Shocking Dairy Detox – This will blow your mind!
I am not a vegan… and not a vegetarian. I don’t have any strange eating habits .
But I have been a milk drinking, cheese eating dairy lover since I was a small child. I grew up drinking milk every single day in my breakfast cereal and as a snack after school and the drink served with dinner.
A while ago I cut out most of my milk drinking and replaced it with Soy milk. Of course now I am told that soy milk MIGHT be bad… mostly it’s one famous doctor who says soy milk is bad, and even though I have not seen any concrete evidence, the anti-soymilk campaign moves onward. That’s okay, because Almond milk tastes great and so does Oat milk… but I’m sure someone is already writing me an email to tell me the evils of these milks also.
*UPDATE: I am watching my carbs, so I now drink unsweetened Almond Milk. It’s yummy.
WARNING:
What I want to tell you is shocking…
I had no idea. Honestly. And I like to think that I am “in the know” about a lot of things.
Yes… I did know that dairy is loaded with fat and cholesterol. That is why I limited my intake of it, reasonably.
About a week ago my wife said she had been talking to a friend of her’s and that the two of them had decided to go a week off of dairy. They wanted to know if I would join them.
She had some printed pages that touted all the health benefits, but without a moment’s hesitation, I agreed to join them.
I grabbed the best dairy free cookbook I could find. (I needed the recipes to be easy to make, and Danielle Walker did just that) and I was ready to begin. Of course I ate a good deal of dairy on the weekend leading up to the Monday we began the 7 days of no dairy.
I wondered how great would I feel after a week of no dairy? Or perhaps nothing would seem different and 8 days later I would be enjoying a piece of cheese.
Mmmmm Cheese….
BOY WAS I WRONG
Giving up dairy was about as hard as I expected for the first couple of days. By the end of day two I was feeling pretty ill, which is out of the norm for me. Honestly, ever since I flipped my life upside down with the law of attraction I have become a high energy and healthy kind of guy. The kind of guy who always feels great.
Day three, instead of rolling out of bed with enthusiasm and excitement for the day ahead, I woke up feeling more tired than I was when I went to bed.
In fact, I felt groggy and brain foggy all day.
I’ll skip the day-to-day play-by-play, and tell you that for seven days straight I have felt terrible, in different ways. I can’t concentrate… I am experiencing headaches, which is something I never have.
I don’t have the deep down energy, and I tire easily. My stomach is bloated and I am retaining water.
My skin has broken out in three different kinds of rashes in three different places on my body. In general I am itchy… and honestly I am cranky. Strange emotions are coming up… anxiety and anger, which I have not felt in many… many years.
I am even late on the 11 cent sale I promised all of you…. because of this brain fog and lack of energy.
Long story short, going off dairy cold turkey causes the body to go into a detox. When I search online I find claims that going off dairy for one week will cause an entire gallon of mucus to exit your body. Obviously, things are not always pretty.
Today it is 10 days later, and I don’t have any desire to go back. Food tastes great without dairy. It seems that at the 10 day mark, for me at least, the cravings have mostly subsided.
Check out the HUGE list of Dairy Free Foods on Amazon. It’s crazy.
Seriously….
My body never went through this kind of hell when I quit smoking. Sure, I have cravings… and it was difficult… but I didn’t get bad breath, skin rashes, headaches, lack of energy, bloating, water retention, and a host of other not-so-pleasant physical problems.
The only craving I have is for cheese. I LOVED CHEESE. Now I know why…
THIS IS GOING TO BLOW YOU AWAY
Cheese is actually physically addictive… no kidding. I must have missed the Surgeon Generals Warning label on the block of cheese.
YOU WONT BELIEVE WHAT DRUG IS INSIDE CHEESE!!!
Check this out:
So here is an excerpt from an article in the Orlando Sentinel July 13 2003:
Of all the potentially addicting foods, cheese may be the most complex. In research studies using vegan and vegetarian diets to control cholesterol or reduce body weight, most participants soon forget the lure of ice cream, sour cream, and even burgers and chicken. But for many people, the taste for cheese lingers on and on. Yes, 70 percent of its calories may come from waist-augmenting fat, and, ounce for ounce, it may harbor more cholesterol than a steak. But that cheese habit is tough to break.Why is cheese so addicting? Certainly not because of its aroma, which is perilously close to old socks. The first hint of a biochemical explanation came in 1981, when scientists at Wellcome Research Laboratories in Research Triangle Park, N.C., found a substance in dairy products that looked remarkably like morphine. After a complex series of tests, they determined that, surprisingly enough, it actually was morphine. By a fluke of nature, the enzymes that produce opiates are not confined to poppies — they also hide inside cows’ livers. So traces of morphine can pass into the animal’s bloodstream and end up in milk and milk products. The amounts are far too small to explain cheese’s appeal. But nonetheless, the discovery led scientists on their search for opiate compounds in dairy products.
And they found them. Opiates hide inside casein, the main dairy protein. As casein molecules are digested, they break apart to release tiny opiate molecules, called casomorphins. One of these compounds has about one-tenth the opiate strength of morphine. The especially addicting power of cheese may be due to the fact that the process of cheese-making removes water,lactose and whey proteins so that casein is concentrated. Scientists are now trying to tease out whether these opiate molecules work strictly within the digestive tract or whether they pass into the bloodstream and reach the brain directly.
(some paragraphs about chocolate addiction snipped)
The cheese industry is miles ahead of them, having gone to great lengths to identify people who are most vulnerable to addiction. It dubs them “cheese cravers,” and tracks their age, educational level and other demographics so as to target them with marketing strategies that are tough to ignore. With a $200 million annual research and marketing budget, the dairy industry is not content to have you just sprinkling a little mozzarella on your salad. It is looking for those Americans who will eat it straight out of the package, whatever the cost to their waistlines or cholesterol levels.
At a “Cheese Forum” held Dec. 5, 2000, Dick Cooper, the vice president of Cheese Marketing for Dairy Management Inc., laid out the industry’s scheme for identifying potential addicts and keeping them hooked. In his slide presentation, which was released to our organization under the Freedom of Information Act, he asked the question, “What do we want our marketing program to do?” and then gave the answer: “Trigger the cheese craving.” He described how, in a partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the dairy industry launched Wendy’s Cheddar Lover’s Bacon Cheeseburger, which single-handedly pushed 2.25 million pounds of cheese during the promotion period. That works out to 380 tons of fat and 1.2 tons of pure cholesterol in the cheese alone. A similar promotion with Pizza Hut launched the “Ultimate Cheese Pizza,” which added an entire pound of cheese to a single pizza and sold five million pounds of it during a six-week promotion in 2000. The presentation concluded with a cartoon of a playground slide with a large spider web woven to trap children as they reached the bottom. The caption had one spider saying to another, “If we pull this off, we’ll eat like kings.”
I am sharing this with you because I care. I wish someone had told me how harsh detoxing could be.
I wish someone had told me how addictive Cheese can be. Or even mentioned the morphine compound found inside.
I’m the kind of guy who turns down pain pills, even after a surgery…
I never knew I was ingesting Morphine with my cheese and crackers.
So if you decide to clean your body up… and want to cleanse yourself without all the horrible side-effects that I have had… you really need to READ THIS NOW.
Overwhelmingly I support the Master Cleanser if you want to purify your body. (It’s just three bucks too!)
Me… I just made a split second decision to join my wife and her friend… I decided to make myself the subject of an experiment if you will…
For those of you wondering about my wife and her friend. YES… they had a rough ride also, including migraine headaches (much worse than mine), irritability, skin breakouts (body acne), and emotional instability (although don’t tell my wife I pointed that out… at least not until she is over the detoxing)
And that is what they cared to share… most people are not as forthcoming with their dirty details like I am. What can I say… I try to live my life like an open book… for all to see, observe and hopefully learn from my mistakes.
Oh yes… there has been a positive thing about this diary detox so far…. I have lost 5 pounds even though I feel like I am eating more than usual, and my wife has lost 4 pounds.. her friend didn’t offer up any weight related conversation.
SO… if you want to go off dairy please don’t let this scare you. Instead, just do it slowly. If I had known then what I know now, I would have simply cut my intake of dairy items down over a 2 – 3 week period and went off it slowly.
Knowing what I know now… I just can’t bring myself to ingest anything dairy.
Wishing you the best day,
Dairy free for 6 days now, sugar free for 1 yr Detox is a real workout. Before being sugar free was always sick and depressed, after sugar free I seemed bullet proof as far as colds and flu etc, however the skin problems remained. Now also dairy free first 2 days laryngitis then mucus build up in throat and nose with constant hacking and blowing with lots of dead nasty bacteria, restlessness, Insomnia, night and day sweats, bloating, headaches, anxiety, depression, I also eat a lot of fermented foods IE Kimchi, and drink Kombucha & water kefir. used to eat a lot of cheese milk and yogurt, but of course all dairy is now gone from my diet. And now it’s day six and seems the throat hacking is getting better as is the nasal area, starting to feel happier actually smiled today. I even tried Colodial silver as I thought I had a really bad cold, may have helped. Dairy detox was almost the same for me as the sugar free detox just no mucus. Today day 6 started thinking clearer memory improving, feeling happy and can feel the energy build like it did when I was a teen am now 60. looking forward to no more hacking and blowing also the bloating and evacuation problems still pester. It is worth it in the end after all it took me 58 yrs to change. And honestly what a change all thanks to my children, I followed their example. Never to old to learn and getting younger by the day. Please don’t let the temporary negatives spoil a healthier positive future
At the begining you said you where a high energy guy (with dairy in your diet). Did you have any ongoing problems when you were on dairy?
I quit dairy cold turkey 8 days ago: doctor’s suggestion. She thought I would want wean myself gradually, but I insisted on giving up immediately. Glad now that I did, But…On day 2 i was about to ask my GP for another round of HRT due to the brain fog, hot flashes and mood swings (much worse than being hangry) I was experiencing. Mentioned this to a pharmacist girlfriend who laughed at me and said, “You’re in withdrawal.” I’ve got to admit I’m relieved; I’m too old for another Menopause!
Today is day 9, and thus far no sweats, headaches, fits of rage or deep hunger-like pains.
Thanks everyone for your stories.
I wonder if eating cheese would ease the withdrawls from herion
About four months ago, I had tried everything I could to cure my symptoms of inability to breathe through my nostrils, and swollen under eyes. I thought it could be food allergies, and stopped wheat, dairy, and peanut butter. For the first week or two, I had pretty severe swelling and creases down both sides of my face below my eyes, and my eye bags turned to double bags. I had a pretty bad red rash also. However, a couple of weeks in, my complexion began to improve pretty dramatically, the swelling of the eye bags decreased (still have them some, but better than it has been in years), and most importantly to me, I can breathe through my nose at night; my inflamed sinuses are better! I had tried all kinds of allergy medications. While I do miss pizza a little, the ability to breathe outweighs it. I have a little wheat and peanut butter now. Tried pizza once and it really weighed me down. I’m probably not used to cheese now, and shouldn’t have it. My withdrawal wasn’t as long or severe as a lot of people here posted, and I am in my later 50’s, doing dairy my whole life. There is a real shortage of information about this out there, it’s like no one believes there can be a such a thing as dairy detox; well, there is! I’m also disappointed allergists never identified this in the past. Diet is huge. If you are reading this, you are researching it. Try it. I’ll never go back. Good luck!
I was like this going off of gluten, but worse. I felt like I was loosing my mind. I was dairy free for over a year and gave it up for some string cheese. That darn cheese… I haven’t been dairy free for a few years and I am noticing how unhealthy my body feels. I am re-experiencing dairy detox and looked it up to remind myself that this was normal.. Uggghhh. I can’t wait for how my body will feel in about 9 days. Thanks for sharing your information, P.S. All of the reputable naturopathic doctors I know with real degrees, which is three, say that organic soy is very GOOD for the typical body.
Thank you very much. I am a 23 year old male and for 6 years I have had symptoms of IBS. I never once considered that I am lactose intolerant. Anyways I started my 14 day detox yesterday and I am having 5/10 anxiety, cotton mouth, feeling hungry after eating, a bit jittery as I am writing this, but your article gives me hope! I promised my nutritionist Id commit to 14 days before reading that you said to ween off it on a 2-3 week basis. Anyways, just sharing my love. Thanks man. We all appreciate it.
Came off withdrawal for dairy after 3 weeksbecause i love cheese. ate 3 lots of goats cheese and now so anxiuos and lack of energy. must go back to dairy free and start again. did not think i would have to start withdrawal again. wonderfu larticalJohn.
Some genuinely wonderful work on behalf of the owner of this
web site, absolutely great subject material.
I am on about week 3 of removing dairy to see if it helps with my swallowing difficulties and indigestion. I have always been underweight, but I have a extremely distended lower abdomen and it seems like the bloating has actually gotten worse since removing dairy and I a incredibly tired and lethargic even after 3 weeks. Can anyone tell me when my physical state will improve? Thanks.
I liked your article, apart from the constant references to fat and cholesterol.
Hopefully by now you have worked out that fat and cholesterol are essential foods and not the enemy.
Cheese, however, is best avoided for its growth hormones and morphine.
So glad to find this. First day off dairy after eating cottage cheese and every other kind of cheese as about 70% of every meal for my whole life! I had this anxious sense of doom all day, and I felt completely freaked out, and then suddenly wondered if it was my dietary change. Glad to find this!