Eating with the Seasons
Staying healthy by keeping in touch with nature's cycles
September / October 2003
Karen Olson Utne magazine
Fresh spring lettuce, succulent fruits in summer, autumn's
squash and wild rice, root vegetables in winter. Eating fresh
seasonal produce not only is delicious, it is a good way to connect
with the rhythms of the natural world. And that, according to Dr.
Elson Haas, founder and director of the Preventive Medical Center
in San Rafael, California, is essential to good health.
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'Your well-being depends upon understanding and integrating your
own cycles with those of nature,' Haas writes in his newly reissued
book Staying Healthy with the Seasons (Celestial
Arts). Originally published in 1981, this classic was one of the
first books to integrate Eastern healing traditions with modern
Western medicine and helped shape today's burgeoning field of
integrative medicine. Haas considers health through the lens of the
five seasons (including late summer) and the Chinese Five Element
theory, which holds that all energy and substance relate to fire,
earth, metal (or air), water, or wood. In the human body, he
explains, each element is important for specific body organs,
'which in turn become especially vulnerable with each new
season.'
Autumn, the season of the large intestine and the lungs, is the
time for concentrating on elimination and cold prevention, as well
as building up for winter with proteins, grains, vegetables, nuts,
and seeds. Winter's emphasis on the kidney and bladder requires
attention to reproductive processes and the warming nutrition of
fish, cooked foods, and beans. Spring's dietary emphasis is on
citrus, greens, and herb teas because this is the season of the
liver and it is all about cleansing. In summer, the season of the
heart, it's time to focus on exercise and eating cooling foods like
salads, fruits, and liquids. Detoxifying is the core of Haas'
approach. 'Most illnesses are a result of excess toxins in the
body,' he writes. 'Healing is the elimination or cleansing of these
toxins, and then achieving a balance of intake and output.' Unlike
fasting, which is defined as water intake only, cleansing is done
by drinking only fruit and vegetable juices -- eating no solid
foods -- for five to ten days or longer.