| Yom Kippur • Thursday, 10 Tishrei 5769 • Begins Wednesday, 8 October 2008 (light candles at 6:39 PM) |
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The body's digestive system is like
a city's power plant. Its furnaces burn fuel and supply energy to all
parts of the city. The fuel must be the proper type or the furnaces won?t
function efficiently. The power plant must also supply the heat or spark
which causes the fuel to ignite. If the fuel doesn?t burn, the city will
have no energy.
Our bodies also need fuel to provide the energy needed to maintain our own spark of life. The body is built, repaired, and fueled by about a half ton of food per year.
This fuel must be selected carefully to provide maximum performance, but having the right kind of fuel is not enough. The food we eat must be digested and assimilated in order to provide the life energy our bodies require.
The digestive system supplies the spark, which initiates the burning (digestion) of our food. If this system is not functioning properly, even the best nutrients do us little or no good.
Various secretions of the digestive system?most importantly the enzymes?provide the spark that breaks our fuel down into compounds which the body can use.
There are three major types of foodstuffs which must
be broken down for complete digestion. These are carbohydrates, proteins,
and fats. Each day roughly two and one-half gallons of digested food,
liquids, and digestive secretions flow through the digestive tract.
The digestion of carbohydrates begins with a starch-digesting enzyme in the saliva; approximately three pints of saliva are produced each day. Carbohydrate digestion is completed by starch- and sugar-digesting enzymes from the pancreas and small intestine. All carbohydrates are broken down into simple sugars.
Proteins break into smaller fragments, influenced by hydrochloric acid and pepsin in the stomach. Then they break further into free amino acids in the intestines by enzymes from the pancreas and intestinal wall.
Fat digestion isn?t complete until it reaches the small intestine. Bile salts from the liver and gall bladder make the fat water-soluble so that it can be carried through the bloodstream, while enzymes from the pancreas and intestinal wall break the fat into fatty acids and glycerol.
When these food particles are small enough, they pass from the small intestine to the bloodstream, where they join other nutrients to be circulated to all body cells. About 90 percent of absorption takes place in the small intestine.
There are many ways we can abuse and weaken our digestive organs. Overeating, constant snacking and diluting digestive secretions with liquids can all place undue stress on our digestive organs.
Indigestion can affect almost anyone. When people eat too fast or too much, don?t chew food properly, or experience emotional stress, they are more likely to feel indigestion. To some degree, these factors can all affect the secretion of hydrochloric acid (HCl) and digestive enzymes.
Also, as people age, their HCl decreases. This begins between ages 35 and 45, and low HCl levels are found in almost everyone older than 55.
Enzyme HealthWithout enzymes, body functions would be too slow to sustain life. Enzymes are essential, but each person is born with a limited enzyme potential. So maintaining an adequate supply of enzymes is vital in supporting body health.
When food enzymes are destroyed by heat, food wilting, or other abuse prior to digestion, the body must create new ones to digest food. Therefore, one of the best ways to help maintain a healthy supply of enzymes is to eat raw foods as much as possible. Not only do raw foods contain enzymes themselves, but they also contain the vital coenzymes (vitamins) that the body constantly needs.

Digestive problems are one of the most common complaints of modern life. Many things interfere with proper digestion'stress, poor food choices, and overeating.
With many additives and processing procedures adulterating the food we eat, vital enzymes necessary for proper food breakdown and absorption are often destroyed. Without these enzymes, even the benefits of a healthy diet cannot fully be reaped, and health concerns may arise.