My podcast with Angelo is now up! Here’s the page: Latest in Paleo 64: Paul Jaminet, Perfect Health Diet.
Yesterday’s show with Sean Croxton is also available: You can listen at Blog Talk Radio’s Underground Wellness page.
My podcast with Angelo is now up! Here’s the page: Latest in Paleo 64: Paul Jaminet, Perfect Health Diet.
Yesterday’s show with Sean Croxton is also available: You can listen at Blog Talk Radio’s Underground Wellness page.
Sean Croxton just sent me the questions he’ll be asking on tonight’s show — they’re terrific and I can’t wait for the show. Sean and I will discuss some controversial assertions from our book, and major factors enabling weight loss and maintenance of a healthy weight. To listen live, tune in to the Underground Wellness show at 8 pm Eastern / 5 pm Pacific.
UPDATE: I forgot to mention that I’ll be appearing on Sean Croxton’s Underground Wellness show Wednesday night, December 5, at 8 pm Eastern / 5 pm Pacific. Sean takes callers which makes it a fun show!
The book is about to launch! The Scribner edition will appear in stores and ship from online retailers in the US and Canada on Tuesday, December 11. An Australian / New Zealand / UK edition from Scribe will follow a few weeks later.
This week I’ll be blogging about what’s new in the new edition. For today, let me just give a brief update about some notable happenings.
We’re getting some mainstream publicity – for instance, we’ll be featured in the January issue of Vogue and in Australia’s largest circulation magazine, Australian Women’s Weekly. I’m hopeful this will continue because I think we offer a uniquely healthful diet that nearly everyone can enjoy.
I’ve sent out a few prepublication copies to bloggers and ancestral health community figures. One went to Dennis Mangan who must be a very fast reader because he has already written a review. He notes that the book sets forth a number of novelties, and concludes:
This is just a fabulous book. I’ve read many books in the arena of health and nutrition, and I have to say that Perfect Health Diet is hands down the best I’ve ever read. The book addresses almost everything you need to know to live in perfect health, and the arguments of its authors are thoroughly convincing. If you have the slightest interest in improving your health, you owe it to yourself to read this book.
We were also mentioned by the popular blogger Glenn Reynolds, “Instapundit.” One of Glenn’s readers then wrote him to recommend our book:
Chalk me and my family up as big fans and beneficiaries of the PHD. It’s been life-altering, literally, for myself, my wife, and my two daughters.
Given the success of the PHD and other similar diets (like the Paleo Diet and the Primal Blueprint), it’s very likely that most of our chronic health issues in the United States are the result of malnutrition: following the USDA’s dietary guidelines seem to reliably lead to human malnutrition.
Malthus may have been right, although not in the way he thought.
That anonymous reader turned out to be Tuck at Yelling Stop. Thanks Tuck!
Next, I have a few podcasts coming up.
My interview with Angelo Coppola of “Latest in Paleo” will go live on Thursday. Topics we discussed are listed on his Facebook page. Angelo says he has competition for his copy of our book. It doesn’t look like he put up a tough fight:
I’ll be appearing on Dr Lauren Noel’s “Dr Lo Radio” show on our launch day, Tuesday Dec 11, at 9 pm Eastern / 6 pm Pacific.
My interview with Abel James Bascom on his “Fat Burning Man” show will go live on Friday Dec 14. This is my second interview with Abel since he read an early manuscript of this edition (first interview from August 12), and it was fun to be able to talk about some of our more offbeat ideas this time around.
On Saturday, December 15, Shou-Ching and I will speak, do a book signing, and eat a potluck supper with the Boston Paleo Meetup group. There are 9 slots available as I write this.
Finally, I’m in the midst of re-arranging content on the site. You’ll notice a “Resources” tab at the top of the page, which is going to have a variety of material, some of it new. I’m going to launch a forum soon and that will supersede the Q&A page as a place to take questions. The Q&A page has moved under the Resources tab. I’ll have more on what’s new at the site when the forum launches.
Thank you to everyone who is supporting our book launch! We believe we have the most delicious, most healthful diet around; it is a truly beautiful book; and we are excited to have a chance to reach a large audience and meaningfully improve public health.
The next year could be huge for the ancestral health movement. We have a chance to leap into the mainstream. Shou-Ching and I will certainly be working hard to bring that about. A lot of other people are working hard at it, too.
In order to accomplish this, we have to work together, and to do that it’s extremely important to meet. That’s why I’m very excited about the two big ancestral health gatherings: PaleoFX and the Ancestral Health Symposium. Both have made announcements this week.
PaleoFX will be held March 28-30 in Austin, Texas. March 30 is my birthday and I can’t think of a better way to celebrate than with lots of Paleo friends.
PaleoFX is a terrific event. The 2013 speakers include Mat Lalonde, Sarah Fragoso, Nora Gedgaudas, Kelly Starrett, Diane Sanfilippo, Jimmy Moore, Nell Stephenson, Cate Shanahan, Abel James, Emily Deans, Michelle Tam, and many more, including rising young stars like Dan Pardi of Dan’s Plan.
PaleoFX has strong fitness and food components, as you would expect given the backgrounds of Michelle and Keith Norris of Ancestral Momentum. Fitness sessions and cooking demos run alongside the talks, so PaleoFX is a great opportunity to improve body and spirit as well as mind.
It will be in a new location, the scenic Palmer Events Center, which unfortunately has space limitations placing a strict limit on the number of tickets that can be sold. PaleoFX 2013 is expected to sell out early, so it’s a good idea to make plans soon.
PaleoFX is offering a special deal on tickets purchased by December 1: you’ll be automatically entered in a contest to win access to a VIP dinner with speakers or a full refund of the PaleoFX ticket cost. Visit http://therealpaleofx.com/ to register for PaleoFX 2013.
The Ancestral Health Society has released a call for volunteers to help with the Ancestral Health Symposium 2013.
AHS 2013 will be held in Atlanta, Georgia on August 15-17. Right now the Society is looking for volunteers for the following positions:
If you’re interested, please let the Society know.
At AHS 2012, I volunteered to help the Ancestral Health Society create a scholarly and clinical journal, the Journal of Evolution and Health. We’re currently choosing a publishing platform and solving technical issues; the editorial process is expected to begin in the new year.
We believe that this journal can bring scholarly, clinical, and popular communities together. The many health success stories that have appeared on Paleo/Primal/PHD blogs are strong evidence for the effectiveness of ancestral approaches to health. The journal will provide a forum to assemble evidence systematically and communicate it to a broader audience.
I know of a number of other promising initiatives underway in the community to bring ancestral health to the general public. Many, I’m sure, will bear fruit.
For our part, we’re hopeful that the new edition of our book can help the movement become more popular. We believe our diet is well-grounded scientifically, effective at healing, delicious to eat, and, because it supports gluten-free safe starches, easy for most people to adopt and maintain.
In the spirit of teamwork, we would like to introduce our readers to other worthy members of the ancestral health community. Toward that end, I would like to add a few “resource” pages to the site:
– Food sites. A lot of great food bloggers post PHD-compatible recipes. Some of my favorites: Hilary Finch Hutler’s TummyRumblr; Russ Crandall’s The Domestic Man; Josephine and Henry Svendblad’s Nutty Kitchen; and Francesca, “The Italian Paleo,” at Francesca Eats. I’m sure there are other great food bloggers that should be on this list. All of them deserve more attention.
– Healers. We often get emails from readers asking if we know of doctors, nutritionists, or alternative medicine practitioners in their area who are familiar with PHD and supportive of integrating modern medicine with natural, ancestral approaches to healing. Usually we don’t. Assembling a list of PHD-friendly healers would let us give a better answer.
If you’d like to be listed on one of these resource pages, please send me an email: pauljaminet at perfecthealthdiet dot com.
I have ulterior motives for discovering PHD-friendly foodists and healers. Identifying allies-in-spirit is the first step toward working together. For example, as the journal gets going, we will want to publish clinical case reports; to do so, the editors will need to be in contact with healers. There may be other opportunities. I organized a panel at AHS 2012 on “New Technologies, New Opportunities” to discuss how the ancestral community can take advantage of software technologies that are enabling new forms of collaboration, information sharing, and mutual aid. I don’t have anything definite in mind – yet – but I think there are opportunities to do a better job of bringing great food and ancestral healing to a broad public.
It’s an exciting time in the ancestral health movement. The community is growing fast, but is still small enough that it’s possible to know most of the players personally. If you’d like to be involved, there are many opportunities. Please consider getting involved!
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