Creating Change
This is the last article in this series where I get down to the nitty gritties.
Control systems
Every machine has a control system, even if it is a simple on /off switch.
The human body is no different except our control system in incredibly sophisticated and to be honest we have no real understanding of how it works, but work it does.
Our gut is an important part of that control system, it is a real brain powered by trillions of cell communicating with each other, just like some super computer. We just have no idea of the code.
Go back a hundred years and there was an abundant supply of microbes, there were the good ones that powered our gut brain and the bad ones that made as sick or even killed us.
Swapping Infectious diseases for non-infectious disease
In fact the majority of people died from some infectious disease in early life, so the average age at death was low.
But with all our modern technology, our medical and food systems, sewage, clean water and an understanding of hygiene we largely solved the problem of infectious diseases – that is until Covid came along.
But our battle against these harmful bugs meant we also wiped out much of our beneficial microbes, so our control system was not working – leading to an epidemic of chronic non infectious diseases – over weight, diabetes, heart attacks, dementia etc.
Good bugs versus bad bugs – Eco balance
This is near the top of the list of challenges facing humanity, how do we control the bad bugs which make us sick without killing of the good bugs which power our intelligent control system.
This is what Gbiota is all about and it is not as difficult as it may seem, if you control the conditions the good bugs will out breed and out compete the bad bugs. What we call Eco balance.
We have the technology, we know how to do it but how do we make this technology available to the wide population?
The fringe group
It is true that we have a small group of followers who are quite happy recycling waste to breed the beneficial microbes that power our gut brain, but this a minute proportion of the total population – so how do we set up a system where the population has access to a healthy gut brain?
We have a number of problems to overcome.
The biggest is that these beneficial microbes have a short life.
You can buy some wonder plant, broccoli, kale or whatever from the supermarket but by the time it has passed from farm, to warehouse, to supermarket to your fridge the beneficial microbes will have died.
Changing our food system
This means a fundamental change in our food system from a highly centralised system, which is the most efficient and beloved by our mega food companies, to a local system.
This is not going back to the old system, that would mean going back to infectious diseases, we need local growers who understand Eco balance.
But for this to really work we have to change the way the system operates, instead of harvesting the plants and selling plants it means customer would buy a box with live plants still growing which they would pick and eat while really fresh, before the microbes die.
A journey of a thousand steps
We have already started, we have the technology and we have a group of dedicates supporters who are growing their own gut brain food, for themselves in their own home.
So what is the next step?
The most important group is to be and new mums. Read The best pro-biotic ever
Mums pass on their gut biota to their babies at birth and from their breast milk.
But mums, even though they love their babies, are typically to busy and stressed out to grow their own gut brain food.
But is is likely that these new mums would have parent, who are equally dedicate to the future of their grand kids and who have the time, resources and skills to produce Gbiota boxes.
All mum has to do is to water, pick and eat.
This benefits mum and her baby but is the next step I establishing a local gut brain food industry of local growers.
So why not join the Gbiota social movement and change the world for the better.
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