Added: 2 years ago
From: MiaDalene
Views: 3,957
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  • Poor tall man - needs to stand UP and - b Part of the video- he looks so sad too-

  • On another video Dave said he carried two juicers in his truck, one juicer in the truck of his car and two juicers at home. I'm a trucker also and wondering what brand of juicers he carries in his truck. I've tried out several brands but find the centrifuge juicers a big mess to clean up because I don't have running water. So, can anyone anyswer this question? Dave, if you read this please respond if you can.

  • @Sam333T I have 5 different juicers, they are require water to clean them. You could juice what you need for the day if you can refrigerate the juice during your travels.

  • Dave you are doing awesome by the way and seem way happier....

  • are you on facebook dave? I am totally a fan..

  • Wouldn't it be wonderful if insurance companies would actually as preventative measures assist in the costs of buying and eating fresh, organic foods. Sadly I don't have insurance nor do I have the income at the moment to buy much organic but I am trying to change my diet and lifestyle and eat as fresh as I can and I am making the switch over to vegetarian/raw food. I also started my first garden with lots of greens so I am totally excited about that.

  • @Nubster12 nice stuff, im trasitioning too, I go to the market and they put out all the fruits and veggies that havent been sold from the old batch to make room on shelves for the newer ones. Sometimes they have super ripe bANAnas with the spots all over and they are being sold in a bunch of up to 15 for just 1 dollar because the skins appearance is what many people thinks is determinate of how nutritious the fruit is. often not so! Anyways, for transitioning, buying our fav fruits really helps.

  • @goanyways That's awesome. My local grocery just throws out the stuff that doesn't look good and we have a very small farmers market that is one day and only lasts for a few hours in the morning so not really an opportunity there either to get unsold produce at a discount. I have been continuing with my quest and the transition is going great. I would say I am about 99% vegetarian now and about 80% raw. Still so much to learn though.

  • @Nubster12 It sounded kinda less disagknowledged in the lass response, and the wouldnt it wonderful if insurance

  • don't you get hungry? How do you cope without nuts/seeds/meat/fish? I can't stop my hunger?! Please help, thanks! : ) I keep trying to be positive.

  • @Catherine8raw You can have raw nuts and seeds/sprouts on the raw food diet. From what I gather he doesn't do a 100% juice but I could be wrong. The key is make as much of the diet raw as possible.

  • @Catherine8raw

    If you are constantly hungry then, eat loads of salad greens or juice them, plus eat loads of fruit. You must eat enough calories or you will be hungry! I get the best results on very little or no fat foods. ie I keep off oil, nuts, seeds, avacodo, etc. I eat the equivalent of 30 bananas a day in calories.

  • @eatmoreraw thanks for replying but that would not work for me.... 30 bananas is too much and gets my insulin high. I need fats. I have come off the diet, suspect, I have lymes disease so I have to be careful with sugars and bacteria.

  • Thank you for having Dave the raw food trucker over and taping... Many of us from Dan's channel have been missing news of him. So good to see he is doing well and continuing to heal. He is such an inspiration isn't he... I've subscribed to you're channel too-you're doing good work!

  • Dave, you're shirt is looking a bit big, time for a smaller size. =)

    Mia, you can strain the juice in a nut milk bag, they work great.

  • Thank you for your response, MiaDalene. After I returned to eating solid foods I experienced brief spotting but not the bleeding of a normal period. It should be interesting to see what happens when I return to juicing which will be sometime next month.

  • This message is for Dave TRF Trucker. I was shocked when my son (who is on his 40 plus day of juice feasting) sent me this video - you mention post-menopausal women getting their period between 10 and 22 days while juicing. On my 14th day of juice feasting I got my period. A real period. My husband is in his forties. Could I become pregnant? I imagine doctors can't tell me.

  • @waddleudo

    while I am not a doctor, it is my understanding that - if you are ovulating... you can become pregnant. (from Mia)

  • I'm not Dave, but have an answer; "post-menopausal" women can still ovulate, and it's ovulation that contributes to pregnancy, not menstruation. You mentioned your husband's in his 40s, but didn't mention your age. I presume you have been post-menopausal for some time? So while your body goes through these changes, if you don't want any late-in-life babies to raise, it's recommended that you take precautions to avoid conception. Cheer up, I recently discovered men can breastfeed babies!

  • I'm not Dave, but have an answer; "post-menopausal" women can still ovulate, and it's ovulation that contributes to pregnancy, not menstruation. You mentioned your husband's in his 40s, but didn't mention your age. I presume you have been post-menopausal for some time? So while your body goes through these changes, if you don't want any late-in-life babies to raise, it's recommended that you take precautions to avoid conception. Cheer up, I recently discovered men can breastfeed babies!

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