Category: Uncategorized

  • When "Sorry" Doesn’t Help

    A Commentary By Dr. Myatt

    When I was a child, I would occasionally do something I wasn’t supposed to. ("Oh, no, NOT Dr. Myatt!" I can hear you thinking :-)) Sometimes when I would apologize, my dad would say "Sorry doesn’t help." Like the time I deliberately dropped one of my mom’s antique bowls on the lawn to see if it would break (I didn’t think it would). It did. I was confused when dad would say "Sorry doesn’t help," because I thought that "sorry" was ALWAYS the "cure" for wrongdoing. Now that I’m older (O.K., MUCH older), I understand what he meant.

    For all the apologies and "true confessions" I hear in practice, you’d think I was a priest instead of a doctor.

    " Oh, Doctor Myatt, I just HAD to eat that food over the holidays. My parents (or children, friends, great-aunt Millie) would have been SO disappointed if I didn’t eat that special cake they baked." (Yeah, right, like they don’t know you’re a type I diabetic with a kidney transplant).

    " I felt sorry for myself so I’ve been eating the wrong foods. Don’t get mad at me." (I’m not mad — not even angry — with you. Sick people keep me in business).

    " I just can’t give up carbohydrates. I’ve got to have my fruit every day." (Suit yourself. I guess you won’t be giving up your high triglyceride or blood sugar levels then, either).

    " I’m sorry. I haven’t taken my supplements like you told me to. That between-meal dose is just so hard to remember." (Gosh, seems like every time you practically cough up a lung you’d remember that you’re supposed to take bromelain for your chest congestion).

    " I’m too busy to take my supplements four times a day. You just don’t understand." (You’re right; I’m not busy. I sit at home all day and listen to "true confessions").

    I forgive you, each and every one, for falling off the diet wagon, failing to get sufficient sleep or exercise, not taking your supplements. I forgive you for eating junk food, smoking, skipping breakfast and not practicing sensible stress reduction habits. In fact, I can forgive you indefinitely. The problem is, MY forgiveness doesn’t help you, and all the "sorry" in the world doesn’t either. Your body is generous, but not nearly so much as I am.

    Would you apologize to your car if you let it run out of gas? And if you did, would that help? Not one bit. You’d still have to put gas in the tank to get it going again. Fortunately, running out of gas won’t ruin your car, just like skipping a meal or one night’s good sleep won’t ruin your body. But what if you run out of oil in your car? The oil lubricates the bearings and cylinder walls so the pistons slide up and down. Running out of oil while driving is almost always fatal to the engine. The motor seizes and you are sunk. Adding oil at this point doesn’t help. Neither does saying "I’m sorry" to your car for failing to add oil. Past a "point of no return" like this, sorry doesn’t help.

    Your physical body needs what it needs: nutrients, air, water, sleep, sunshine. If you miss out on any of these for too long, you will feel the inevitable effects. An occasional "running out of gas," like skipping your supplements for a day or two, or blowing your healthy diet once in a while, won’t "make or break" you. The problem is, many people are breaking the "health rules" far more than this. Lack of nutrients, exercise, sleep and healthy food has negative effects on the body that are cumulative. Although the body can be quite forgiving when we finally get around to giving it the "basics" that it needs, we still endure the effects of our negligence. Sometimes, we pass the point of no return— like running out of oil while driving— and we can’t reclaim health simply by "being good" and being sorry.

    It’s not too late to quite smoking after you have lung cancer. Studies show that this measure will still prolong your survival time. But you WILL almost certainly die from lung cancer, which is still largely incurable at this time. Sorry won’t help.

    Heart disease can be greatly aided and often completely reversed by corrective diet, exercise and nutritional supplementation. It’s never too late to help your heart. The problem is that many people don’t get a chance to make amends. Fifty percent of first heart attacks are also last heart attacks, if you get my drift. Sorry doesn’t help.

    A lifetime of insufficient calcium and magnesium can lead to bone mineral loss— osteoporosis. Although bone mineral density can be recouped with proper diet, exercise and natural hormone replacement therapy, many people don’t discover osteoporosis until they’ve broken a hip. If you survive a serious fracture and live to tell about it, corrective measures will help. The problem is, more women die from the health hazards of hip fracture than from breast cancer. A lifetime of nutrient deficiencies can’t always be made up for, and sorry doesn’t help.

    Numerous studies document the health benefits of healthful living and good nutrition when done consistently over time. Long-standing intake of calcium decreases the risk of colon cancer and osteoporosis. Adequate intake of B6, B12 and folic acid prevent heart disease, depression and dementia. A lifetime of small but consistent exercise greatly reduces the risk of heart disease and many types of cancer. And please keep in mind this doesn’t mean you need to be a saint. It’s what you do 80% of the time, not what you do 20% of the time, that will determine your long-range health and longevity.

    Think about it. Are you eating well, following a nutritionally complete dietary supplement program, getting regular exercise even if modest in amount (10 minutes per day will make a difference), getting adequate sleep and breathing deep of some good air? I’ll forgive you until the cows come home if you’re not doing these things, but your body, which doesn’t understand forgiveness quite like I do, may be another matter. Make those positive changes on a regular basis today, while you still have the opportunity to maintain or reclaim good health.

    Remember, after the engine seizes, sorry doesn’t help.

  • The Drug Pushers in Your Neighborhood

    The latest Drug Pushing targets our children…

    No, it’s not meth, or crack cocaine, or marijuana – these drugs are far more insidious and worrisome. You see, these drugs are being pushed onto our children with the blessings of our own government!

    That’s right – these drug pushers are not sleazy, violent underworld characters or drugged up gangbangers – no, these are legal, licensed, tax-paying, fee-paying corporations that are doing everything in their power to convince ever-more Americans that they should, they must use these toxic chemical concoctions. They have (like any smart drug pusher) developed the "connections" that they need to ensure that they can operate with impunity: the cocaine drug lord has the local cops "in his pocket" to keep him safe. The drug companies have politicians – senators, representatives, bureaucrats, lobbyists, judges, lawyers, doctors – that have been bought and paid for and can be depended on to help quell any opposition to the agenda of "drugs for everyone" and ensure that the legal climate favors the use of drugs over any other therapy – such as natural, herbal remedies or even proper diet and simple exercise.

    No doubt you have seen the recent headlines in nearly every media outlet – the American Academy of Pediatrics has recommended that children as young as age eight be considered as fair game for a life-long prescription of statin drugs. All they have to do is be a bit overweight, or demonstrate a raise blood pressure, or show a blood sugar test that indicates they might be at risk for developing diabetes, and WHAM! – out comes the prescription pad and BAM! – little Johnny is put on kiddie-statins, and THANK YOU MA’AM! – says Big Pharma as they watch the profits roll in…

    No matter that most of today’s kids are not overweight because of a statin deficiency, but because of their sedentary lives and miserable diets of junk and sugar. All that sugar and inactivity is certainly raising their little blood pressures and they are undoubtedly showing high blood sugars on lab test. But it’s not profitable to do anything about that – and besides, that would cut into the profits of the giant Soft Drink Industry and Junk Food Industry – where it is profitable to use that as an justification to push a drug on them.

    These are drugs that:

    1. Hopefully won’t cripple or kill them with it’s side effects (rhabdomyolysis can be lethal – remember, the heart is a muscle!)
    2. Hopefully won’t stupefy them in these critical growing years (cholesterol is a vital ingredient for the formation of brain and nerve tissue and of the neurotransmitters that control thought, mood, and emotion)
    3. Certainly won’t do anything about the terrible diet and near-total couch-potato inactivity of so many of today’s kids.

    So, doctors are now being advised to start "screening" children as young a 2 years, prescribing statins as young as 8 years, and following the bouncing ball as Big Pharma, the AMA, and the AAP scheme to lower the "acceptable" cholesterol levels to ever-more dangerous levels. That’s right, as cholesterol levels drop, risks of hemorrhagic stroke (the kind that doesn’t respond to those "miraculous" clot-busting drugs) and other medical emergencies rise! (to say nothing of developmental disorders that we will discover as we deprive growing kids of an essential nutrient!)

    All this will do is perpetuate the belief that our lives must be modulated and controlled through the ingestion of an appropriate (according to Big Pharma) "Pill For Every Ill" from cradle to grave – that we have no ability to control our own circumstance – that we simply are not capable of pushing ourselves away from potato chips or soda pop, and that it is not possible for us to increase our physical activity in any meaningful way.

    To be fair, this will do one very important thing: it will ensure the continued decline of the health of America, and will guarantee the profit picture of Big Pharma for generations to come. And doesn’t that make it all worthwhile?

    Pssst! Wanna try some of these pretty pills little girl?

  • Happy Independence Day To All!

    It was with immense pride and pleasure that I climbed the steps to raise this flag this morning…

    As I look over the news headlines today I am reminded that "freedom isn’t free" – I hope you will join me in taking a moment to remember all those who have sacrificed to bring to us and to preserve and safeguard the freedoms that make this country great.

    Respectfully,

    Nurse Mark

  • Some days it’s just hard to not take things personally!

    Today was one of those days.

    First, we were notified that despite our best efforts we are the victim of a several hundred dollar fraudulent order. We’ll report it to the police, but it is unlikely to do any good – we are out the money and the products, and worse, there is someone else out there whose credit card was stolen and used to place the order. The person whose stolen card was used will get their money back – we’ll take the hit – that’s the way it works.

    Ouch!

    Then, even though we repeatedly tell people that we cannot provide individualized medical recommendations to someone who is not our patient, and that complicated illnesses like cancer should never be treated as a a Do-It-Yourself project, Dr. Myatt received this letter:

    Hello Dr. Myatt,

    My name is Linda Xxxxxxx, I am a 47 yr. old single mother with a 14 yr. old daughter, and no other family to speak of. Recently, after a routine mammogram, I was diagnosed with Stage II Breast Cancer, and also in a couple lymph nodes in right axilla.

    I am refusing conventional treatment, "the Big 3", slash, poison and burn, so could you please advise me as to what alternative treatment I should try and what supplements to take? DIM, Citrus Pectin, Larch, Essiac Tonic . . . .

    I am on a low-budget, therefore, cannot afford a consult with you, so if you would be so kind as to just let me know what to start taking asap I would greatly appreciate it.

    Thank you and God Bless,
    Linda

    Now, neither Dr. Myatt nor I consider ourselves to be uncaring or unsympathetic – quite the opposite in fact. Dr. Myatt took time out of a busy patient day (during her break, actually)  to send Linda the following response:

    Linda:

    Sorry about your diagnosis.

    Let’s see… you have a potentially life-threatening illness and you want me to "shoot from the hip" with advice without benefit of knowing the many details that make your case different from all other breast cancers? That’s far too dangerous for both of us.

    Since what you are asking for is really "generic advice," please check out this page on my website: http://www.drmyattswellnessclub.com/cancer.htm

    I NEVER recommend that anyone make their treatment a "do it yourself" job. You need to be working with a physician on this.

    I can already see where you’re going, and I warn ALL my cancer patients about it. Once you have a diagnosis of cancer, "everybody is an expert." That means you are going to hear and read on the internet about 1,783 proposed treatments and remedies. And you’ll have no clue as to which of those, or which combination, would be best for you. And that’s how most people get into trouble making cancer treatment a "DIY" project.

    Sorry I can’t be more specific but you really need to have someone review your entire medical history, family history, lifestyle, diet, stress, weight, hormone levels and medical tests in order to make more targeted recommendations.

    Best success with this. Please let me know how things work out for you.

    In Health,
    Dr. Myatt

    So, let’s look at Dr. Myatt’s reply here before we continue:

    She is sorry to hear of this diagnosis. Gosh, I am too – it is a very serious, frightening diagnosis. I feel badly for Linda and for her daughter.

    She summarizes that this woman is asking for specific, individualized advice about the treatment of a life-threatening disease based on the most minimal of information. She correctly suggests that this is dangerous for both doctor and patient. She points Linda toward a very detailed, well-researched page with plenty of generalized recommendations and strategies for dealing with cancer. These recommendations are as detailed as they can be without incurring the ire of the FDA, FTC, or any number of other government groups who would like to suppress this sort of information and without having the benefit of individual and very detailed medical records, history, symptom surveys, lab workups, and more – the sort of information that we have when we are working with someone in a patient / doctor relationship.

    Dr. Myatt then goes on to offer the advice that she routinely offers to her cancer patients: beware, because everyone who knows you, and a lot of people who don’t, will all suddenly become "cancer experts" – your mom will deluge you with newspaper clippings about cutting-edge cancer research, your brother will have sage advice and counsel, your neighbor will know about something that helped his cousin when all else failed, the lady down the street will want to sell you miraculous, health-restoring tropical juices and coral calcium, and the internet will make you crazy with competing claims for cures. Dr. Myatt’s advice? Work with a physician who can help to cut through all the static and snake oil, and don’t try to "Do-It-Yourself".

    She then apologizes for being unable to offer more specific recommendations, and again encourages Linda to work with someone who can make more targeted recommendations. Since Linda has made it clear that she will not spend any money on a consultation with Dr. Myatt or presumably anyone else, she wishes her the best of success in her quest for a cure and leaves the lines of communication open, asking Linda to let her know how things work out.

    That all sounds pretty fair to me; above and beyond the call of duty even – given that Linda made it clear that she would not be consulting Dr. Myatt, but just wanted some very detailed free advice and treatment recommendations for her life-threatening disease.

    I thought nothing more about it – I returned to our case of fraud, and to trying to juggle Dr. Myatt’s schedule to squeeze in a new, emergency consult – yet another person with a nasty diagnosis asking for our help.

    Then Dr. Myatt received this reply from Linda:

    oops, I accidentally hit "send" before finishing . . so anyway, as I was saying,

    the reason I contacted you was because you are a physician . . .

    yet you told me I need to contact a physician.

    You warn against the dangers of trying to "do it yourself" . . .

    yet have a website with supplements and suggestions to aid in the treatment of cancer and other ailments.

    How confusing is that?

    Anyway, I wish you the best of luck in your naturopathy practice, and maybe you can try to be a little nicer to people and not so condescending.

    Let me know how things work out for you.

    Have a Nice Day

    Yikes! Condescending?!? Be nicer to people?!? Where did that come from? Did I miss something in all of this?

    Dr. Myatt just shrugged, and said "I’ll just ignore it, delete it. – It’s ok."

    But it’s NOT ok – not at all! Not to me, anyway.

    A reply like that hurts, Linda. Dr. Myatt has spent long unpaid hours researching and gathering together information, distilling the best of her recommendations to countless patients with similar illnesses, and publishing those recommendations on her website – free of charge, for everyone and anyone to take advantage of and benefit from, and you accuse her of being condescending and not nice because she cannot, and will not, she dare not, attempt to give you detailed, individualized, doctor-patient advice when she knows nothing more about you than a vague diagnosis? SHAME ON YOU!

    Linda, I’m hurt by your comments to Dr. Myatt; we all are here, because every one of us on her team shares her same zeal to help people. We recognize that some people cannot or will not spend the money for a consultation, so we all spend unpa
    id hours providing as much information as we dare in order to help those people.

    I’m hurt, but when you decide to get serious about your illness I hope you’ll call or email me so that I can get you scheduled for a consultation – I know that, as a patient, when you give us the information we need we can certainly help you through this.

    Whew! I sure am glad it’s Friday – I think I’ll go have a beer and hammer on some metal in my little workshop for a while… dull some cutters, make some chips, and relax for a bit…

  • No Matter What It’s Called, Sugar Is Still Sugar!

    Folks, if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck – right?

    It seems that lots of folks have a real hard time understanding that no matter what it is called, sugar is sugar.

    Ron, who asked about what diet to try in a recent letter to us, tapped back in to say that he is going to try to give up the sugars – Bravo! – by using a drink product that contains maltodextrin! Huh? Read on…

    Hey Doc, I started tryin’ to break the sugar habit. And taking BHip. and it has  Maltodextrin, Is is safe…?  BHip is mixed with water and taste great, Better than sodas . What ya think?

    Hey Ron,

    What part of "For a healthful quick energy drink check out Zip-Fizz." were you having trouble with?

    Here is the comparison: bHip ZipFiz
    Sugars 2 gm  0 gm
    Calories 24 10
    Carbohydrates 6 2

    Ron,  maltodextrin is just another name for sugar! Maltodextrin is a sweetener made from starches: potato, corn, rice, wheat – it doesn’t matter. It has exactly the same amount of carbohydrates per 1 tsp serving, 5, and calories per serving, 19, as sugar does.

    As far as the body is concerned, sugar is sugar is sugar – cane juice, corn syrup, fructose, glucose, maltose, cane sugar, beet sugar, maple syrup, honey – they are all sugar! Even if you call them "all natural" or "organic" they are still sugar!

    You are right – anything is better than sodas – but this product still contains sugar!

    Hope this clears up the difference between sugar and sugar and sugar for you!

    Cheers,
    Nurse Mark