Thursday, September 19, 2013

Mary Gilroy Offers a 'Health Is Simple' Ongoing Seminar at Grace Church


Mary Gilroy of Foxfire, Moore County, N.C., offered free health advice to a group gathered at Grace Church in Southern Pines, N.C., on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2013, for her "Health Is Simple" ongoing seminar.

“If you want real healthcare, you’re going to have to take responsibility,” said Mary, a Grace Church member and a tall, thin former Lt. Commander who served 10 years in the Navy.

She grew up on a farm in the Madison, Wisconsin, area, where her father was an attorney. She has two older brothers and a younger sister. She is part owner of Raider Tactical LLC and also coaches weight loss and natural health as a way of sharing her passion for health with others. Her interest in health, nutrition and weight loss began in college.  

“As a freshman in college I was 40 pounds heavier than I am today,” Mary said. “I began working out and started losing weight. Then I had to learn how to maintain my weight loss and that eventually led me into natural health and nutrition. Today, there is so much health and nutrition information available that is seems overwhelming to try and figure out what to do. I like to keep it simple and give people practical ways they can improve their health.”

Mary plans to offer once-a-month (each second Thursday at 7:00 p.m. in Room 104) health seminars at Grace Church. 

She is married to T.J. Gilroy, author of “The Holy Hand Grenade,” a book about “How to get what you really want, really!” (Find his blog at www.thomasjgilroy.com.) A graduate of the University of Virginia, T.J. spent 12 years in the U.S. Marine Corps and served as a Cobra Helicopter pilot. He works as vice president of sales for Quantico Tactical in Aberdeen, N.C. He and Mary lead “Chosen for Greatness,” a “small group” about finding your gift and passion. The group meets at Grace Church. T.J. also leads “The Holy Spirit in You,” a small group meeting at the church.


Mary used a power-point presentation to share information on physical health and some mental and spiritual health advice. She began her presentation with a photograph of a lion’s head and this quote by St. Augustine projected onto her screen: “The truth is like a lion. You don’t have to defend it. Let it loose. It will defend itself.”

Heath Care Costs 

As Mary began her seminar, "Health Is Simple," she asked, asked the Grace Church group where the U.S. ranks in life expectancy. A few attendees made guesses.

“Fifty –third,” she said. “It used to be 46th. Right above us is Taiwan.”

She noted that the U.S. now averages $8,000 per person per year for health care costs and that the average U.S. doctor – probably contrary to popular thinking – earns only $130,000 each year. The average U.S. doctor is finally out of debt at age 52, she said.

“How many pounds of sugar per year do we eat [in the U.S.]?” she asked.

More guesses.

“One hundred and thirty pounds per year,” she said. (That’s the present average for each U.S. citizen, and some writers list higher estimates than 130 pounds.)

She said each person averages taking in 10-15 pounds of salt each year and perhaps 10 pounds total of chemicals, synthetic vitamins, food coloring, etc.

She quoted Hippocrates: “Let your food be your medicine and your medicine be your food.”

Mary’s father died at age 54 when she was 15 years old.

“He had his first heart attack at 35,” she said.

Health and Fear

She said one should check his motive for wanting health. Is that motive “fear”? The Bible (NASB) offers comments on “fear”:

“For what I fear comes upon me, and what I dread befalls me” (Job 3:25).

For God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power and love and discipline” (2 Timothy 1:7).   
 “So that we confidently say, ‘The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can man do to me?” (Hebrews 13:6).
“There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love” (1 John 4:18).
“There’s a piece of it [lack of fear] that comes by trusting that God loves you,” Mary said. “You’re not truing to get something from God. You’re trying to receive what God has done for you.”
We are made up of basically three dimensions: spirit, soul (mind, will and emotions equal “psyche”) and body (involving the senses: sight, taste, touch, smell and hearing).
A Christian has his soul “redeemed” and changed, but his soul and body are not redeemed, yet, Mary noted.
Noting that “eating healthy foods” may “cost more,” she referred to Philippians 4:19: “And my God will supply all your needs according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus.”
“You’ve got to believe that God wants you to have what you need to have [in order] to do what you need to do,” she said.
She said America’s health care system is already broken and that “new policies will pour more people into what’s broken.”
She quoted Proverbs 23:7 – “For as he thinks within himself, so he is. . . .” – and recommended “As a Man Thinketh,” a book by James Allen.
“Think what God thinks,” Mary said. “The Devil’s primary purpose in life is to pull you off the Word.”
She referred to 3 John 1:2: “ Beloved, I pray that in all respects you may prosper and be in good health, just as your soul prospers.”
“You do that by confessing God’s word,” Mary said. “Get your mind in the Word.”
 Emotions
She asked if attendees remembered when they used to go the doctor and he didn’t seem rushed.
“They don’t have time,” she said. “[Now] they treat symptoms.”
“But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy” (James 3:17).
“My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. . . .” (Hosea 4:6).
“Wisdom illuminates knowledge,” Mary said.
She recommended Dr. Don Colbert’s book titled “Deadly Emotions,” which states that thoughts show up in our bodies.
“He [Colbert] says 85 percent of his patients’ diseases are directly related to stress and emotions,” Mary stated.

The IRS and “the law of unintended consequences”
Car insurance is designed to cover “wrecks” and private health insurance (owned by individuals who paid directly to insurance companies) was designed to cover “catastrophic” health developments, Mary said. But the U.S. government, wanting to control inflation during after World War II, told employers that employers couldn’t offer monetary raises to employees. But the government let employers offer health benefits and let employees “write off” those benefits from their federal taxes. After World War II, that plan stayed intact. That’s how health insurance became connected to jobs.
From Wikipedia: “Employer-sponsored health insurance plans dramatically expanded as a direct result of wage controls imposed by the federal government during World War II. The labor market was tight because of the increased demand for goods and decreased supply of workers during the war. Federally imposed wage and price controls prohibited manufacturers and other employers from raising wages enough to attract workers. When the War Labor Board declared that fringe benefits, such as sick leave and health insurance, did not count as wages for the purpose of wage controls, employers responded with significantly increased offers of fringe benefits, especially health care coverage, to attract workers.”
Mary said her husband, T.J., says you follow the money to get to the root of many problems.
“There’s a time when a person’s true character come out: when there’s not enough money on the table – and when there’s too much,” T.J. Gilroy says.

Blood Regeneration
Mary said an 1828 U.S. dictionary defined “pharma” (as in pharmacology) as “witchcraft.”
She recommended “Live Blood Microscopy,” a process that involves looking at a person’s blood cells magnified 1,000 times during an one-half hour appointment.
“Every 90 days we regenerate [all] red blood cells,” she said.

Germs versus pH 
She talked about the “Feud in France”: Louis Pasteur’s theory about germs versus Antoine Bechamp’s theory.
From Wikipedia: Louis Pasteur (1822 – 1895) was a French chemist and microbiologist. . . . He is remembered for . . . breakthroughs in the causes and preventions of diseases. . . . [He] created the first vaccines for rabies and anthrax. His medical discoveries provided direct support for the germ theory of disease and its application in clinical medicine. He is best known to the general public for his invention of the technique of treating milk and wine to stop bacterial contamination, a process now called pasteurization. He is regarded as one of the three main founders of bacteriology . . . and is popularly known as the "father of microbiology."
Bechamp (1816 – 1908) was a French chemist and biologist now best known as a rival of Louis Pasteur.
“‘The Battle for Health Is Over pH” is a good book,” Mary said. That book reportedly emphasizes the role the body’s acid-alkaline balance plays in maintaining optimum health. Many researchers hold that a balanced pH is a foundation component to health and wellness. Some say the contributing factors in all disease can be boiled down to one very simple thing – too much acid.  
 From Wikipedia: “In chemistry, pH is a measure of the acidity or ‘basicity’ of an aqueous solution. Solutions with a pH less than 7 are said to be acidic and solutions with a pH greater than 7 are ‘basic’ or alkaline. Pure water has a pH very close to 7. (‘pH’ [reportedly] stands for ‘power of hydrogen.’”
Antoine Bechamp said it’s not germs that cause disease; it’s your cells not being healthy enough to fight the disease off, Mary noted.
“Does a swamp attract mosquitoes or mosquitoes attract the swamp,” she asked.
She said that Louis Pasteur admitted on his deathbed that he was wrong.
“That whole thing [Pasteur’s theory about germs] invented ‘attack things from the outside’ – not the inside,” Mary said. She said about pH: “On a scale of one to 14, seven is neutral. Below seven, acid starts to back up. Acid leads to disease. In your body, ‘yuck’ thrives in an acidic environment. Acid plus yuck equals chronic disease. . . . Excess estrogen causes breast cancer in women and prostate cancer in men.”
She said people can contract Lyme’s Disease not only from ticks but also from spiders and mosquitoes.

Sugars
Grains and sugars are acidic, Mary said. Use no more than 25 grams of sugars daily and get some of that from fruit.
“There are 16 grams of sugar in one tablespoon [of sugar],” she said. “There are 16 teaspoons of sugar in one 12-oz. Coke.”
“That’s why I drink Pepsi,” said Pastor David Pratt, who sat among the group. He leads Grace Church’s small groups and prayer ministry.
Group laughter.
Mary said grains are not good for humans. Any food made from wheat, rice, oats, cornmeal, barley or another cereal grain is a grain product. Bread, pasta, oatmeal, breakfast cereals, tortillas, and grits are examples of grain products.
“Sweet potatoes are OK, but high in sugar,” she said. “Grains are addictive.”
Fruit is very high in sugar, she noted.
“Your body could live a long time without carbohydrates, and without fruit,” she said.

Protein:
“Don’t eat processed meat,” Mary advised.

Healthy fats and vegetables:
Coconut is a good fat. Canola oil is high in omega 6. Corn oil and peanut oil are high in omega 6. Eat butter (not margarine!), and raw nuts and raw vegetables, she said.
She reviewed the government site (www.choosemyplate.gov) and found it advised eating too much grain, along with other skewed recommendations. The American Heart Assoc. advised eating “whole grains.” She disagrees. She presented her own guidelines for eating shown on a chart called “Mary’s Plate.”  
“‘Wheat Belly’ is a good book,” Mary said. She said one of her brothers “went from 250 pounds to 200” after reading and applying guidelines in “Wheat Belly.”
She said grain is the source of our “issue.”
“Grain puts weight in your middle,” she said. “I’m not a calorie counter.”
She also advised that people should “eat right for their blood types.”
“O+ needs red meat,” she said. “A types don’t need as much red meat.”
Coffee beans are one of the most pesticide-laden beans on earth, Mary noted. And she lemon juice is good to drink; it “turns alkaline” inside your body.
“Commit to cook from scratch,” Mary said. “Prepared foods have preservatives."

GMOs
She briefly discussed GMOs, “genetically modified organisms.”
Added information from http://action.greenamerica.org: “GMOs, or ‘genetically modified organisms,’ are plants or animals created through the gene splicing techniques of biotechnology (also called genetic engineering, or GE). This experimental technology merges DNA from different species, creating unstable combinations of plant, animal, bacterial and viral genes that cannot occur in nature or in traditional crossbreeding. . . . Studies point to the idea that there’s grave cause for concern about the health effects of consuming GMOs and the chemicals they are sprayed with, including food allergies, irritable bowels, organ damage, cancer.”

Stress
“Address your stress,” Mary said. “Most of us live lives that are far too busy. . . . In 1910, the average American got 10 hours of sleep per night in America. The more sleep you get before midnight, the better sleep you get.”
She said we need to “get more Word” into our hearts.
“What is it worth to you to be healthy?” She asked. “You have to swim upstream [to be healthy].”                       

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