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Salt
of the earth
by Martina Watts BA(Hons) Dip ION
Nutritional Therapist
Too
much salt is bad for us, say the Department of Health, and leads
to fluid retention, high blood pressure and heart disease. They
refer, of course, to the refined table salt we use to flavour our
meals as well as the staggering amount routinely added to convenience
foods, bread and even breakfast cereals. Common table salt
has been stripped of its trace minerals, consisting merely
of sodium and chloride. In the UK, the anti-caking agent hexacyanoferrate
2 is added to prevent it from becoming damp, and there is debate
whether such chemicals make it harder for the salt to be utilised
effectively by the body.
Yet left
in its untreated original form, salt is a fundamental requirement
for life. All forms of life evolved from the primal ocean
covering our planet millions of years ago. Since then, sea water
has been evaporating, leaving behind a crystallised salt containing
the 84 minerals and trace elements that are also to be found within
the human body itself.
The nutritional
quality of natural crystal salt contrasts starkly with the impoverished
form of salt we now use for flavouring our food.
Salt
used to be considered more valuable than gold and was believed to
safeguard our health. Our bodily fluids are slightly
salty and similar in composition to sea water. We
require this salty solution to regulate and perform all physiological
functions in the human body. It is present in the amniotic
fluid required by the embryo to survive, and necessary for cellular
maintenance, nerve conduction, digestion, absorption and elimination
of waste products.
Whereas
common table salt is detrimental to human health in excess, whole
crystal salt, found naturally in salt mines, is thought to have
healing properties and increasingly being used by health
professionals to treat a wide range of health problems. A regular
intake of water with a tiny amount of crystal salt, called “sole”
(pronounced solay) is known to stimulate circulation, lower blood
pressure and remove heavy metals from the body.
Natural
crystal salt can be used on food and in cooking instead of processed
salt. Therapeutic uses include sole inhalations
to treat sinus and respiratory conditions, sole eye baths to soothe
irritated eyes, sole wraps for arthritis,
sole baths to aid in detoxification
and sole mud masks for various skin conditions.
Peter
Ferreira, a German biophysicist, is a leading authority of the
subject. His lifelong fascination with water and salt led to research
into the healing benefits of crystal salt as described in his book
“Water & Salt: The Essence of Life”. He explains that crystal
salt differs widely in quality depending on the location found and
warns of inferior copy cat products made from more ‘common' forms
of rock salt. In his research, he refers to a specific crystalline
salt, hand mined in the Himalayan Mountains of Pakistan, which appears
superior to those from other geographical locations. Ferreira has
donated his author's fee to a child aid project in Pakistan, saying:
“We received a wonderful gift from these people. I believe it is
time to return something.”
Handmined Original
Himalayan Crystal Salt and the book “Water & Salt: The Essence
of Life” by P. Ferreira and B. Hendel are available from Best Care
Products Ltd in East Grinstead, Tel. 01342-410303 or visit www.bestcare-uk.com/shop
Martina
Watts BA(Hons) Dip ION is a BANT registered Nutritional Therapist
practising in Brighton, East Sussex, UK.
She
is a Foresight Preconceptual Care Practitioner and an independent
Nutrition Consultant for schools, local government and the NHS.
She
has a particular interest and experience in working with children
and adults with digestive, behavioural and immune problems. In order
to book a consultation, please contact The
Crescent Clinic of Complementary Medicine on Tel. 01273-202221 or
The Dolphin House Clinic on Tel. 01273-324790.
Martina
also works as a freelance journalist and provides nutritional information
to the private and public sector in the form of talks, conferences
and educational material. For more information, please visit www.thehealthbank.co.uk
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