Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Beautiful South African Child
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Lions, Tigers and Witch Doctors, oh my!
Friday, November 21, 2008
START AT THE BOTTOM
FLAX LIGNAN FACTS
The FDA:
“Flax seed lignans have anti-tumor, anti-mittic, antioxidant and weak estrogenic activity, are
potentially the richest source of phytoestrogens in the human diet and may be linked to a low incidence of breast and colon cancer. Their significant ability to prevent cancer is recognized by the National Cancer Institute. In addition to having anti-cancer properties lignans also have anti-viral, anti-bacterial and anti-fungus properties.” *(Obermeyer W, et al (US Food and Drug Administration, center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, Div. Contaminants Chem., Natural Products Branch), Meeting Of The Federation Of American Societies For Experimental Biology On Experimental Biology March/April, 1993, Faseb J (Fed Am Soc Exp Biol), A863, 1993
The Mayo Clinic:
“Phytoestrogens are naturally occurring compounds that lower circulating estrogens in your body. Flaxseed is particularly high in one phytoestrogen, lignan, which appears to decrease estrogen production and which may inhibit the growth of some breast
cancers.” - The Mayo Clinic http://www.mayoclinic.com/print/breast-cancer-prevention/WO00091/METHOD=print
The American Cancer Society:
“One study of 25 men with prostate cancer found that a low-fat diet along with ground flaxseed reduced serum testosterone, slowed the growth rate of cancer cells, and increased the death rate of cancer cells.”- The American Cancer Society. www.cancer.org/docroot/ETO/content/ETO_5_3X_Flaxseed.asp?sitearea=ETO
You can order flax hull lignans at the AIDS Research & Assitance website: www.aidshivawareness.org or call 817-886-8108
GOOD NEWS: Healthy KIDS (even with AIDS)!
Meet the TREE PEOPLE
There are many groups of rural peoples that live amongst these trees. As a matter of fact, in the several acres of area that our contact works with, there are over 5000 people that live there. They are called "squatters". They don't own the land, but they can't be pushed off it either. They build simple mud huts with dirt floors and no electricity. If you follow the path through the trees you'll find groups of people in little clearings.
I took these photos. The child in the dirty sweater is a typical rural South African child. The woman in the photo isn't the child's mother, but is an aunt who is taking care of him. We had the privilege of praying with this woman.
This lady's brother (the child's father) had died several days before, most likely from AIDS. The picture of the mud hut with the muddy smudges on the windows is something they do when someone has just died. This lady was showing that her brother had just passed.
These are the people that we are wanting to get the flax lignans to. Before our trip, the contacts we were working with had only been giving the flax to orphans. We now gave permission to extend giving the flax into the rural areas, and this lady's area will be one of them. Because more and more people are buying flax hull lignans in the U.S. for their own immunity boosting and health reasons, it is enabling us to donate more and more of the flax lignans to people like this! It is truly exciting!
Reaching the people through spiritual avenues...
The AIDS Pandemic....
I just got back from Piet Retief, South Africa and Swaziland. People keep asking me about my trip and I am finding myself without the words to describe what I've experienced. I actually thought I'd be excited to share what I experienced, however I'm finding that the exact opposite has occurred and I am not wanting to tell anyone about it, because I don't feel that I can adequately describe what I saw. The whole scope of the AIDS pandemic is quite overwhelming.
One of the purposes of the trip was to do some HDTV filming for an infomercial that we're putting together, we accomplished that goal.
The other big goal was for me to see the work that is going on there so that I can communicate that well to others (which I'm still figuring out how to do) as I'm working now with AIDS Research & Assistance Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to help fight the AIDS/HIV pandemic problem in Africa.
The AIDS problem is truly pandemic. 5 years ago in Swaziland, the census showed 1.3 million people. This year's census showed 850,000. People are dying at the rate of thousands a day. To even begin to fix this pandemic problem, we're going to have to combat it on many levels.
Education is only a small slice of the solution. This battle is going to have to be fought in the mind, body and spirit. It's too big to be fought on just one or two planes, as I'll explain in further blogs.