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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / Pollen is Not The Problem

Pollen is Not The Problem

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • How Seasonal Allergies Originate in the Gut
  • Parents Pass Gut Flora to Their Children
  • Gut Imbalance Can Develop Later in Life
  • Steps to Eliminate Seasonal Allergies From Your Life
  • Bottom Line on Healing Pollen Allergies

pollenSpring has sprung in full force in my neck of the woods, and wow, is the pollen ever thick!

Sounds of people sneezing and blowing their nose fill the pollen laden air. Boxes of tissue, allergy pills and bottles of eye drops are flying off the shelves fast and furious in pharmacies all across town.

While pollen does indeed make you sneeze if you get a noseful of it, is it really necessary to dread spring every single year knowing that Visine and allergy meds will be your constant companion to deal with watery eyes and congestion for at least a month or two?  Is this something you just have to resign yourself to and live with?

The truth is that seasonal allergies are much more than a nuisance. They are one of the mildest forms of autoimmune disease. It is a gentle warning by the body that more autoimmunity problems are on the way if the dietary flaws and gut imbalance that is causing them is not dealt with effectively.

Hippocrates noted that “all disease begins in the gut”. This includes seasonal allergies like allergic rhinitis or hay fever.

Dealing with seasonal allergies using over the counter or prescription meds is like cutting the wire to the flashing oil light on the dashboard of your car and pretending that the car is no longer low on oil.  Such an approach guarantees that the problem will get worse over time and most likely lead to more serious autoimmune problems in the future such as asthma, eczema, psoriasis, fibromyalgia, lupus, celiac, migraines, MS, diabetes, arthritis and the list goes on.

For example, it was recently reported that babies with eczema even if mild are much more likely to develop asthma. In fact, 40% of babies with eczema go on to develop this much more serious autoimmune disease later in childhood.

A healthy balance of beneficial gut flora in our colon is the ultimate gatekeeper of health. Gut flora is the major regulator of the immune system for better or for worse. When the gut environment is out of balance, a malfunctioning and overreactive immune system is the result.

How Seasonal Allergies Originate in the Gut

When the gut is out of balance, opportunistic and pathogenic microbes overgrow and take over dominance. These pathogens produce toxic substances which are the by-products of their metabolism. Some of these toxins actually play an important role in the body when the pathogens in the gut are controlled and kept in check by good flora. But, when the good flora is absent or not playing a dominant role, these pathogens can overproduce these toxins.

One such toxin produced by several types of gut pathogens (Proteus, E. coli, Staphylococci and others) is histamine which is actually an important neurotransmitter in the body.

When these microbes grow unchecked in the gut due to a lack of beneficial flora, they overproduce histamine. This causes many functions in the body that react to it to go haywire as excessive amounts pour into the blood.

Is Benadryl your best friend? If so, you know you potentially suffer from an overgrowth of pathogens in your gut that are overproducing histamine!

Parents Pass Gut Flora to Their Children

Conventional medicine likes to point to genetics as the cause of allergies. This is the case for only a small percentage of cases. The fact is that parents pass on their gut imbalance problems to their children. This causes gut dysbiosis to worsen with each successive generation. This and oversterilized environments that gives children little access to probiotics in nature is the main reason why seasonal allergies have skyrocketed in recent generations.

According to Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD, children with autoimmunity issues almost without exception have a mother and most likely also a father who exhibit signs of chronic gut dysbiosis. Most women have been on the gut destroying birth control pill for years before having children. They also have taken many courses of antibiotics throughout their lives. Almost every single one has a health problem that is associated with chronic gut imbalance. The  most frequent being digestive disorders, hay fever and other seasonal allergies, migraines, PMS, chronic cystitis (UTIs) and vaginal yeast infections.

Do you wish to have children free of allergies? If so, it is imperative as a mother to be to get your gut health in order before birthing them. Ensuring the infant microbiome at birth is properly seeded with a diverse population of beneficial microbes is another important step.

Gut Imbalance Can Develop Later in Life

Have you ever noticed that a lot of adults say that they developed seasonal allergies all of a sudden one year where they never had them before?

Well, the pollen hasn’t changed has it?  The excuse that “the pollen is really bad this year” is not the reason either.

Development of seasonal allergies all of a sudden or those that get worse each year is a sign that gut health is deteriorating with age. At that point, steps should be taken quickly with the diet to rectify the situation.

The good news is that even if you or your children have seasonal allergies now, you can deal with it effectively with a change in diet!

Steps to Eliminate Seasonal Allergies From Your Life

Here are a few simple steps for combating seasonal allergies with diet:

  • Eliminate pasteurized dairy from your life in all forms. Pasteurization of dairy denatures fragile milk proteins and renders then allergenic among other problems. Grassfed raw dairy would be an excellent alternative here. If you have problems digesting dairy, try healthy milk substitutes such as homemade coconut milk tonic.
  • Source the best, raw, unfiltered local honey in your area and use a teaspoon or two everyday during allergy season. Note that heated honey does not confer any health benefits and is actually toxic according to Ayurvedic tradition. If you prefer creamed honey to liquid, be sure it is free from any additives and GMOs.
  • Look to significantly reduce or eliminate grains and sugars in all forms from your diet. Many people with seasonal allergies report nothing short of miraculous improvement when they take steps to avoid gluten containing grains. Even more effective is avoiding all grains and sugars particularly during allergy season.
  • Look at the GAPS Diet as a long term solution for rectifying gut imbalance. Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MDs book Gut and Psychology Syndrome is a primer on this subject.  She not only describes in detail how gut dysbiosis develops in the first place but outlines a comprehensive plan for rebalancing gut flora and putting autoimmunity into remission for good.
  • While you are healing from the inside out, use herbs to find natural, nontoxic allergy relief instead of meds. This article details which allergy relieving herbs are most potent for this purpose and how to use them.

Bottom Line on Healing Pollen Allergies

Seasonal allergies need not continue to annoy you year after year during what should be one of the most beautiful and enjoyable times of the year.

Spend some time and energy fixing your gut environment and reap the rewards by breathing freely again no matter how thick the pollen may be!

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Category: Natural Remedies
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (199)

  1. Colleen B

    Oct 10, 2012 at 12:10 am

    Have you done any research on the liver and how a “clean” liver helps with this? My chiro talks about this and after being on Zyrtec for like 10 years I went off it on Jan 1. Also went off all asthma meds after many years. We have been using whole foods, raw grass-fed milk, coconut oil, raw honey, kombucha, and other things to turn around some health problems (mostly asthma an allergies, but have experiences some other wonderful side effects like some weight loss and clearer skin!). But, this fall, when the mold spiked, so did my allergies. I was MISERABLE from the moment my eyes opened in the morning. I tried my traditional “liver cleansing” things like drinking lemon water or kombucha (which seemed to work all summer) and nothing helped. The chiro suggested a liver cleanse, but I was/am not in a good enough emotional place after my father died a few months ago, to attempt something where I can’t eat regular food for a couple weeks. She suggested adding beets to my diet. So, I roasted some up and, since I don’t love the taste, started making fruit smoothies with them in the AM. My runny nose would stop before I was finished with the smoothie! I still had a couple hard days but it seems to be done now. Some of the foods we eat for liver cleansing are the same foods you would eat for gut health, but I really don’t see much about this topic (of liver health) and wonder if you knew anything about it. THanks for all your wonderful information Sarah!

    Reply
    • Gait

      Apr 15, 2014 at 2:01 pm

      It’s true that Liver Support helps great for sinus problems and seasonal allergies!

      I see it this way: when the liver can’t work like it should be, the blood needs to be clean, so the garbage is going through to the others cleansers, and often to the one who are not the best.

      When your liver can clean up things well, a lot other things are going well too!

    • Ania

      May 16, 2014 at 12:12 pm

      Not to mention that the liver is a major digestive organ. It is the organ that secretes bile to help properly digest fats.

  2. Rebecca

    Aug 22, 2012 at 8:09 pm

    Oh my gosh! You just described me EXACTLY. I suddenly developed allergies one day when I was about 24 years old. I am now 46 and each year they get worse and worse and worse. In fact, I am not infamous with a government inspector at my hospital because my allergies were so bad. She insisted I must be sick and refused to let me sit by her during my interview! I actually sneeze so many times in a row that I have blacked out. I have no idea what my voice sounds like since I have been nasally for years AND I have hardly any sense of taste left. It is depressing. Yes, Benedryl is my best friend.

    Reply
  3. Peter

    Jul 21, 2012 at 11:57 am

    Do not forget that the way in which you are breathing plays an important role!

    See this specific page, but the entire website is amazingly interesting:
    http://www.normalbreathing.com/diseases-Asthma.php#Allergies%20and%20asthma

    After a stressfull period in my life I apparently ended up with a slight from of chronic hyperventilation. After training (under the watchiful eye of an instructor in this so-called Buteyko method) to breath through my nose 24/7 reducing my breathing frequency from 24 times/minute to about 6-9 times/minute at rest…(which prevents your nose from being stuffed!) I also reduced my hayfever symtoms, which I had for 16 years (!), with about 95%.

    (Next to that I have less headaches, warm hands & feet, feel less stressed, less brain fog, etc. etc.)

    It’s really a website which contains an amazing amount of information that is vital to your health and quality of life!

    http://www.normalbreathing.com/

    Amazing!

    Reply
  4. Anonymous

    Jul 21, 2012 at 10:27 am

    I realize this is an old thread, but wanted to ask whether dust allergies are a special case or in any way different?

    Reply
  5. Kimmi

    Apr 3, 2012 at 7:45 pm

    I love your analogy to the car. Hey honey the engine light has been on for a week, I don’t think it’s going to shut off on it’s own. “OK, I’ll head out there now and cut the wire so you don’t see it anymore”.
    Sounds ridiculous but we do it every time we take allergy meds!
    Nice article, thanks for sharing.

    Reply
  6. Manda

    Mar 24, 2012 at 5:49 pm

    This post seems to come with perfect timing for me. I hate spring because of my allergies. In fact, I’m writing this post while taking allegra, benedryl & some nasal spray while struggling to stay indoors during such perfect weather. But I’m also about to sign up for a cowshare/raw milk program. I’m not sure if I’m at a place to fully take on the GAPS diet, but I think I’ll keep a record of how my allergies hold up with raw milk. Thanks for writing this!

    It’s also interesting you noted gut dysbiosis. Does that include Crones & Ulcerated Colitis? Both run in my family. While I’m not showing either symptoms yet, my spring time allergies are frankly horrendous.

    Reply
  7. Esther

    Mar 23, 2012 at 11:58 pm

    What’s been a huge help for me this year ( and I know it’ll help anybody who’s willing to do it) is what’s called a Buteyko Breathing Method. I have hay fever and asthma and this breathing technique has been a life saver!

    Reply
  8. Aimee

    Mar 23, 2012 at 9:28 pm

    Thank you for another great post Sarah! When I first read about this connection – gut health and autoimmune problems (from your earlier posts) it was very foreign to me. I did purchase the GAPS books and this makes so much sense. I was always amazed a few years back when my son started school the amount of peanut allergies and asthma in children. When I was in elementary school (over 30 years ago) I was not aware of any of my classmates having any of these problems. I was not sure if mainstream doctors had better ways to detect these issues, were being told by drug companies that more and more kids had these symptoms to push more drugs or was it true that so many more children were truely ill?

    Reply
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