When Wendy Andringa, a busy professional living in Brooklyn, New York, was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in December 2005, she hardly thought that her path to recovery would mean biweekly trips to the farmers market or reading about industrial agriculture. Wendy’s story of treatment and discovery shares an intensely personal quest to combat disease through healthy eating.
Adult Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma is a disease in which malignant (cancer) cells form in the lymph system. According to the Lymphoma Information Network, its causes are still unknown, although genetic and environmental risk factors have been associated with its development. The American Cancer Society estimates that 53,370 cases of NHL will be diagnosed in the U.S. this year, 28,190 of those cases being women.
For the thirty-nine-year-old professional designer, the concept of illness couldn’t have been more remote. With a busy career and social life, Wendy exudes energy. There’s no hint of illness about her slight frame and youthful appearance. Nonetheless, she found herself facing a serious disease.
In Wendy’s case, her cancer was diagnosed as indolent, or slow growing. Her doctors at Beth Israel Medical Center recommended “watchful waiting,” in which a patient’s condition is closely observed without giving any medical treatment until symptoms appear or change. While the news meant that she wouldn’t be undergoing radiation or chemotherapy, it also left Wendy wondering exactly she should do. She felt like a time bomb. An independent thinker with a competitive nature, the idea of sitting by and waiting did not seem like a take-charge approach to getting, and staying, well. She decided to go beyond what traditional medicine could offer her which really wasn’t much at this point. She began with the Beth Israel Continuum for Health and Healing, recommended by her oncologist, where physicians specialize in holistic medicine. Although her doctor made suggestions as to alternatives she might consider, including diet, yoga, meditation, and acupuncture, it was Wendy’s job to pursue a course. “When I visited the integrative medicine MD I realized that I had to take responsibility for my own healing process. He didn’t treat me like a passive patient; he asked me what I was going to do about it. That’s when it hit me that doctors don’t really heal you, they just guide you in the healing process.”
“I researched everything. Almost everything I read directed me to diet as the source of wellness—as well as illness.” Wendy’s bookshelves grew with cookbooks and nutrition guides. Healing With Whole Foods: Asian Traditions and Modern Nutrition, by Paul Pitchford, is a favorite. “My preference is to eat more like our great grandparents might have eaten, or what they call a whole food diet, and I’m not talking about the store.”
Wendy’s focus became the nutritional quality of foods and the elimination of non-nutritionally significant foods from her diet. “More green food for beta-carotene. Lots of fiber, whole grains, complete protein, and good natural fats. Just food as close as possible to its original state, which is its most nutritional state, and food that is best for building immune strength.”
As Wendy’s knowledge of nutritional health increased, so did her interest in everything about food.
Fighting Disease with a Whole Foods Diet
By: Lori Ball (View Profile)
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This is a nicely written article about a courageous lady!
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