Human antioxidant and immune defenses are plants rooted in the soil
of the bowel contents. The bowel ecosystem is as diverse and delicate as any other in
nature. It interfaces with the outside world on one side and with the blood ecosystem on
the other. The blood ecology, in turn, integrates with liver, kidney and brain ecosystems.
Human health, in essence, is a dynamic ecologic equilibrium among the various body organ
ecosystems.
It is distressing to see little children who live on antibiotics. In so
doing, food and mold allergies that set them up for recurrent infections go unrecognized.
Their delicate bowel ecosystems are battered repeatedly with broad-spectrum antibiotics
that violate their antioxidant defenses. When their oxidative metabolism causes behavior
and learning difficulties, school psychologists promptly label them with hyperactivity and
attention deficit disorders, or refer them to their pediatricians who readily oblige the
psychologists with Ritalin prescriptions.
Many women suffering from severely battered vaginal and urinary
ecosystems are prescribed one course of antibiotics after another. The symptoms caused by
such ecologic disruptions are vigorously suppressed with yet additional doctors. Not
infrequently, they are completely unaware of the true nature of their suffering. I discuss
these subjects at length in the companion volume, RDA: Rats, Drugs and Assumptions.
Attempts to resolve issues of stress with therapies based on the prevailingand
simplisticfight-or-flight notion of stress are bound to fail, and they do.
Similarly, there are important ecologic considerations affecting home
and work environments. I refer readers interested in this subject to the companion volume,
The Canary and Chronic Fatigue.
Since health is ecologic equilibrium, it can only be preserved with
ecologic thinking. Until mainstream physicians learn to think ecologically, people who
suffer chronic stress have no choice but to learn about ecologic balances in the body and
how to preserve them.