Friday, March 25, 2011

On Cleansing, D#1 - Kicking Caffeine


What is your most irrational fear? As you titrate with us off caffeine, gluten, dairy, alcohol and sugar, what are you most afraid will happen? Let's start with caffeine.

Today is D#1 of the Gottfried Cleanse, and I'm kicking caffeine - or at least I'm starting the process. Why is it so hard to decaffeinate? What's stuck and repetitive in my thinking about caffeine and what it does for me? Are you similarly addicted? What are the reasons? Better energy? Better concentration? More creative? More on your game?

Many of my patients look at me blankly when I suggest they detox off caffeine. A doctor has never told them to decaffeinate before - and that may have something to do with the fact that 90% of doctors are addicted to caffeine. Yet the same patients tell me they're exhausted, they don't get restorative sleep, they're sleep is disrupted with awakenings at 1am or 2am or 3am or 4am or all of the above, they have a hard time winding down, they're "wired but tired." We check their labs and cortisol is too high after their cup of Peet's, and there's a muffin top emerging in their mid-section. They have blood sugar instability, and get irritable unless they eat frequently. Even worse, caffeine increases inflammation, which is the final common pathway for many bad things from bad aging to cancer.

All related to caffeine. Kick the habit with me, slowly over the next 7 days. Substitute real sources of energy rather than fake sources. Exercise in the morning instead of your cuppa Joe. Meditate. Take maca capsules or add maca powder to your smoothie. Check your adrenal function.

"But I only drink decaf!" is another common refrain in my practice. I drink decaf too, well Blue Bottle Decaf Noir to be precise. It has a fair amount of caffeine (usually 1-3% to comply with international standards), and the process for decaffeinating is not exactly good for you. Here's that chemical process as described by Wikipedia:


In the case of coffee, various methods can be used. The process is usually performed on unroasted (green) beans, and starts with steaming of the beans. They are then rinsed with a solvent that extracts the caffeine while leaving the other essential chemicals in the coffee beans. The process is repeated anywhere from 8 to 12 times until it meets either the international standard of having removed 97% of the caffeine in the beans or the EU standard of having the beans 99.9% caffeine-free by mass. Coffee contains over 400 chemicals important to the taste and aroma of the final drink: it is therefore challenging to remove only caffeine while leaving the other chemicals at their original concentrations.

I've taken a fair amount of chemistry and biochemistry courses, and I can tell you that "solvent" is almost never a good thing.

I'm taking my Detoxification Support Packets, which really helps the liver with getting off caffeine with minimal side effects. For more on the two phases of detoxification and how the packets help, click here. To order Detox Packets, go here and search "detox."

Today: white tea, third infusion only. No decaf. Lots of herbal tea including ginseng. My canary: hot filtered water with Meyer lemon and two pinches of cayenne. I'm lovin' my liver again. xoxo

4 comments:

Namaste said...

I've had to come to the realization that I am physically dependant on cofee. If I go beyond 9:30 or 10:00 am without cofee I get a HUGE headache that leads to nausea. And I cant get past the wonderful aroma, and all the sensory triggers associated with it. The best I have been able to do is keep my consumption down to a cup or so a day, but evertime I clean the 'grunge' build up from the filter resevoir I cringe at what my insides must look like ! Thank you for the useful pointers!

Shachar said...

Dropping coffee IS a challenge. Thanks for the valuable info.

Slavica said...

I'm right there with you, Dr. Sara. Today, I stopped all forms of caffeine as part of the weaning (went from green tea to white tea in days 1 &2). Incidentally (validating fodder for your post-cleanse habits), Blue Bottle Decaf Noir uses the swiss water process to decaffeinate, rather than the significantly more toxic direct solvent method you quoted from wikipedia. But, yes, in cleanse time, it's better not to have the taste of coffee or those trace amounts of caffeine. I hope your cleansing day 3 is a productive one!

Dr. Sara Gottfried, MD said...

Thanks, all, for your comments. Slavica, for the clarification on the Blue Bottle swiss process for decaffeination. Yet I totally get a buzz from Decaf Noir! The main problem with decaf coffee is that it's still very acidic, which tends to veer the body toward hormonal imbalance. To answer your question about vitamin C and B3, I believe the main problem is with either insufficient (also compromises detoxification) or excess levels (think: Linus Pauling). How do we right-size your levels? The detox packets are a great start. Does that answer your question?

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I'm an organic gynecologist, yoga teacher + writer. I earn a living partnering with women to get them vital and self-realized again. We're born that way, but often fall off the path. Let's take your lousy mood and fatigue, and transform it into something sacred and useful.