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Relief for Intestinal Gas and Bloating: Part 5 of 9 on ELIMINATION


Robyn Openshaw - Jul 22, 2008 - This Post May Contain Affiliate Links


A healthy bowel produces minimal flatulence, none of it foul-smelling or causing pressure, swelling, or pain. Gas is, as Dr. Jensen describes it, “putrefactive fermentations” of undigested proteins. In other words, proteins sit in the gut and become hosts for undesirable bacteria.

The problem is, when converting people to a high-fiber, GreenSmoothieGirl diet, some people who didn’t have gas before, now do! If they ate Coke and donuts before, they had no flatulence, and then when they start green smoothies as Step 1, they’re gassy and miserable. They might even want to quit and go back to when they felt “better.”

Dr. Jensen likens this to when you sweep a dirty basement: as you sweep it up, a lot of dust is kicked into the air. His research indicates, however, that people, even while experiencing gas problems, report softer stool and easier passing of the gas. It gradually lessens, he said, until it becomes minimal after about three months. Be patient and don’t quit good habits as you seek relief for intestinal gas and bloating.

As you get through that initial period, drink 1 ounce of water for every 2 lbs. of body weight, which will help.

Here are all the posts in this series on elimination:
Part 1: Green Feces
Part 2: Foods That Cause Constipation
Part 3: Relieving Constipation
Part 4: Natural Laxatives
Part 5: Relief For Intestinal Gas And Bloating
Part 6: Chronic Constipation
Part 7: Best Colon Cleanse
Part 8: Body Cleansing
Part 9: More Experts On Colon Cleansing

Posted in: Health Concerns

5 thoughts on “Relief for Intestinal Gas and Bloating: Part 5 of 9 on ELIMINATION”

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  1. Hal says:

    Flatulence from undigested proteins? I thought it was a case of bad food combining? Could you comment, please.

  2. Robyn says:

    Food combining theory is just that: theory. Quite a few experts say that our body is equipped to handle a variety of foods eaten at once just fine. I have never seen anything empirical or compelling to convince me about some of these complicated “food combining” approaches. When to eat what food shouldn’t be rocket science. That said . . . I do think it makes sense that eating heavy proteins (like animal flesh) with quickly digested starches (like fruit) may cause problems. Perhaps that particular combination could lead to undigested proteins sitting in the gut.

    In general, I think you should combine all plant foods however you want to! Eat greens, vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts and seeds with joy and abandon! A healthy GI tract should handle it just fine. If you personally have damage to your digestive system and find that certain combinations cause gas for you, then by all means avoid those combinations.

    Read Ch. 6 of 12 Steps to Whole Foods for more information about legumes and flatulence, and avoiding it.

  3. Lindy says:

    This is good news for me! I was wondering because I have been having gas even though I haven’t been eating dairy products. So I’m glad that it is supposed to happen like that!

  4. lbwall says:

    I’ve been drinking green smoothies for about 10 days and have had horrible bloating. So much that it looks like I’m pregnant. Is this normal?

  5. Rose says:

    Hi all,

    I’ve been drinking green smoothies for about nine months now having now less than 5, often times 7 smoothies a day. Each smoothie was about a quart and full of kale, spinach to double the liquid level from 2.5 cups (water) to 5 cups (blended greens). Then I fill the rest with a frozen banana, couple of apples/pears/oranges and then filled with frozen fruit from costco, like the mixed bag of mango, papaya, pineapple or the frozen berries like blueberries. I’ve had gas since day one but I’m not bloated, nor is it stinky, just gas.

    Two weeks ago I had to go visit my daughter and did not take the Blendtec as my family would kill me. I purchased quarts of green smoothies from the grocery store. Once I got home I made my own version again and had a day of gas. I realized that I didn’t have any gas during the two weeks of grocery story smoothies but that it returned with the thick tasty ones I make at home. Now I’m wondering why. I’ve always been very healthy, mostly vegetarian, super active, and never been overweight. I cook vegetarian meals most nights.

    My hair has the best change with the green smoothies other than just feeling wonderful consuming so many greens and fruits. My hair is so much thicker, curlier and shiny. The grey is still there but you can’t have everything.

    Why is green smoothies making me gaseous?

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