The Naturopathy Dance
It’s funny how resistant people are to the idea I’m using naturopathy to diagnose and treat F’s issues. More than one person has shared that muscle resistance testing is obviously just the placebo effect, which is, I think, their nice way of saying “laden with quackery.”
I would note that F obviously has food sensitivities. Feed her tomatoes, watch her digestive system churn out poop that rashes on contact. Something is not right there. Stripping common allergens from a diet, waiting until her digestive system is back to normal based on poop output and then reintroducing them one at a time seems to me an awfully conservative way of treating the issue. It nicely falls into the “first, do no harm” mandate of medicine. Skin prick tests are not good at picking up milder sensitivities that can make you feel lousy without actually causing a full blown allergic reaction and elimination and challenge diets are a standard method of diagnosis.
And, yes, milk, eggs, yeast, strawberries and corn are all very common allergens.
I first met naturopathy when I couldn’t take steroid nasal sprays for my spring allergies because they are not wholly safe when breast-feeding. A friend suggested I try a teaspoon of local honey a day. Local honey contains the local pollens mildly processed via bee gut. It sounded a trifle nuts but I figured, “Can’t hurt, might help” and that taking a teaspoon of honey each day was hardly a burden. It helped. Steroids or honey. Which would you pick?
Muscle resistance testing has good results for some people. And, being forced to eat fresh, non-processed foods, homemade sourdough bread1 and gourmet chocolate2 is, like eating honey, hardly the worst prescription ever. If her digestive issues don’t clear up then we move to blood testing. What we are doing now? Can’t hurt. Might help. I’ve noticed that people who turn first to naturopathy seem to have clear skin, healthy hair and a noticeable dearth of illness. Perhaps its the reliance on healthy eating. And, of course, if the placebo effect works who cares that it’s “not real”? I had horrible headaches almost every day during the spring until I took allergy medication. Honey also keeps me headache free. I don’t care whether it is because I only think it will; all I care about it the lack of the horrible crushing pain in my head.
So I’m doing the naturopathy dance and I don’t particularly care if anyone thinks it quackery. I have no interest in convincing anyone that muscle resistance testing is a useful test and no desire to convert anyone to alternative methods of health care. All I want to do is get my daughter well.
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1 Because sourdough is made from a starter that utilizes wild yeast instead of baker’s yeast many people with baker’s yeast allergies can eat it without any problems. The only catch is you have to make it yourself because commercial sourdough tends to “cheat” and use some baker’s yeast to speed up the rising process.
2 High quality dark chocolate has neither milk nor eggs in it.

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April 21st, 2008 19:20
I use homeopathic remedies on my kids, George and I all the time. I get crap too but ya know what, it works. And like you i couldnt really give two shits what people think about it!!
Good for you! Poor Fiona. I hope you get some answers soon.
FWIW, Georgie used to eat citrus and before we could get home, he’d have pooped and have a rash that would bleed. It took 2 years, but he grew out of it… Im hoping that she will too.
((HUGS))
April 21st, 2008 19:21
I’ve never heard of grouping eating local honey or elimination diets with homeopathy. Homeopathy is more about diluting herbal and mineral tinctures until they’re detectable in solution in only trace amounts. I think some of these things you’re talking about is more along the vein of naturopathic medicine. The two tend to get conflated.
April 21st, 2008 19:23
Edited to reflect Emilin’s vocabulary correction.
April 21st, 2008 20:27
Wow… you’ve gotten flack from people for going to a naturopath? Now *that’s* crazy.
and not that I’m happy that she’s allergic to tomatoes since I know how awful that can be… but wow! See? I’m not crazy either. Tomatoes are the devil’s food.
you know, if I believed in the devil.
April 21st, 2008 21:26
People can be ridiculous. A large amount of effective therapies in so called modern medicine are base don natural therapies. I am sick of people, including med school professors I have argued with after class, painting all natural medicine as unproven quackery and all pharmaceuticals as sound safe science. Elimination diets are a great way to treat many childhood problems, especially GI upset, recurrent infections and skin problems.
April 21st, 2008 22:14
OMG! Go here! http://4littlemen.blogspot.com/2008/04/little-strict-you-say.html
April 21st, 2008 23:02
Wow, I was surprised to read about this when I came to your site today. I grew up with this method (the muscle resistance thing), but most people I know have never heard of it! I think it works, although I have no idea why! Once I moved away and got married, I haven’t kept up with it, but my mother has - and swears by it! I’m glad that it’s working for you though…I’d do anything to keep my daughter healthy too!
April 22nd, 2008 06:56
Is Muscle Resistance the same as NAET?
April 25th, 2008 10:56
Stronger than a spoonful of honey is bee pollen — you can buy local bee pollen at lots of natural food stores & farmer’s markets. My mother basically cured her seasonal allergies with this method.
I don’t know what muscle resistance is but i will google it when i have a chance.