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Casey Damron, DVM - Integrative Medicine, Veterinary Herbalist, Holistic Surgeon

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Food Therapy


Image for Food Therapy for Pets at White Oak Animal Hospital in Fairview TN

The Energetics of Food

Hippocrates once said: “Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food.”

In today’s world of fast food, processed food, and modern pharmaceuticals, the idea of food therapy has been lost and forgotten.

Long ago, in ancient cultures, this concept of food as medicine and medicine as food was important not only for survival but also for health.

Ancient cultures discovered that foods had very predictable physiologic and metabolic effects on the body.

This is when the theory of food energetics originated.

Food Therapy: Warming vs Cooling

Food Energetics is not a Western concept.

In Eastern cultures, each naturally occurring source of food such as meats, plants, nuts, and fruits has an innate energetic quality—either warming, cooling, or neutral.

Although it may seem confusing, the designations of warming, cooling, and neutral in relation to “Food Energetics” have nothing to do with temperature.

Warming, cooling and neutral in relation to “Food Energetics” denotes how each food affects the physiology and metabolism of the animal after consumption.

Warming foods tend to increase the metabolism and get the energy flowing, whereas cooling foods tend to calm the body and absorb some of the excess heat the body produces.

You can easily recognize the predictable effects in our everyday diets.

For instance, a habanero pepper heats your body, gets your blood pumping, and makes you sweat.

A banana cools the body and regulates heat.

We frequently eat foods according to the seasons such as warming chili (chili powder is energetically warming) in the winter and cooling watermelon in the summer.

The practice of food energetics combines two ancient eastern medicine philosophies:

  • The Principles of Yin and Yang
  • The Five-Element Theory

The Yin & Yang of the World

The Yin Yang SymbolThe yin/yang theory describes how every naturally occurring event has equal and opposite forces in nature.

These include: hot/cold, light/dark, day/night, weak/strong, soft/hard, dry/moist, man/woman etc.

One force cannot exist without the other and often times one force is the origin for the other.

These forces are in constant motion, conflict and struggle.

The ultimate goal is balance between each opposing force.

All foods (ingredients) have this yin/yang principle in the form of cooling, warming or neutral/balanced effect upon the body.

The Five Elements

The 5 Element Chart used for pet food

The Five Element Theory embodies the five major organs of the body. And, how each food affects one or more of these organs.

The five major organs of the body are the heart, spleen, lung, kidney, and liver.

These organs interact with one another in various ways.

The foods we eat can help promote one or more of these major organs and how they perform in the body.

A simple example of this principle in use would be a person with heart disease would eat beef heart or a person with irritable bowel syndrome would eat beef tripe.

These foods are not commonly eaten in western cultures but have been a staple in Eastern culture diets for thousands of years.

Old Time Remedies

Many of our old tried and true remedies our grandparents taught us to utilize these food energetic concepts.photo of lemon and honey used for page "Food Therapy"

For example, a common home remedy for a sore throat is lemon with honey. Lemon and honey lozenges are even available at most local drug stores.

In Western cultures, we think of lemon as being acidic and may kill bacteria. At the same time, honey has well-known antibacterial and antiviral properties.

However, according to Eastern medical theories of Food Therapy, honey and lemon elixir is a cooling mixture to counteract heat generated in the throat by an infection.

Another example would be apples or apple juice to relieve constipation.

In Eastern medicine, Apples for Dog Nutritionapples increase the energy flow of the body.

The energy flow of the intestines is stimulated and thus the constipation is relieved.

Isn’t it interesting how Grandma’s old-time cures fall right in line with Eastern food energetics?

It is within individual food energetics, that we are able to utilize their collective therapeutic benefits.

Using “Food Energetics” as our guiding principle, PET | TAO formulates diets with unique ingredients designed specifically to keep the body in harmony or return the body to harmony in the presence of disease.

Do you think Eastern Food Therapy might help your pet?

Schedule an Appointment With Dr. Damron

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Casey Damron, DVM - Holistic Vet - Fairview, TN

Casey Damron, DVM , CVA 

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