pouty mcpoohead
Jan. 20th, 2006 09:22 pmWith FALCPA in place and supermarket stock slowly turning over to new, I'm discovering why I keep having mystery hives and eczema. It's not idiopathic, after all, which I suppose should be a relief. Soy is hiding in EVERYTHING where it seemed it shouldn't. I mean HIDING. This explains why my reactions to more than trace amounts have gotten so horrid--I'm getting minute trace reactions constantly. *sigh*
Maybe I'll feel better when I start eating nothing but rocks and dirt.
Maybe I'll feel better when I start eating nothing but rocks and dirt.
EVIL, EVIL SOY
Date: 2006-01-21 02:48 am (UTC)WHY do companies think it's necessary to put soy in my bread? or my SORBET??? I just don't get it. and all the organic shit isn't very helpful either, because it's all packed with "healthy" crap like soy. I about blew my top in the grocery store the other day when a label said "no trans fat" and ingredient NUMBER ONE was "hydrogenated soybean oil." where do they THINK that trans fat comes from???? lying sacks of shit.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-21 03:47 am (UTC)Oh, but think of the fiber!
no subject
Date: 2006-01-21 03:53 am (UTC)And worms! Don't forget to eat worms!
no subject
Date: 2006-01-21 04:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-21 04:02 pm (UTC)It won't make more foods available, but it will allow us to avoid the worst offenders. And we've had to convert to buying as much as possible fresh from local sources. Buffalo and venison instead of beef because cattle are fed soy and it gets into the meat. Pig from small farms who don't feed their piggies soy. Ditto for chickens and turkey. I learned to hunt so I could feed my child. And garden. And contact gardeners who don't mulch with soy by-products to buy their produce. And buying wheat and grinding it ourselves to avoid the soy fillers.
Most people don't take soy allergies seriously because the food pr industry has touted soy as the new panacea. It's even in prescription drugs as filler, if it's not listed as one of the active ingredients. It's especially ubiquitous in medications for women - PMS remedies, menopause remedies, and birth control. I second
no subject
Date: 2006-01-21 11:36 pm (UTC)I submitted comments on the FDA FALCPA docket, too.
I've had an anaphylactic soy allergy since 1999. It's the tiny amounts that don't trigger anaphylaxis--but do trigger reactions--which make my life miserable.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-26 09:47 pm (UTC)Anyway, as an adult I try to avoid soy just because it supresses the thyroid. My thyroid has enough trouble keeping going without being actively suppressed.