Your body is always flushing out toxins, no matter what your diet is, but when you abstain from meat, dairy, refined sugar, processed foods, gluten, caffeine, alcohol, and other common allergens and intolerances, you are simply supporting that natural system. Consequently, your body will probably unload a lot more toxins during a cleanse. Detox symptoms usually only last for a few days to a week, so if you are experiencing detox symptoms for longer than that, you should talk with your doctor and make adjustments to your diet. Typical detox symptoms include but are not limited to: sweating, bad breath, headaches/body aches, gas/bloating, constipation/diarrhea, fatigue, brain fog, intense craving, breakouts. If you feel excessively dizzy, weak, or nauseous, that’s a sign that a) You aren’t doing your cleanse right, b) You need to make adjustments or adaptations to your cleanse, or c) You just need to stop cleansing.
Plan Ahead Carefully
If you’ve never done a cleanse before, or if you struggle with them, have a game plan and start out easy. One way to ease your way into a cleanse is to go mostly raw vegan but allow yourself some rice and cooked vegetables for the first week. Then you can transition to all raw the next week, and if you want, try a juice fast the third week. Some people prefer to do a raw day, or a juice day, once a week, and then slowly build up to a whole week. Whatever you do, make sure it’s something achievable and challenging, but not intimidating. When you plan out your cleanse, make sure your grocery list reflects your plans. Pick out meals ahead of time, with lots of variation, and shop for what you’ll need. This saves money, time, and frustration. If you’re going to be out all day, make sure you bring juices in a big thermos or food in a little cooler in your car.
Listen to Your Body
Your body is unique. We’re all special snowflakes. So what works for me may not necessarily work for you. If you need to lightly steam your veggies before you eat them, you don’t fail at cleansing. That’s fine. If you find yourself feeling too faint no matter how much juice you drink, then go have a salad. Take care of yourself. This whole venture is about feeling better, right? And ideally, it should be fun. If you love experimenting in the kitchen, then take that creative energy to your cleanse. There are plenty of recipes to work from that are complex, diverse, and nutritious. Make them pretty, share your favorite recipes with loved ones, blow up Instagram with your deep purple berry smoothies.
Drink Enough Fluids
Even though many foods are water-rich, you still need to drink a lot of fluids. . If your detox symptoms include diarrhea, or your cleanse involves colonics or enemas, you have to be extra diligent with your water and juice intake. My favorite way to do this is every night before bed I fill a two-liter glass bottle with filtered water, some fresh fruit, and fresh herbs, and then pop it in the fridge. When I wake up, I have lovely infused water to drink throughout the day. It’s low-calorie, delicious, and healthy. Experiment with cucumber, lemon, and mint; orange, strawberry, and basil; watermelon, mint, and lime; blackberry, rosemary, and peach...
Don’t Starve Yourself
The point of a cleanse isn’t starving, unless you’re doing a water fast, but I’m not your girl for that biz. If you’re doing a raw food cleanse, make those breakfast smoothies substantial and those salads full of veggies and garnished with seeds, olives, or healthy dressing. If you’re doing a juice fast, you need to drink a lot of juice. Think four or five juices a day plus water as needed. That’s three juice-meals and two juice-snacks. Even if one of your cleanse-goals is to lose weight, you still need to consume enough calories to function. You need energy to weather the detox symptoms and to keep your metabolism ticking over. If your body thinks you’re starving, it will hold onto those calories, and you will cling to those monster peanut-butter-pancake-banana-split-sundae cravings. Ideally, you should feel light but satiated. Give yourself indulgences, like organic lychee fruits, durian fruit, or sweet dark cherries. Make sure every day that you eat something you love. Make it a priority to come up with juices or meals that you enjoy making and eating.
Don’t Overdo it on the Exercise
New cleansers tend to either exercise too much or too little. Ideally, every day you should do twenty minutes to one hour of light exercise daily. You should break a sweat, not drown in sweat. Think brisk walks, yoga (probably not hot yoga), bouncing on a trampoline or rebounder, light weights, nothing too extreme. If you’re a serious runner and your body is used to logging long miles every day, you don’t have to abstain. Just run half what you would normally run, and if you’re not feeling right, take it down to a walk. Light exercise will help your energy, digestion, mood, and detox process, and it will clear your head.
Don’t Rely on Supplements
While many raw foodists insist that you can get everything you need from a raw vegan diet, that’s just not true for all people, and in any case, soil quality has changed over the years and much of our produce isn’t all it should be as far as vitamins and minerals go. Some people benefit a lot from taking a multivitamin with a good amount of vitamin B. Also, there are supplements that can aid your detox process, particularly liver and colon function. My favorites come highly recommended by Ndoema, a juice-cleanse superstar: bentonite, psyllium husks, and cascara sagrada. Ask your doctor if these are safe for you, and if there are any supplements you may need specifically.
Scrap the All-or-Nothing Attitude
Ok, so you cracked and ate a grape, a potato, a granola bar, a doughnut, a cheeseburger… who cares? Seriously. Who gives a flying chickadee spit? Many people tend to see their slip-ups as absolute failures and throw in the towel then and there with varying degrees of excess. When my husband slips up during a cleanse, he tends to just say, “Ah, well, feck it. I’m going to eat German chocolate all day, or all weekend, or all week….” This attitude is both unnecessary and extremely contagious. I’ve joined him in this excessive self-punishing/self-indulgent outburst many times. If you found that you’ve eaten something not on your cleanse-agenda, just forgive yourself, and make a healthier choice for your next meal. Forget about it.
Avoid Isolating Yourself
If you’re on a cleanse, your impulse might be to isolate yourself in order to keep yourself from temptation. While the impulse is totally understandable, this is not healthy and it makes the cleanse a lot harder to manage emotionally. But I get it. I don’t care what anyone says, it is not as fun going to a restaurant and ordering a plain garden salad, dealing the server’s judgey-face situation, and pretending that you really don’t want to slap your friends’ fancy cheese plate into your mouth. Instead, look to your friends for support — tell them what you’re up to and why, and invite them to do non-maddening activities with you if you can’t deal with lunch and dinner dates. Or if your friends are adventurous foodies, you can always try out a raw vegan restaurant with them if your town or city has one, or you can invite them over for a juice-fest or raw vegan soiree. If you have a partner who isn’t cleansing with you and you really can’t watch him or her eat German chocolate in front of you, nicely ask them to keep their chocolate exploits a secret. I really like the camaraderie of doing cleanses with friends, roommates, and/or my partner, but even if you’re going solo on your cleanse, it’s always nice to ask a supportive friend if you can talk juice with them from time to time. Cleanses are much easier to do with a community.
Employ Alternative Cleansing Practices
When you detox, your body needs all the help it can get to clear the stuff out of you. For your sinuses, try using a neti pot to flush out your nasal passages with sea salt and warm distilled water — it’s an ancient Ayurvedic technique. Make sure you use it safely, though. For removing toxins from your mouth and tongue, you can try oil pulling first thing in the morning, another Ayurvedic technique to flush out the toxins in your mouth. For your skin, try dry brushing every day. It stimulates your lymphatic system and it exfoliates like crazy. To draw out impurities, use green clay masques.For your colon, some juice fasters and raw foodists absolutely swear by regular enemas and colonics. They help to flush out old toxins that might be stuck in the digestive tract, and it’s particularly great if your cleanse is messing up your digestion. Check with your doctor if these practices are safe for you.
Plan Ahead Carefully
If you’ve never done a cleanse before, or if you struggle with them, have a game plan and start out easy. One way to ease your way into a cleanse is to go mostly raw vegan but allow yourself some rice and cooked vegetables for the first week. Then you can transition to all raw the next week, and if you want, try a juice fast the third week. Some people prefer to do a raw day, or a juice day, once a week, and then slowly build up to a whole week. Whatever you do, make sure it’s something achievable and challenging, but not intimidating. When you plan out your cleanse, make sure your grocery list reflects your plans. Pick out meals ahead of time, with lots of variation, and shop for what you’ll need. This saves money, time, and frustration. If you’re going to be out all day, make sure you bring juices in a big thermos or food in a little cooler in your car.
Listen to Your Body
Your body is unique. We’re all special snowflakes. So what works for me may not necessarily work for you. If you need to lightly steam your veggies before you eat them, you don’t fail at cleansing. That’s fine. If you find yourself feeling too faint no matter how much juice you drink, then go have a salad. Take care of yourself. This whole venture is about feeling better, right? And ideally, it should be fun. If you love experimenting in the kitchen, then take that creative energy to your cleanse. There are plenty of recipes to work from that are complex, diverse, and nutritious. Make them pretty, share your favorite recipes with loved ones, blow up Instagram with your deep purple berry smoothies.
Drink Enough Fluids
Even though many foods are water-rich, you still need to drink a lot of fluids. . If your detox symptoms include diarrhea, or your cleanse involves colonics or enemas, you have to be extra diligent with your water and juice intake. My favorite way to do this is every night before bed I fill a two-liter glass bottle with filtered water, some fresh fruit, and fresh herbs, and then pop it in the fridge. When I wake up, I have lovely infused water to drink throughout the day. It’s low-calorie, delicious, and healthy. Experiment with cucumber, lemon, and mint; orange, strawberry, and basil; watermelon, mint, and lime; blackberry, rosemary, and peach...
Don’t Starve Yourself
The point of a cleanse isn’t starving, unless you’re doing a water fast, but I’m not your girl for that biz. If you’re doing a raw food cleanse, make those breakfast smoothies substantial and those salads full of veggies and garnished with seeds, olives, or healthy dressing. If you’re doing a juice fast, you need to drink a lot of juice. Think four or five juices a day plus water as needed. That’s three juice-meals and two juice-snacks. Even if one of your cleanse-goals is to lose weight, you still need to consume enough calories to function. You need energy to weather the detox symptoms and to keep your metabolism ticking over. If your body thinks you’re starving, it will hold onto those calories, and you will cling to those monster peanut-butter-pancake-banana-split-sundae cravings. Ideally, you should feel light but satiated. Give yourself indulgences, like organic lychee fruits, durian fruit, or sweet dark cherries. Make sure every day that you eat something you love. Make it a priority to come up with juices or meals that you enjoy making and eating.
Don’t Overdo it on the Exercise
New cleansers tend to either exercise too much or too little. Ideally, every day you should do twenty minutes to one hour of light exercise daily. You should break a sweat, not drown in sweat. Think brisk walks, yoga (probably not hot yoga), bouncing on a trampoline or rebounder, light weights, nothing too extreme. If you’re a serious runner and your body is used to logging long miles every day, you don’t have to abstain. Just run half what you would normally run, and if you’re not feeling right, take it down to a walk. Light exercise will help your energy, digestion, mood, and detox process, and it will clear your head.
Don’t Rely on Supplements
While many raw foodists insist that you can get everything you need from a raw vegan diet, that’s just not true for all people, and in any case, soil quality has changed over the years and much of our produce isn’t all it should be as far as vitamins and minerals go. Some people benefit a lot from taking a multivitamin with a good amount of vitamin B. Also, there are supplements that can aid your detox process, particularly liver and colon function. My favorites come highly recommended by Ndoema, a juice-cleanse superstar: bentonite, psyllium husks, and cascara sagrada. Ask your doctor if these are safe for you, and if there are any supplements you may need specifically.
Scrap the All-or-Nothing Attitude
Ok, so you cracked and ate a grape, a potato, a granola bar, a doughnut, a cheeseburger… who cares? Seriously. Who gives a flying chickadee spit? Many people tend to see their slip-ups as absolute failures and throw in the towel then and there with varying degrees of excess. When my husband slips up during a cleanse, he tends to just say, “Ah, well, feck it. I’m going to eat German chocolate all day, or all weekend, or all week….” This attitude is both unnecessary and extremely contagious. I’ve joined him in this excessive self-punishing/self-indulgent outburst many times. If you found that you’ve eaten something not on your cleanse-agenda, just forgive yourself, and make a healthier choice for your next meal. Forget about it.
Avoid Isolating Yourself
If you’re on a cleanse, your impulse might be to isolate yourself in order to keep yourself from temptation. While the impulse is totally understandable, this is not healthy and it makes the cleanse a lot harder to manage emotionally. But I get it. I don’t care what anyone says, it is not as fun going to a restaurant and ordering a plain garden salad, dealing the server’s judgey-face situation, and pretending that you really don’t want to slap your friends’ fancy cheese plate into your mouth. Instead, look to your friends for support — tell them what you’re up to and why, and invite them to do non-maddening activities with you if you can’t deal with lunch and dinner dates. Or if your friends are adventurous foodies, you can always try out a raw vegan restaurant with them if your town or city has one, or you can invite them over for a juice-fest or raw vegan soiree. If you have a partner who isn’t cleansing with you and you really can’t watch him or her eat German chocolate in front of you, nicely ask them to keep their chocolate exploits a secret. I really like the camaraderie of doing cleanses with friends, roommates, and/or my partner, but even if you’re going solo on your cleanse, it’s always nice to ask a supportive friend if you can talk juice with them from time to time. Cleanses are much easier to do with a community.
Employ Alternative Cleansing Practices
When you detox, your body needs all the help it can get to clear the stuff out of you. For your sinuses, try using a neti pot to flush out your nasal passages with sea salt and warm distilled water — it’s an ancient Ayurvedic technique. Make sure you use it safely, though. For removing toxins from your mouth and tongue, you can try oil pulling first thing in the morning, another Ayurvedic technique to flush out the toxins in your mouth. For your skin, try dry brushing every day. It stimulates your lymphatic system and it exfoliates like crazy. To draw out impurities, use green clay masques.For your colon, some juice fasters and raw foodists absolutely swear by regular enemas and colonics. They help to flush out old toxins that might be stuck in the digestive tract, and it’s particularly great if your cleanse is messing up your digestion. Check with your doctor if these practices are safe for you.
No comments:
Post a Comment