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Always hit the “bull’s eye” with teleological nutritional targeting

Always hit the “bull’s eye” with teleological nutritional targeting

Almost everyone can remember hearing “Eat the carrots, they’re good for you!”. Did she ever take those wise and meaningful instructions to heart and ask for another help or did her eyes cloud in mock belief?

What was once considered pure folklore is proving to be astonishingly true. True for carrots plus a cornucopia of other delicious garden delights.

What exactly is teleological nutritional targeting? Is it a game of bow and arrow or something out of a new age chemistry lab? It is neither.

The whole thing is pretty old news, some would even say it’s really old wisdom. It just hasn’t caught our attention in the last few centuries or so, until recently.

Teleological is the study of design or purpose in natural phenomena.

Nutritional targeting is “hitting the mark” of our dietary needs with nutrition-specific fruits and vegetables.

You can intelligently determine how a particular plant from nature’s bounty will follow its own individual requirements simply by looking at it. The exterior shape and design is the first clue and the interior shape and design gives the second.

The color also plays apart.

So, back to the carrot. Cut into “coins”, you can see that the interior design remarkably resembles the iris and pupil of the eye. Nutritional science wholeheartedly supports the role this vegetable plays in your eye health.

Isn’t it amazing how some foods resemble the parts of the body they help, such as:

  • Walnuts – an uncanny resemblance to the left and right hemispheres, upper brains, and lower cerebellums of the human brain. Compare the wrinkles (folds) in the inner nut and outer shell with the neocortex. Science has now discovered that the nutrients present in walnuts help develop more than thirty-six neurotransmitters for brain function.
  • Celery and rhubarb: A single standing “rib” suddenly appears as a bone. These foods specifically target bone strength. Is it any wonder bones are 23% sodium and these foods are 23% sodium? If your body doesn’t get enough sodium, it pulls it out of your bones, weakening them. Feed your hungry bones!
  • Tomatoes: look inside and you will see a resemblance to the four chambers of the human heart. The red color of a vine-ripened tomato matches the blood that flows through it.

Whatever your need, there is a plant out there somewhere with the answer found in its matching design.

There is an endless supply of solutions!

Mother Nature has a story she longs to tell you by sharing the wisdom of what’s inside every fruit and vegetable. She is just waiting for you to ask her!

Once I tell you about its secrets, you’ll see fresh produce with a new meaning, a new enthusiasm. You’ll be spouting your newfound knowledge to everyone who pays attention to you (hmmm…wonder what the story is about the corn!).

Now, imagine going to the farmers market, where all the selections are organic. You choose onions with healthy skin, sweet potatoes that are elongated and six to ten inches long like the pancreas, fresh beans, and other information-rich garden offerings.

What joy!

Then come home and fill your kitchen table with delicious treasures. Make a list of the areas of your body that will get the attention that are hungry when you devour these delicious fresh foods.

Next, pull out your favorite cookbook and try to make a specific, nutrient-dense meal that’s really satisfying and tasty, too. Repeat daily.

Mother Nature, the “first farmer” in history, will thank you.

Become your own pharmacist today, the 21st century way! Learn more TNT wisdom and reap treasure troves of information on a variety of specific whole foods that match the seven body system blueprints.

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