Chapter Twelve

What I Do

This chapter summarizes the various habits I use to reduce my ASD symptoms and improve my health. Always remember everyone is unique and has specific needs, unlike the needs of other people. 

Therefore, this chapter is simply a general guideline of techniques I use to reduce inflammation and improve the connections between neurons. As discussed earlier in this book, reducing inflammation, and improving connectivity may significantly improve many ASD symptoms.

Because of reduced connectivity, inflammation and CDR can create rigid thinking patterns, reducing creativity in everyone. Therefore, methods discussed in this chapter improve everyone’s ability to think, remember, and be creative. Anyone in the creative field or business world may improve by using these ideas.

GENSLYM

At some point on my personal healing journey, I created a daily checklist for myself with the acronym GENSLYM. In addition to healing many health conditions, following the checklist leads to weight loss, generating a slimmer body, which is fitting considering the acronym.

Grounding: I love to spend time grounded to the Earth. I especially love to go outside and directly connect to the Earth during sunrise and sunset. I also have specialized Earthing equipment that helps me ground when inside the house and working on my computer.

Exercise: I exercise at least 30 minutes every day, often more. I lift weights and play sports Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I walk around outside, preferably in nature, on my recovery days, which are Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. I also walk a lot on Sunday. I like to run in a grassy field with my shoes off to maximize the grounding effects and strengthen my feet. In addition, I often take cold showers after exercise to improve the efficiency of my cells. I plan on also using a sauna in the future.

Nutrition: I track food intake with a particular focus on minerals and micronutrients. Using the tracker, I try to meet at least 94% of my nutrition goals every day. Also, I eat in such a way that I balance inflammation. This way of eating has many factors, such as circadian rhythms, intermittent fasting, carbohydrate/fiber ratio, cleanness of food sources, fat intake, and periodic 48-hour fasts. My plan for nutrition includes the importance of good mental nutrition. Therefore, I avoid negative people. I also do not watch news and limit my time on social media. There is an extensive review of nutrition factors in Chapter 7.

Sleep: I go to bed by 9 pm and sleep connected with the Earth. Sometimes I go to bed later, depending on social activities. When sleeping, I use a special grounding bed sheet attached to a wire connected to a grounding rod outside buried into the Earth. Also, I periodically go camping to ground and synchronize with Nature.

Light: I focus on managing both sunlight and darkness. I get early morning sun exposure upon my eyes and limit light exposure after dark. I keep as much light out of my room as I can at night. I sleep in a room with no lights on, and I use blackout curtains to block outside light. I also get at least 30 to 60 minutes of midday direct sunlight exposure daily.

Yoga: I have a daily yoga practice that involves a series of yoga poses and breathing exercises. I mainly practice yin yoga, which consists of a series of poses held for longer times to lengthen connective tissue. This style of yoga is also relaxing and better for reducing stress.

Meditation: I meditate twice daily, once in morning and in evening. This meditation preferably happens directly connected with the Earth and outside with sunrise and sunset. However, depending on the weather, I sometimes mediate outside.

Each of these lifestyle choices balances inflammation and benefits my health. Because starting new habits is hard, gradually begin new habits by doing only a few minutes per day at first. Set a minimum of a couple of minutes for each habit and then add a minute each week. There is a discussion about habit change in Appendix B.

Also, start with changing habits that most strongly affect inflammation, such as nutrition, sleep, and light. Getting a daily system in place to reduce psychological stress is also important at the beginning of any healing journey. Change can be overwhelming, but much is possible when approached with focus, patience, and love.

Nutrition

Changing my food choices was the most significant factor that drastically improved my negative health symptoms, such as anxiety, brain fog, depression, social withdrawal, and lack of eye contact. One of my first realizations, many years ago, was that processed food and refined carbohydrates were causing many of my health problems. 

Subsequently, I discovered dairy products were causing my depression. At the time, over ten years ago, I knew nothing about the gluten-free casein-free (GFCF) diet. However, I did notice changing my food choices, such as reducing sugar and stopping wheat and dairy, eliminated multiple symptoms, including anxiety and depression.

As a side note, before I made these natural changes, I was prescribed a powerful benzodiazepine drug because of my frequent panic attacks. However, when I tried to cut back on the benzodiazepine drug, the withdrawal effects were much worse than the prior panic attacks. I remember, at some point, grabbing the washing machine, so I did not feel like I was going to fall off the planet. 

Sometime after this frightening experience, I found out about the concept of titration, which involves crushing a pill into a very fine powder and blending the powder into water. I would then place this mixture into a graduated cylinder, which looks a tall thin glass with measurement lines on the side. The graduated cylinder allowed me to accurately see how much water to pour out every other day. This way I could slowly lower the water level and somewhat control the amount of medication I gradually removed over a time span of multiple weeks. This helped me slowly stop taking the benzodiazepine and significantly reduced the negative symptoms from the withdrawal of the drug. Some drugs do not dissolve in water, so to keep my drug mixed well with the water I would have to shake the glass so the crushed drug powder would float around in the glass not just sit at the bottom.

Before I found this titration technique, splitting the pill in half to reduce how much I was taking was too much of an extreme reduction in dose. This drop caused horrible withdrawal symptoms because my body could not adapt to the sudden change in the concentration of a powerful unnatural drug. 

As a caution, this technique may only work on some types of drugs. Therefore, if seeking a better withdrawal from medication, then consulting with a doctor about titration using water is important.

A few months after I began changing my food choices, I learned about the glycemic load and how there are many health benefits to making sure my blood glucose levels do not rise too fast. The glycemic load is important because a sudden arrival of too much glucose in the blood reduces fat metabolism and increases glucose metabolism. This metabolic shift can cause many health problems. After I learned about the glycemic load and the dangers of excess blood glucose, I decided to limit consumption of all foods with added sugars and most high glycemic load foods.

Today, I do not eat most high glycemic load foods, such as white rice, white bread, and many refined carbohydrates. I still eat potatoes because of the potassium content and other benefits. If potatoes are baked, left to cool, and then reheated, that creates resistant starch, which lowers the glycemic load. Also, potatoes have many antioxidants and phytochemicals to compensate for their medium glycemic load status.

Importantly, good nutrition avoids many addictive foods, such as candy, fried food, pizza, and desserts. Often reminding yourself of the multiple health benefits and health risks helps with letting go of addictive foods. 

One of the side benefits of reducing sugar intake is many fruits taste sweeter because taste buds adjust. Now, if I ever have a soda, the drink tastes disgustingly too sweet. 

I also started eating according to how nature adapted the body to eat. Many hunter-gatherers eat whole foods, and about 30-40 percent of total caloric intake is from healthy fats. Therefore, I purchased a 5-gallon container of grass-fed beef tallow from a good online store, and I started to cook meals using this fat. Grass-fed beef fat has a more balanced omega-6/omega-3 ratio. If the fat is from a good source, then there are also significantly fewer pollutants than fat from many industry meats. Grass-fed beef tallow also has a more balanced proportion of monounsaturated to saturated fat, than the ratio found in coconut oil and palm kernel oil. The grass-fed beef tallow kept me fuller after meals and gave me sustained energy for the day.

Around this same time, I started to track my food intake using an online application called cronometer. I wanted to make sure I got enough potassium, magnesium, and zinc, as well as all other essential nutrients. By tracking my food intake, I saw my daily percentages of many different nutrients. Using this application, I saw I was not getting enough potassium and magnesium. Therefore, I increased my intake of food with these minerals, which further increased my energy and improved my mental function. I like tracking because the visual feedback of micronutrient percentages lets me see where I need improvement.

Interestingly, when I cut back on my sugar consumption, this caused my symptoms to temporarily become worse. This reaction likely occurred because the lack of sugar caused the death of many harmful bacteria living in my intestines. 

As discussed, many bad intestinal bacteria love excessive carbohydrate intake. Changing my food plan took away much of the food source for many of these bacteria, which caused them to die and release their toxic contents. These toxic contents can temporarily elevate inflammation and worsen various symptoms.

Also, my food plan increased autophagy, clearing away many old cells and inefficient mitochondria. This process temporarily raises inflammation and my health problems from this effect did not last more than a week. However, I introduced my food changes gradually, which reduced symptom intensity and how long the symptoms lasted.

Shockingly, bad intestinal bacteria influence the brain by using various chemical signals. This affects the craving for junk food and refined carbohydrates. For this reason, drastically reducing my sugar and refined carbohydrate intake was a difficult emotional experience. I knew about the influence of these bacteria and was not going to allow bacteria to tell me what foods I must eat. Therefore, with commitment, I maintained my food plan and was able to move through the temporary discomfort.

Today, my food plan has a lot of plants in my meals. To cook many meals, I like to use a slow cooker. I also do not eat nearly as much meat as the average person. The first reason I reduce my meat intake is because of the number of pollutants and hormones in many industry meats. The second reason is the horrible treatment that happens to many animals in the current industrial food production system. The third reason is most plants cost less money and are nutritious if food is well-planned. To increase this advantage, I purchase my plants locally and in season, which makes plants both less expensive and have higher phytochemical content.

However, I do eat some meat twice to three times a week. I either buy grass-fed at the store or meat from the local farmer’s market. I like to purchase from local suppliers because I can make sure the animals were given a decent life, were hormone-free, and not full of pollutants. I also purchase eggs from chickens not fed grains and allowed to roam around outside.

Also, by shopping at my local farmer’s market, I support someone in my local community, which helps to keep the money circulating in my town. I try not to purchase from a big chain store because most of that money leaves the community, weakening the local economy.

To get even more nutritional value when buying meat, I will also purchase beef liver and other animal parts from my local farmer’s market. Hunter-gatherer societies highly value eating organ meats because of extra nutrition. I chop up the liver into pieces small enough to take like a pill and freeze the liver on baking sheets so that the pieces do not stick to each other in the freezer. I then swallow a few small pieces every other day from the freezer to get added B-vitamins and other nutritional content.

I also like to eat oysters and clams, especially during the winter months. I also eat wild-caught salmon about once or twice a week. Overall, eating seafood that contains less pollution may benefit health. 

I also like to make big pots of tasty stews and soups that have a lot of fat. Some of the foods I include in different meals are lentils, avocado, mushrooms, kale, mustards, broccoli, radishes, carrots, peppers, potatoes, beef, black beans, collards, cabbage, onions, and garlic. I like to eat cruciferous vegetables because these types of vegetables stimulate Nrf2, increasing the activity of my antioxidant enzymes. 

In general, I eat more plants than meat and cook with a lot of grass-fed beef tallow. Depending on what I eat, I try to have my fat intake between 30 to 40 percent of my total daily calories. Ever since I started eating this way, I do not gain weight, and my energy stays stable throughout the day.

This amount of fat surprises some people, especially if the low-fat propaganda still controls their thought. However, eating more fat reduces the need to metabolize a lot of glucose for energy. In modern society, most people do not eat enough healthy fat, which causes an over-activation of glucose metabolism and less fat metabolism. 

Too much glucose metabolism makes an imbalanced ratio of NADH/FADH2, which leads to excess reactive oxygen species generation from complex I in electron transport chains of mitochondria. To prevent the overactivation of glucose metabolism, I eat a lot of grass-fed animal fat and avoid most foods with a high glycemic load.

As discussed, saturated fat temporarily increases insulin resistance because saturated fat and glucose compete for cell metabolism. If fat blocks high glycemic load foods from being metabolized, then combining these two types of food raises blood glucose levels and increases damage from inflammation. Therefore, if eating more saturated fat, then avoiding high glycemic load food is important.

In contrast, eating low glycemic load foods in a food plan with high fat intake greatly improves health. There are further benefits if the foods also have a lot of minerals and phytochemicals.

Another habit I follow is limiting omega-6 fat intake. I achieve this by avoiding most polyunsaturated vegetable oils. These oils damage easily and typically contain many omega-6 fatty acids. Unfortunately, most processed foods often contain polyunsaturated oils. By avoiding processed foods, I automatically eat less omega-6 fatty acids. 

A significant source of these oils is restaurants, which often cook food in these oils at high temperatures that damage the fragile oils. I especially do not eat fried foods because the process of making fried foods involves frequently reheating polyunsaturated vegetable oils, which damages the oils and causes even more health problems.

Therefore, I eat food I cook at home as much as possible. By cooking at home, I can use better ingredients and have more control over what I am eating. By cooking at home, I can use excellent spice combinations to make the food healthier and tastier. However, being able to use spices depends on salicylate sensitivity, since many spices have high salicylate levels. 

Home cooking also helps save money. I enjoy cooking and like listening to music while making my favorite recipes. Making cooking an enjoyable experience is important for staying motivated in the kitchen and improving health.

When cooking at home, using the slow cooker, and letting food cook overnight makes cooking easy. I can wake up in the morning with the cooking completed, allowing me to have a large breakfast and a good morning. Overnight cooking what would have been dinner and eating it as breakfast makes a massive positive difference in both health and easiness of life. Eating the largest meal in the morning better matches circadian rhythms. This improves sleep and digestion. 

Besides managing what I eat, I also limit the time I eat to an 8-hour window, from about 8 am to 4 pm. I typically have a big breakfast around 8 am and lunch before 4 pm. I sometimes eat vegetable snacks in between these times. Also, I fast for 24 to 48 hours once every month. Fasting increases autophagy, removing inefficient mitochondria, reducing inflammation, and improving metabolism.

Food Preparation

Early on in my lifestyle change adventures, I found that cooking a lot of food and saving some food for later in the week made life much easier. Having to cook every day can be difficult and demotivating for busy people. Therefore, cooking enough food for a three-day supply and saving some food in the fridge for later is helpful. This way, when getting off from a long day of work, most of the cooking is already done. Also, having chopped vegetables stored in the fridge helps with the urge to snack. Having a plan to prevent snacking on processed foods is important because snacking on processed foods generates too many reactive oxygen species in the body.

Food Summary

Everything discussed up to this point can seem like a lot of work. However, the lifestyle patterns mentioned in this book can lead to less time spent dealing with, and paying money for, medical conditions. At first, these changes can feel limiting. However, once the habits form, the health benefits create positive momentum, making habits easier and automatic.

Regarding habits, I think of change with the mentality of attraction and not repulsion. This is because the word “no” often triggers the subconscious mind to rebel against the self-determined limit. Instead, choosing “yes” and living with a clear and visualized purpose draws the goal closer. This reduces the effort and psychological stress often part of habit change. Focusing on improvements is better than obsessing over what is lost.

Overall, I felt significantly better and relieved most of my ASD symptoms, eating low glycemic load foods with lots of fat, while avoiding high glycemic load processed foods, gluten, casein, industry meats, and most foods with long ingredient labels. Combining these changes with fasting and circadian rhythm timing created even more health improvements. The connection between these changes is they all reduce and balance inflammation. 

The nutrition section of this book goes beyond a simple gluten-free and casein-free diet, which is only a very basic introduction to making food changes. The nutrition plan outlined in this book considers the type of meat (industry vs. local), the fat (omega-6 vs. omega-3), the glycemic load (carbohydrates are not equal), various plants (different antioxidant potentials), pollution (which accumulates up the food chain), anti-inflammatory supplements (turmeric and MSM), circadian rhythms (timing of food intake), intermittent fasting (limiting food intake window), food combination (structuring the meal order), and bacterial intestinal balance (carbohydrates vs. fiber). 

Do not underestimate the power of food to change health.

Exercise

As mentioned, exercise reduces inflammation, especially if the exercise is moderate and not too intense for a long time. For exercise, one of my favorite sports is basketball because it requires a lot of motor coordination that helps increase the connections between my neurons. I also like the creativity involved in passing and moving around the court. 

In addition to playing basketball, I wind sprint, where I walk and periodically sprint for a short distance. I also do bodyweight workouts, such as pushups, sit-ups, squats, and poses that challenge my balance.

I prefer to exercise barefoot on a grassy field to increase exercise endurance and pull more electrons into my body to improve metabolic efficiency. I like to go to a local field where I know there is likely to be no roots or glass on the ground. I wind sprint and do bodyweight exercises on the field.

I feel significantly less fatigued when I run barefoot in grass versus when I run with shoes. The electrons from Earth increase my endurance by reducing excess reactive oxygen species, which improves mitochondria efficiency. 

Research needs to be done on the endurance acquired by running barefoot on grass. Connecting to Earth for health benefits will be a major area of medical research in the future.

In addition to basketball, barefoot running in the field, and bodyweight exercises, I also lift weights. Training with weights increases my testosterone levels and enhances neuron connectivity by increasing BDNF, serotonin, and IGF-1. I think clearer when I am regularly lifting weights a couple of times a week. I also feel much calmer and sleep better when I combine barefoot running and weight training on the same day. While working out, I also like to listen to music or an entertaining podcast.

Meditation and Yoga

I also love to meditate often. As mentioned, meditation increases awareness of the present moment. Meditating does make the moment feel like a present from a greater source. I feel more peaceful, focused, and aware.

Unfortunately, most people go through life without much awareness of the present moment. Their focus is on the past or what is going to happen in the future. Thoughts of regret and worry increase psychological stress, which raises inflammation. Meditation moves awareness away from these stressful thoughts and into a deep, relaxing, peaceful state of being.

Meditation allows my awareness to passively watch my thoughts from a detached perspective. Already discussed, this perspective is like being underwater and seeing the waves on the surface. This watching is beyond all thought and, therefore, beyond judgment.

For my meditation practice, when the weather is good, I meditate in nature during the sunrise and sunset. I feel strongly grounded to the Earth when sitting outside on a grassy field. Connecting to the Earth during meditation increases the electron flow, which reduces more reactive oxygen species.

Interestingly, there are more electrons available during sunrise because of the electromagnetic flux generated on Earth at this time. I notice an improvement in meditation quality when meditating outside during the sunrise. 

I also love to do yoga poses before I meditate because the poses help me stretch and relax. The various poses also strengthen and increase flexibility, so my sitting posture during meditation is more comfortable. Adding in some pranayama further oxygenates my body. This improves metabolism, limits inflammation, and enhances mental clarity.

Sun

Besides being outside for meditation and exercise, I also like to sun gaze. When the Sun is low in the sky, about at the tree line, I look about 30 degrees away from the Sun for a brief amount of time. Sun gazing better establishes my circadian rhythms and noticeably improves my mood for the day.

Most days I also sunbathe. I typically sunbathe every day for at least 30 minutes when the Sun is much higher in the sky. If I have free time, then I like to relax in the sun while listening to music or a podcast on my headphones. If I am busy working, then I structure my sun for a series of 5-minute sessions whenever I take a break. Getting a lot of sun is relaxing, raises vitamin D levels, and likely frees up extra electrons to reduce reactive oxygen species.

There are likely other benefits to sunlight research is yet to fully reveal. For example, perhaps the infrared beams in sunlight penetrate skin and activate the mitochondria beneficially. Using infrared light therapy is a new area of research already showing some amazing health benefits. 

Perhaps vitamin D is primarily designed as a signaling hormone to let the body know sunlight is providing other benefits, such as freeing extra electrons and improving mitochondria function. Future researchers will discover sunlight has multiple positive health effects that go way beyond simply vitamin D.

Mental Stimulation

I also have mentally stimulating habits that increase the connections between my neurons. My primary habits are reading and writing. I read many non-fiction books because I love learning information I can apply to reality. I have personally experienced the incredible power of knowledge with action to transform suffering into happiness. 

Rather than simply learning a collection of facts, I like to see patterns and arrange facts into a framework, which is how this book partly originated. Discovering patterns hidden inside the information I learn creates new neuron connections and strongly establishes my knowledge base. Writing about these patterns further organizes my mind and hopefully helps other people.

I also play games that improve neuron connections. One of my long-time favorite games is chess. I especially love playing a fast version of chess known as blitz, where each person only has five minutes on the clock for the entire game. Not only is this fun, but this game also increases my processing and pattern recognition speed.

Another game I love to play is Halo™ on the Xbox One™ because this game is fun, fast, and intense. This game also expands the neuron connections between the visual, auditory, and motor coordination brain areas. The battles in this game can get intense, which requires even more connectivity to coordinate motor movements with audio and visual data.

Another way I improve my neural connections is music. I started playing music at a young age, first starting on the piano. I later played clarinet and tenor saxophone in the school band. Although I do not currently play clarinet and saxophone, I still like to improvise on the piano. I also enjoy freestyling lyrics to various instrumentals because I love the sound and the passion I feel. Quickly making new lyrics further increases my neuron connections.

Of course, depending on the ASD severity, some of these techniques may or may not be an option. The main point is that pushing mental limits without causing too much agitation improves neuron connectivity. 

However, if too much inflammation exists, then the CDR effects makes neuron connections much less likely to form, which inhibits the effectiveness of many types of mental stimulation. Therefore, first reducing the inflammation is important. Instead of using powerful synthetic drugs to reduce the inflammation, a better method is to simply change the many lifestyle factors affecting inflammation.

Although this chapter is simply my story, many scientific studies in this book seem to support what I do and what other people may also benefit from doing. I included this chapter to add a personal story and to let you know that healing happens.

I used to have such severe anxiety I could not go to the store because of panic attacks. I was easily overwhelmed by light, noise, and outside stimulation. Anxiety and a lack of eye contact affected my ability to talk to people. I would also feel compelled to do the same activities often for comfort. In addition, I had depression that made me unable to live an exciting, passionate life. 

All of this changed for me when I decided to actively transform my health and daily decisions. To transform my health, I started learning as much as possible. I studied thousands of hours, focusing on biochemistry and medicine. Using this knowledge, I healed myself. The key to this process is consistency and the correct daily habits. The secret to changing those habits that make a big difference is small steps. This is discussed more in Appendix B.

As an important reminder, the body often takes time to heal. When I started to significantly change my lifestyle, some positive changes took about two months to appear. Therefore, patience is a requirement. Before abandoning changes prematurely, give the new changes more time to work. Nature moves at its own pace, which is often slower than the mind wants it to be.

For many years after my health improved, I continued to learn and work on increasing connections between my neurons. One day I suddenly experienced an epiphany, as if many rooms of a darkened house were suddenly bright with light. At this moment, I realized many of the ideas in this book, such as the likely causes and treatments for ASD. 

Also, I started to understand the relationships between many different health conditions. I saw cancer, autoimmunity, diabetes, and Alzheimer’s disease from a totally different perspective. I created this book to share these ideas and help people have better health. In addition, I hope future researchers recognize the value contained in this book and change how many health conditions are understood and treated.

Now that I have improved my health and become more high-functional, being an ASD individual feels like such an amazing gift. I can use my pattern recognition skills to people heal and see health differently.

I do not think ASD is a condition with a cure in the sense of how that word is used. Instead, ASD is a condition that may experience significant improvements and higher functioning. Healing may even occur to such an extent that many difficult symptoms disappear.

ASD people behave and see the world differently, but that difference provides a unique perspective and valuable perspective. In a modern world of increasing corporatization and boring sameness, such differences may be the secret to solving the world’s complex problems.

I understand some families have severely disabled ASD children and how difficult that may be. I hope this book did not offend anyone because that way not my intention. All life has value and great beauty.