4
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Toxic Superfoods: How Oxalate Overload Is Making You Sick— And How to Get Better
by Sally K. Norton
Sponsored
Synopsis
An eye-opening guide that exposes the toxins lurking within certain leafy greens, sweet potatoes, turmeric, almonds, and other commonly touted superfoods and offers ways to reshape your diet to begin healingYour spinach smoothie might be making you sick. But there's good news: ...
An eye-opening guide that exposes the toxins lurking within certain leafy greens, sweet potatoes, turmeric, almonds, and other commonly touted superfoods and offers ways to reshape your diet to begin healing
Your spinach smoothie might be making you sick. But there's good news: You can safely reverse your load of oxalates –the chemical toxins produced by many plants– and discover vibrant health.
After suffering for decades from chronic joint inflammation and other problems, Sally Norton, MPH, discovered that the culprits –oxalates– were hiding within her healthy, organic vegetarian diet. She now works with clients to safely reverse their oxalate load and shares their surprising stories in this book. Oxalates most famously cause kidney stones, but they are also behind gut problems, chronic pain, joint pain, inflammation, autoimmune conditions, mineral deficiency, sleep disorders, osteoporosis, fatigue, and brain fog.
Modern diets, especially ones that are gluten-free, keto, or plant-heavy, tend to be overloaded with oxalates; in fact, commonly touted nutritional superstars like spinach, sweet potatoes, turmeric, chia seeds, berries, and almonds are especially high in the toxin. Norton believes that most of us would enjoy better lifelong health with less oxalate in our food. Shining light on what might be nothing short of a hidden and mounting epidemic, Toxic Superfoods offers solutions where none have existed before, showing how to identify whether you have a problem and offering a research-backed plan with key supplementation for safely reversing your oxalate load.
Your spinach smoothie might be making you sick. But there's good news: You can safely reverse your load of oxalates –the chemical toxins produced by many plants– and discover vibrant health.
After suffering for decades from chronic joint inflammation and other problems, Sally Norton, MPH, discovered that the culprits –oxalates– were hiding within her healthy, organic vegetarian diet. She now works with clients to safely reverse their oxalate load and shares their surprising stories in this book. Oxalates most famously cause kidney stones, but they are also behind gut problems, chronic pain, joint pain, inflammation, autoimmune conditions, mineral deficiency, sleep disorders, osteoporosis, fatigue, and brain fog.
Modern diets, especially ones that are gluten-free, keto, or plant-heavy, tend to be overloaded with oxalates; in fact, commonly touted nutritional superstars like spinach, sweet potatoes, turmeric, chia seeds, berries, and almonds are especially high in the toxin. Norton believes that most of us would enjoy better lifelong health with less oxalate in our food. Shining light on what might be nothing short of a hidden and mounting epidemic, Toxic Superfoods offers solutions where none have existed before, showing how to identify whether you have a problem and offering a research-backed plan with key supplementation for safely reversing your oxalate load.
You May Also Like
Fearless Watercolor for Beginners: Adventurous Painting Techniques to Get You Started
Sandrine Pelissier
DAHİLER SINIFI:PABLO PICASSO
Sarah Rossi
Buying Online Businesses The Warren Buffett Way: The Value Investing Strategy to Building Wealth with Little Money (Hidden Alpha Investing)
Hyun Kim
The Secret Marriage
Mikayla Davids
Augoustides and Kaplan's Cardiac Anesthesia Review
John G.T. Augoustides MD
Jupiter's Travels: Four Years Around the World on a Triumph
Ted Simon
Memoir Picks
View All
Simply More: A Book for Anyone Who Has Been Told They're Too Much
Cynthia Erivo
One Aladdin Two Lamps
Jeanette Winterson
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
J.D. Vance
That's a Great Question I'd Love to Tell You
Elyse Myers
Actress of a Certain Age: My Twenty-Year Trail to Overnight Success
Jeff Hiller
I Just Wish I Had a Bigger Kitchen: And Other Lies I Think Will Make Me Happy
Kate Strickler