Caveman Diet? Not If You Plan to Live
More Than 30 Years
By Gabe Mirkin, M.D.
Some popular books tell you that because
some prehistoric humans lived on large amounts
of meat and ate no grains, you should do the
same. That's lousy advice.
We do know that humans' nutritional
needs and system of digesting, processing
and using nutrients have not changed significantly
in two million years. We are omnivores
and can get nutrients from plants, animals
or both. The human race has managed to
acquire food and survive on every body
of land on earth except Antartica, and
has adapted to major climate changes.
No single food or group of foods is essential;
humans can get the nutrients they need
from any reasonably varied selection of
plants and/or animals as they are found
in nature.
We know what our ancestors ate by studying
their fossilized feces; as you would expect,
they ate whatever was most available in
their place and climate, and within their
skills. The books that tell you to eat
meat focus on groups who had fire and
domesticated dogs, hunting weapons, and
sparse vegetation - primarily grasses.
These people ate mostly meat, as did later
people in the far north.
But earlier humans, and those living
in more tropical areas, ate huge amounts
of plants plus animals that didn't require
hunting skills: insects, frogs, snakes,
fish, small birds, and scavenged carcasses
of animals killed by other predators.
Many of the prehistoric peoples appear
to have been well-nourished, healthy and
not affected by many of our diseases.
But their normal life-span was 20-35 years.
The diseases and health problems of settled
people, with the advent of agriculture,
came from many sources: crowding, poor
sanitation, higher fertility, reliance
on just a few food crops, famines and
so forth.
The "caveman diet" of the popular
authors, based on meat and those plants
that don't need to be cooked, is unreasonably
limited and unhealthy for people who expect
to live to be 100 or more. Meat from your
supermarket is a far from wild game as
white bread is from pinenuts. It's 30
percent fat, where game is 3 percent fat.
How can they tell you all our problems
come from eating grains and beans, and
then say you should eat animals that have
been fattened on nothing but grains and
beans?
All the foods in North America today
have been transformed from those that
were available to our ancestors: they
are larger, sweeter, fattier and more
abundant. But they still contain the same
nutrients as the ancient wild species.
Most of our diet problems today stem from
eating too much, and from man taking things
away from the foods that are found in
nature - wild or domesticated. (White
flour, white rice, milled corn, sugars,
extracted oils and fats). When you take
away parts of plants and load up just
on the parts that taste good, you lose
nutrients and end up with too many calories.
Here's my proposal for a hunter-gatherer
diet for the 21st century:
Roam around your supermarket and gather
anything you can recognize as part of
a plant. That means you can pick up just
about everything in the produce department.
You'll find seeds in the grains section
(brown rice, wild rice, barley) and dried
beans. Pick some dried fruit, nuts, sunflower
seeds. If you find cans or frozen food
packages that have pictures of just fruits,
vegetables or beans, you can add them
too. Go to the spice section and get herbs
and spice seeds: poppy seeds, sesame seeds,
peppercorns, caraway seeds and the rest.
While you're gathering all these plants,
if any big game runs down the aisle or
flies overhead, you can hunt it down and
add it to your cart.
Dr. Gabe Mirkin has been a radio talk
show host for 25 years and practicing
physician for more than 40 years; he is
board certified in four specialties, including
sports medicine. Read or listen to hundreds
of his fitness and health reports at http://www.DrMirkin.com.
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