For instance, here is one online journal where someone had terrific success on GAPS and moved through the intro in about 19 days...
http://gnowfglins.com/2012/07/13/our-ex ... ntro-diet/
Be sure to notice the reduction is skin symptoms in her journal.
Some people with major digestive issues (diarrhea, bloating, etc) can take a few months before they graduate to full GAPS. Basically you stay on GAPS intro until you can tolerate items on Full GAPS (via physical skin tests, digestion observation, etc).
If that's still confusing, here's a good resource that walks you through the steps...
http://theliberatedkitchenpdx.com/basic ... resources/
Perhaps the greatest feature of the GAPS intro diet isn't so much what's in it, but what isn't in it. In other words, we know that bone broth is "healing," but at the same time you're eliminating certain foods to starve out bad bacteria and eliminating foods that might irritate the lining of the gut. So, it's really three-pronged approach.
I definitely see your point, and you might be 100% right. But I'm not entirely sure that mixing together a synthetic soup of supplements would give you a tasty bone broth. Unless it tasted exactly the same, one would have to assume that they were somehow different in some unknown way (co-factors, flavors, additives etc). I really don't know.MachineGhost wrote:I'm still wondering if bone broth is just isn't the whole food extreme-purist, suboptimal approach to getting at what is really need. Why wouldn't adding powdered gelatin to some beef broth not have most of the same gut healing effect?
Here would be my questions... Don't supplements have unlisted things in them (additives, stearates, acids, oils) that allow them to move through machines that could possibly irritate the gut? Don't supplements go through a process (heating, dry-freezing, etc) that could degrade the bioavailability of nutrients or co-factors? I don't know the answer to those questions, but I wonder if the supplemental version would be as pure, soothing or as bioavailable as the bone broth. I just don't know.
Let's keep in mind that bone broth has been historically used to heal guts for centuries. And while you may have been eating gut healing supplements for years, the very fact that you have high inflammatory responses to certain foods suggests that your gut is most likely still inflamed and perhaps "leaking" toxins into your bloodstream — and therefore we might ascertain that your gut still needs some kind of healing. Again, this speaks to Hippocrates as well as Stokes/Pillsbury's gut-skin hypothesis.
So, here's a speculative theory, MG...
Isn't there a chance that something in one of your 35 supplements is irritating the lining of your stomach? Or could it be the total combined level of the additives in all your supplements that are irritating the lining of the stomach? If so, then a "whole food extreme-purist" approach might actually give your gut a chance to heal. I'm just speculating, but I can't help but wonder if there's a good scientific reason why a "whole food extreme-purist" approach might be ideal here.
You could certainly recreate a lot of a whole foods diet with supplements, but I'm fairly certain you'd be eating a lot of pill/powder/additive material as well.
I'm wiling to guess that your inflammatory response predates your supplement usage (I seem to remember you saying that this all started around puberty). But, if you've spent the past few years trying to alleviate your symptoms with supplements, it might just be that those supplements aren't giving your gut a chance to heal.
My theory is purely speculative, but I only bring it up as an explainable reason why a whole foods approach might work better (i.e. our stomachs evolved to eat foods, not supplement additives).