Family cooking together in the morning, playing with flour

Nutrient Depletion in Pregnancy & Spacing Pregnancies

Approximately 74% of American women are lacking proper nutrients in their diet. The effects of this level of depletion may not be currently apparent in your state of health, but at some moment in time down the genetic chain someone in your family will suffer from this level of loss. Our genome has been squandered for too many years, which may be the cause of the massive reproduction issues we are now experiencing. Each generation will suffer more if we don’t start to pay closer attention to our body’s needs. It is only natural that we will start to see more problems with health in years to come as individuals will likely begin to physically age faster, suffer emotionally and develop diseases at higher rates. In order to protect your children, you not only need to eat right, but you also must consider spacing your children or fully replenishing your nutrient levels between each pregnancy.

In the Western culture, it is common for women to have babies later in life. As a result of this, if they choose to have multiple children, they are birthing them closer together. This does not allow for their bodies to build back proper nutrient reserves, which affects the child’s genome and the mother’s health. Catherine Shanahan explained in her book, Deep Nutrition: Why Your Genes Need Nutritional Food, that the fetus behaves similar to a parasite within the womb and is oblivious to the health of the host. The baby will take whatever it needs in order to survive. You will possibly have enough nutrients for your first baby, but will likely be depleted after having more children if you don’t renew your level of health. The women of some tribal cultures naturally understood this. They used to attempt to separate their children by three to four years in order to ensure that their bodies would have enough time to nutritionally build themselves back up. They did this naturally to protect the health of their future generations and their genome.

The baby always takes what it needs and programs itself under these conditions. Each pregnancy drains the body of vital vitamins and minerals unless the mother takes the time and energy to replenish. Shanahan explained, “The latest generation of children has accumulated the epigenetic damage of at least the three previous generations due to lack of adequate nutrition. Along with overconsumption of sugar and new artificial fats found in vegetable oils. The family genome has been getting battered relentlessly for almost a century – even during key, delicate periods of replication. The physiological result of these accumulated genetic insults? Distorted cartilage, bone, brain and other organ growth.” If a diet is deficient in fat the fetus will extract fat as needed from the mother’s brain. If the baby is in need of calcium he or she will take the nutrients from the mother’s bones.

The placenta was created to protect the child and has supernatural nutrient scavenging abilities. Even in an environment with poor nutrition the first child will likely thrive. The following offspring will experience the disadvantage, especially if the woman’s storehouse of nutrients was not refilled. If there are not enough nutrients, the second child’s epigenetic expression will likely be impaired which may cause disease or disability throughout the child’s life. Shanahan explained that subsequent children of a woman lacking a proper nutrient storehouse will be constructed as well as possible under the conditions, however both the mother and the child may suffer as a result. We have no idea what will happen to the future generations if we do not learn to eat a diet closer to what ancestors did.

She discussed the importance of creating a birth gap between pregnancies in order to restore the nutrient levels within women’s bodies for each child and the mother’s wellbeing. Shanahan said, “Previous studies have shown that births less than 18 months apart increase child mortality and, in some cases, stunt growth.” She noted facial disproportions, variances in appearance and skeletal structural asymmetry in second and third born children. These subtle symmetry shifts can cause injury or pain later in life. The underlying cause of these structural problems is not because of the birth order, but a result of malnourishment of the mother affecting the child in the womb. Systematic spacing of children and planning is a form of female empowerment and freedom. Spacing children by three to four years, like ancient tribes did, helps the tissues to reform and replenishes nutrients.

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