually doing fine. And they get some terrible disease before they're 70.
But still, questions swirl in my mind. If they do get a terrible disease by 70, was it what they ate in their 20s that caused it? Do things really build up in the body over that long a time period?
Some of the primary questions that I ponder regularly these days are:
1. Do I really have to eat as perfectly as I'm eating in order to evade chronic or degenerative illness and/or cancer?
2. Does what I eat now, in my early 20s, really have a definitive and inescapable effect on the rest of my life?
3. Is the effect of food on health simply based on what your ratio of healthy to unhealthy food is? In other words, if you eat 99% healthy, but eat donuts for that last 1%, will those donuts have an impact on your health? And if not, why not? What about 2%? 3%? If 97% of what you're eating is raw vegetables, fruits, meat, etc, can that 3% of donuts really have an impact? How does it work? Is there a tipping point? Or is it just an infinitely curved line? Does it follow a similar working to the laws of motion? (i.e. Something must receive a minimum amount of force applied to it before it will begin to move). In the food case, this would be: A person must eat a certain amount of unhealthy food before it can adversely affect that persons health.
4. Are desserts made of whole foods (like what you find at whole foods) healthier than what you'd find at safeway? (with the massive lists of chemicals and preservatives, etc)
5. If you eat whatever you want until you're 50, and then go to 100% raw organic, does your body just clean itself out in a few years and you're good to go? Or does what you did in the years previous to 50 have a damning effect on you forever?
6. Why does it feel as though we Really need nice warm foods (like soups) during cold weather? How does completely avoiding all cooked food make sense living in a cold climate?
7. Kind of a general summary of all of the above. I see other young people eating whatever they want, day after day, week after week, and their bodies are functioning perfectly. Is something bad really building up inside them? How? Can it be seen? How do we know this?
8. What other factors contribute to health aside from food? And can they condemn you to illness even in the face of a perfect diet?
Basically, how do we know how any of this works? And how do we know that something like, for example, homemade lasagna, is unhealthy? (just the first thing that came to mind). Let's assume it was all made from scratch at home, and had no added sweeteners, preservatives, chemicals, etc. Just cooked pasta, melted cheese, tomato sauce, cooked meat, etc. This looks, smells, tastes and feels really good. What is it doing that will cause disease? Does it really cause disease? How do we know?