Peaches & Nectarines

Healing Food
The skin of peaches and nectarines has a property that’s sticky to toxins and poisons inside the intestinal tract. These skins cling to deep-seated pockets of debris; old, putrefied food; and mucus inside the small intestine and colon, driving them out to make room for friendly bacteria and microorganisms and allow for better nutrient absorption. The juicy nature of a peach or nectarine is unique in that it’s a combination of fruit acid with mineral salts and sugars, with an astringent phytochemical compound close to the pit that allows for rejuvenation close to the liver’s inner core. Peaches and nectarines are prized by deer. These fruits have adapted to create a certain phytochemical compound when in their growing stage that acts as an appetite suppressant for deer. That appetite suppressant is harmless to humans but allows peaches and nectarines to be self-limiting and grant a high satiation effect. This phytochemical compound interacts with the endocrine system, allowing sluggish endocrine glands that are losing vitality to revive and come back to life. Because of the self-limiting phytochemical compound, eating peaches and nectarines can help someone who wants weight loss to experience it more quickly. Peaches and nectarines are far more effective than any weight-loss drug. Peach and nectarine trees also draw up a wide variety of minerals and nutrients out of the earth to make a very well-rounded supplementation effect, warding off nutritional deficiencies. If you’re with a group of family or friends, there’s a test for who needs the peach or nectarine the most: Spin the peach or nectarine on a smooth surface, such as a table, while everybody is sitting around it. Wherever the bottom of the peach or nectarine points when it stops is who needs the fruit most. Without any uncertainty, the peach or nectarine will land in the direction of who needs it the most, because it’s such a spiritually connected food. As you continue to play the game with additional peaches or nectarines, the next person the fruit lands on is who needs the fruit the second most, and so on. If the new peach or nectarine points to a person on whom a fruit landed earlier, that’s because after the earlier fruit digested, the new peach or nectarine decided the person still needed an additional one. If the peach or nectarine never lands on one person at the table, it doesn’t mean that person should not eat a peach or nectarine. It simply means the other people at the table needed the fruit more. The peach or nectarine should be eaten at the time it points to a person. If, for some reason, the fruit continually points to the same person, it doesn’t mean the person needs to eat all those peaches and nectarines at once. The person can take breaks and eat them throughout the day or the following day.
As your peaches/nectarines are ripening, get them into the refrigerator if they’re ripe before you can eat them. The best time to eat a peach or nectarine is on an empty stomach or a stomach that’s not had a heavy meal in the last few hours. Eating a peach or nectarine when one is hungry somewhere around midmorning, without a lot of other food around it, is best for maximum absorption and assimilation.

Sources(1)

  • Life-Changing Foods