There is a lot confusion regarding the consumption of salt. We
have heard plenty of times that salt is no good for our health and there are
people that take pride in not using salt at all. Probable this confusion has to
do with both the quality and the quantity of what we consume.
Unrefined sea salt has been a source of life and health from
the beginning of times. It was considered so precious that people were paid in
salt- hence the word salary. It is simply the result of the evaporation of
seawater. Its composition is almost up to a 90% chloride and sodium, the rest
being sulfate, magnesium, calcium and potassium also elements of extraordinary
qualitative importance.
But this excellent
ally to our health can become poison if refined and processed with chemicals
and additives. Commercial sea salts available on the market today might vary in
their chemical composition, but none has the same composition and proportion of
elements found in sea water. Common refined table salt is 99,99% sodium
chloride plus added iodine and dextrose (a kind of sugar). So we should take
only unrefined sea salt and avoid the refined
, iodized one.
Another thing to bear in mind is that we have to use salt in
cooking, never raw and that we can add the salt to our recipes using shoyu or
tamari (see my blog on shoyu and tamari http://www.macrobioticscyprus.com/uncategorized/soy-sauce-shoyu-or-tamari/) , which also need to be cooked.
About the quantity, about half tea spoon a day is
sufficient. We need to take salt because it contributes to a good drainage of
toxins, allows life energy to flow and so boosts our vitality, improves our
sexuality, favors concentration and stimulates digestion among other benefits.
However, an excess of salt provokes stagnation of our life energy which
manifests in hardening and contraction of the blood vessels, premature white
hair, pain in the knees and kidneys, menstrual cramps, dry skin, liquid
retention, hypertension, impatience, short temper, tension and mental rigidity.
Salt? Yes, unrefined and in moderation.
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