Blood Type is a far more important determination of individuality and similarity than race. For example, an African and Caucesian (white) of blood type A could exchange blood or organs and have many of the same aptitudes, digestive functions etc.,- characteristics they would not share with a member of their own race who was a blood type B.
Racial distinctions based on skin colours, ethnic practices, geographical homelands or cultural roots are not a valid way to distinguish peoples.
Mankind has a lot more in common with one another than we may have ever suspected. We are all potentially brothers and sisters in blood.
The story of humankind is a story of survival.
As the early human race moved around and was forced to adapt its diet to changing conditions, the new diet provided adaptations in the digestive tract and the immune system necessary to survive and thrive in each new habitat.
These changes are reflected in the blood types.
Blood Type O: The oldest and most basic blood type, the survivor at the top of the food chain, with a strong immune system, willing and capable of destroying anyone, friend or foe.
Blood type A: The first immigrants, forced by the necessity of migration to adapt to a farming lifestyle and diet. A more cooperative personality able to get along in crowded communities.
Blood B: Adapting to new climates and mingling of populations representing nature’s quest for a more balanced force between the tensions of the mind and the demands of the immune system.
Blood type AB: The delicate offspring, a merger between the tolerant Type A and former barbaric but more balanced Type B.
A single drop of blood contains aeons of genetic memory, passed on from our ancestors. And with this also comes the diets and particular foods each blood type ate. Of course people didn’t move around like they do today and foods did not get shipped around the planet like today either.
So we are, most of us, eating so many different foods along with processed food and foods with chemicals on them (to keep the foods looking good), we have completely lost sight of what foods are beneficial and result in our continued health.
Read “Eat Right For Your Type”, by Dr. Peter D Adamo Naturopath.
Tips:
1) Grab a copy of Eat right for your Type and begin a journey to health and prosperity.
2) Take stock of what you are eating, do you really need to eat as much as you do?
Put some order in your life and cut out foods you know are doing your body no good.
3) Take daily exercises from walking to swimming to cycling to running to badminton to tennis to football to cricket to gym to pilates to Gi gong etc.
4) Come to the Get back health Clinic this week.
