Eye Vitamin Information
Eye Vitamin Tips and Advice
How many times, when you were a kid, did you hear someone nag
you about eating your carrots because they were good for your eyes,
were good eye vitamins, and when you challenged this, the nagger
jokingly asked you, “Have you ever seen a rabbit wearing
glasses?”? How many times did you figure out a way to slide
those nasty cooked, mushy things off the plate, onto the floor,
into your waiting beggar-doggie’s mouth? And years later, as
you squinted or huffed on the stained eyeglasses to clear them, did
you regret not listening to those who knew better after all?
Yes, the carrot is an eye vitamin. It is classically the first one
we think of as an eye vitamin, anyway, as carrots have vitamin A,
an antioxidant that is said by the experts and pros to contribute
in the prevention of weakening eyesight, macular degeneration,
cataracts, and even blindness.
But carrots alone or vitamin A alone do not the complete eye
vitamin make. And as with any vitamin—eye vitamin, skin
vitamin, hair vitamin, etc.—there are a couple of important
facts. One, it is possible to overdose on certain (if not
most) vitamins.
If we read how this or that supplement is the ideal eye vitamin,
and we take too much, we can break out in itching, rashes, and
worse conditions…due to vitamin toxicity. Two, an individual
eye vitamin A, for instance, does not work alone. Other vitamins
help the fat-burning properties of a vitamin, or assist in the
absorption process. That is, vitamins work in
conjunction. If you take vitamin C, considered a good
eyevitamin for possibly reducing certain risks of degeneration and
glaucoma, you will do well to have the right amount of
bioflavonoids, for bioflavonoids are said to help the body absorb
vitamin C.
Eye Vitamin Facts
This latter point or principle makes sense if you think of the
perfectly balanced diet: certain foods are reckless together, doing
nothing more than encouraging the omega-6 fatty acids to overpower
the nutrients or what have you; yet other foods, when eaten
together, work to encourage digestion, or burn fat, or what have
you. I am by no means an expert or a nutritional professional
of any kind, I just found over the years that certain food
combinations are extremely good together, like rice and beans, for
instance. And I make the connection with the same process the
eyevitamin and its comrades need to undergo by being taken
together. I will leave the factual and scientific to the
pros, then, and leave you with what I understand to be the ideal
combo-eye vitamin:
Vitamins A, C, and E, as well as a balance of omega-3 fatty
acids and others, are now in one eye vitamin…so you don’t have to
weigh, measure, or calculate the right mix, and so you don’t have
to, if you can’t stand to, eat those cooked carrots. Raw ones
are better and better for you, anyway. Did you ever see a
rabbit eating COOKED carrots?
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