What is
an urban troglodyte? You might know, that Homo troglodytesis is “an invalid taxon
coined by Carl Linnaeus to refer to a legendary creature”, but we use it as
caveman, perhaps a little like “Defending the Caveman” by Rob Becker. Somehow
the urban troglodyte is still the human of 100,000 years ago, but man isn’t
only genome. “The oldest human remains from which an entire genome has been
extracted belongs to Ust'-Ishim man, who lived about 45,000 years ago in
Western Siberia” [1]. Cavemen lived in caves and urban troglodytes live in three
bedrooms and two bathrooms caves. Cavemen and urban troglodytes aren’t so
different, but they aren’t the same!
The paleo
hype doesn’t take into account that though we might resemble very much our
caveman ancestors we have changed since then. On the other hand, our
digestive system hasn’t changed so much that we could be successfully
maintained by junk food including soft drinks. Lactose intolerance and gluten
sensitivity are hints that we cavemen changed, but that we urban troglodytes
retained some of the old traits. Some people don’t have problems to digest milk
livelong, while others lose the ability to produce lactase after they have been
weaned. Some people suffer from celiac disease or non-celiac gluten sensitivity,
but others don’t have problems to digest wheat, rye, or other grains of this
group.
In Diet for the Urban Troglodyte I want to
discuss dietary changes for better health in the light of avoiding unhealthy
habits and regaining access to forgotten principles.
The urban
troglodyte may eat according to omnivore, vegetarian or vegan preference. We
have so much knowledge on diets and foods, we only have to apply it. You might
have noticed – the urban troglodyte isn’t a carnivore as the intestines are too
long. Too long intestines and too much meat might mean a higher risk for colon
cancer. I don’t know if the Flintstones soaked the idea in us that
cavemen thrived on large amounts of meat. Interestingly they ate dinosaur steaks,
but had a dinosaur pet. The Flintstones
depicted concepts of a modern omnivore society (as part of the urban troglodytes)
that eats one species and keeps the other as pets [2]. The step from omnivore
to vegan or vegetarian is an ethical step. You can argue down to a little meat
with health reasons, but not beyond. The German concept of Vollwertkost (whole food would be the best of inadequate
translations) is allowing some meat though not advocating meat.
Here are
a few of the topics to come in the future:
01.
Sugar, artificial sweeteners (ha!) and reading ingredient lists
02. Raw
or not so raw
03. Starches
04.
Glycemic index
05.
Fruits, berries
06. More
veggies
07. The
protein issue
08. Omega
fatty acids
09. More
nuts and seeds, but not too much
10. Oats
and bread
11. Dark
green leafy vegetables
12. Salt,
necessary, but deadly as SALT
13. Herbs
Now that
you know that you are an urban troglodyte, where would you start? Start by
leaving out any drink that contains sugar or artificial sweeteners. Green tea,
oolong teas, herbal teas are great without sugar. Water with a little lemon,
lime, or strawberry makes great drinks.
Change
slowly with everything that follows.
Links:
.
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