Ellen Jaffe Jones - Anna Maria Island, FL
Beating the Genetic Odds
*This is a lovely low fat vegan success story from
http://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2007star/sep/starellen.html
When
I was five years old my aunt died of breast cancer in our home. My
mother and sister also had breast cancer. My mother later died of
Alzheimer’s, but she also had diabetes, osteoporosis, and had had
several open-heart procedures. Both of my sisters have heart
disease, and my sister who hasn’t had cancer has diabetes. In
addition, both of my parents and their parents had diabetes.
Given my history, shock and awe transform my
doctors’ faces when they discover that I am 54 and am on no
medications. All of these diseases, they told me, are genetic and
there is nothing I can do about them. But they are wrong. This is my
story of how I found great health and beat the genetic odds that
were working against me.
In 1981 when I was 28 and working as a TV reporter,
I suffered a life-threatening colon blockage; the fast food of a
fast-paced career had caught up with me. I became so doubled over in
excruciating pain that two of my co-workers had to carry me to the
car and drive me to the emergency room. The doctors said they had
never seen a colon blockage that large in someone so young. They
said I could avoid surgery this time but I would need to be on
medication for the rest of my life (they had to manually remove the
blockage, a pain that was worse than going through natural
childbirth).
I felt I was too young to be on medication for the
rest of my life, so I began reading every book I could find on
fiber, including Don’t Forget Fibre in Your Diet by Denis Burkitt
and Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappe. The relief was
almost immediate. I started out by adding bran to my food and then
slowly revamped my diet completely. I ate an almost completely
plant-based, macrobiotic diet for a year, and when my busy lifestyle
began to overwhelm me, I discovered The McDougall Plan.
During my first pregnancy I was told that I needed
more protein, so I started eating dairy again. When my daughter (who
was breastfed) had screaming colic at six weeks old, and nothing
else worked, I decided to stop the dairy. As a result, the colic
vanished. I also noticed that when I gave up dairy, my sinus issues
resolved (I often couldn’t get through a news story without sniffing
or clearing my throat).
Looking back over the years, my cholesterol numbers
tell me exactly how well I was adhering to a good diet (I saved all
my test records). From 1999 to 2000, my cholesterol climbed from 135
to 203, which reflected my straying: that was the year the Atkins
Diet was in high fashion (for a second time). I foolishly thought
maybe the science had changed; that’s what the news stories were
saying (the only thing that had changed, however, was the marketing
of high-protein diets). I was now working as a financial consultant
for a Wall Street brokerage firm. When I saw that people in the
office were losing lots of weight, I thought to myself, “All these
Wall Street brains couldn’t be wrong, could they?”
|
Blood Lipid Summary (mg/dL) |
|
Year |
LDL |
Total |
HDL |
Timeline of Lifetime |
|
1989 |
78 |
146 |
52 |
|
|
1998 |
87 |
151 |
42 |
|
|
1999 |
74 |
135 |
52 |
Low-fat vegan |
|
2000 |
120 |
203 |
65 |
Atkins |
|
2002 |
108 |
183 |
50 |
|
|
2003 |
95 |
180 |
65 |
Coronary calcification |
|
2004 |
90 |
161 |
56 |
Fibroids |
|
2005 |
84 |
154 |
44 |
Low-fat vegan. No more fish |
|
2007 |
85 |
152 |
53 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
So, I started eating fish again and found myself in
the emergency room for the second time in my life. I was
hemorrhaging with painful fibroid tumors that needed to come out,
said the ER doctors, who were also recommending a hysterectomy and
ovary removal (to stop estrogen production, thereby putting an end
to my menopausal symptoms and hopefully future fibroid growth). At
this point my weight was at its peak: 147 pounds, which was not
pretty on a 5’3” frame. My attitude was to just get it over with,
but when I called my gynecologist that day she said to just sit
tight until she could meet with me.
When we met, she said, “Why don’t you go back to a
low-fat, plant-based diet.” I took her advice, and within a month
all my symptoms (painful fibroids, headaches, symptoms of
fibrocystic breast disease, and even hot flashes) were gone.
Previously, my husband would often remark (as I broke out in profuse
sweating), “You’re flashing again, dear, aren’t you?” He was amazed
that the flashes ended almost overnight and that menopause became a
breeze for me.
This return to a low-fat vegan diet also resulted in
a 25-pound weight loss. I wasn’t trying to lose weight, I was just
trying to keep my uterus. I was never hungry and never counted
calories; just sticking to the McDougall Maximum Weight Loss plan
did it. I ate only sweet potatoes as my main starch, along with lots
of raw and cooked green and yellow vegetables until I reached my
goal weight of 122.
|
Weight
Summary |
|
Date |
Weight |
Timeline of Lifetime |
|
November 1999 |
130 |
Before Atkins |
|
December 2001 |
136 |
During Atkins |
|
June 2003 |
136 |
|
|
June 2004 |
141 |
|
|
March 2005 |
142 |
|
|
June 2005 |
150 |
Begin low-fat vegan return |
|
December 2005 |
131 |
|
|
August 2006 |
137 |
|
|
November 2006 |
129 |
Started running |
|
February 2007 |
122 |
Running and MWL Program |
|
March 2007 |
|
Running injury, limits exercises |
|
August 2007 |
125 |
|
|
|
|
|
I also began running again, but only after I took off enough weight
to decrease the inflammation in my joints, and the pain in my back
and knees. In the past year I have placed 2nd and 3rd in my age
group running in 5K races. I used to run in my twenties and
thirties, but never placed in a race. When I started running again,
about two years ago, my goal was simply to finish, so placing has
been a real thrill.
During the last visit to my gynecologist, she
laughed and said, “Look at your tiny waistline!” I had never before
thought to put “tiny waistline” and me in the same sentence. She
tells her overweight patients who say they have no money to buy
healthy foods, “Either you pay the money to buy fruits and veggies
now or you’ll pay later when disease hospitalizes you.”
Discovering how to beat cancer and other diseases
while maintaining a healthy weight has become the investigative
reporting job of my life. However, one of the saddest things for me
is to see others who suffer so much yet refuse to look at new ideas
that might save their lives. My friends are amazed at how much
weight I’ve lost and how in shape I’ve become. I’m always loaning
out books and being supportive when I can. As for my relatives, they
often tell me their diseases are genetic and are a natural part of
aging. My family warned me of the varicose veins I would succumb to,
but not one has appeared. But I have learned that information about
better health cannot be forced or preached. Listeners have to be
receptive and ready. All I can do is lead my life by example. It is
so true what Dr. McDougall says: People choose a steak over life.
When I hear people say, “But eating that way is difficult,” I wonder
if they realize that having their chest cracked open during surgery
would be far more difficult.
As for my doctors, this is a gradual learning
process for them. I now greet them with, “Hi, I’m the broccoli rep.”
A 300-pound cardiologist I saw last year remarked to me, “You have
the heart of a 21-year-old. That diet and exercise thing is really
paying off!” I now seek out doctors who better understand the
pathways to true health.
In addition to working full-time with my husband in
his media-training business, I also teach free nutrition classes
(through the Cancer Project) at hospitals, community centers, and
condo associations. The class evaluations people write are better
than any paycheck or Emmy. The marketing director of a hospital
where I held classes recently wrote, “We will definitely work
together again. What you are teaching is so critical to our
population.” When you can change lives and improve health through
such simple steps, there is nothing like it. Please take a look at
this story and online video of me talking about the Cancer Project
on Tampa Bay's 10 News on September 10, 2007.
2007 John McDougall All Rights Reserved
McDougall Wellness Center P.O. Box 14039, Santa Rosa, CA 95402
http://www.drmcdougall.com