As I understand the recommendation for children is: give them food you actually need to chew rather than all the soft processed crap everyone in the developed world eats right now
Which seems, maybe, not bad advice in a much bigger way?
Haven't listened to the episode yet but curious if you dealt with the Mew's most noteworthy claim to me: that jacked up teeth is a relatively new thing and in prior eras,
where everyone really had to chew real food
teeth were on balance straight and no one needed to have their wisdom teeth out
this fact alone offers some credence to the Mews' hypothesis, even if it won't work for adults.
The practice of removing wisdom teeth has never made any sense to me at all and the Mews' are the only people who have ever offered a reasonable explanation for what's going on there.
As I understand the recommendation for children is: give them food you actually need to chew rather than all the soft processed crap everyone in the developed world eats right now
Which seems, maybe, not bad advice in a much bigger way?
Haven't listened to the episode yet but curious if you dealt with the Mew's most noteworthy claim to me: that jacked up teeth is a relatively new thing and in prior eras,
where everyone really had to chew real food
teeth were on balance straight and no one needed to have their wisdom teeth out
this fact alone offers some credence to the Mews' hypothesis, even if it won't work for adults.
The practice of removing wisdom teeth has never made any sense to me at all and the Mews' are the only people who have ever offered a reasonable explanation for what's going on there.
"Haven't listened to the episode yet but" seems like a warning to slow down. :(
i mean i read the blog post and its tone was p clear
pretty much as i expected it to be but glad they did talk a little about soft foods real impact