ABOUT CHRISTINE LYDON, MD
Since receiving her medical degree from Yale in 1994, Christine Lydon, MD has
made it her life's work to educate people about sound nutrition, effective training
techniques, and healthy approaches to permanent weight loss. A fitness personality
and physique model with a long list of television and print credits, Dr. Lydon
has served as a nutrition consultant to large corporations, as well as a personal
fitness consultant to a diverse clientele ranging from housewives and firefighters
to celebrities like supermodel Carre Otis, Quentin Tarantino, and the late Richard
Pryor. Dr. Lydon currently devotes herself to writing and speaking about weight
management, disease prevention, and nonpharmaceutical alternatives for increased
longevity. People place their confidence in Dr. Lydon's commentaries because,
as her photos clearly illustrate, she practices what she preaches.
In my own words...
I earned my MD from Yale in 1994, but unlike most of my peers, I chose not to
practice medicine in the traditional sense. While most MDs treat disease for
a living, I spread the gospel of good health. Between my medical education,
research background, consulting experience, and involvement with the fitness
industry, I've managed to assemble an eclectic foundation that sets me apart
from other self-proclaimed health gurus.
For example, I am certainly one of very few physique models who can truthfully
say that my opinions on diet, training, and supplementation are rooted in a
solid understanding of biochemistry, anatomy, and physiology. By the same token,
after spending nearly a decade doing investigative research in the areas of
neurobiology, biomechanics, and sports medicine, I know how to interpret data.
Whether I'm perusing the latest breakthrough study in the New England Journal
of Medicine or scanning the health factoids in Cosmo, I can read between the
lines to draw my own conclusions.
Likewise, working closely with private clients boasting a spectrum of occupations
and personal fitness goals, from academy award winners and professional athletes
to fire fighters and new moms, has has taught me the delicate art of motivating
without overwhelming, an approach that carries over to my writing. As an author,
columnist, and freelance writer, I find it extremely fulfilling to know that
I can reach more people in a single day than the average physician might treat
in a lifetime.
A lot of people ask me what on earth led me to follow such an unorthodox career
path. After all, I went to medical school to become an orthopaedic surgeon.
Back then, my head was filled with romantic preconceptions about what it meant
to be a doctor. According to my ingenuous notions, modern medicine was a dynamic,
almost magical domain of endless possibilities, and doctors were heroic miracle
workers. I truly believed that the human body, with the proper inducements,
possessed infinite healing potential.
Medical school cured my fantasy.
I quickly learned that most people who suffered from serious medical conditions
would never be "as good as new," that treatable almost never meant
curable, and that drug side effects could be just as devastating as the illnesses
they were intended to alleviate. Moreover, I was appalled by the alarming degree
to which the pharmaceutical industry shaped my medical education. By pouring
billions of dollars every year into drug research, pharmaceutical companies
subsidize the education of every physician who graduates from an American medical
school. The upshot of this arrangement is a medical system that places inordinate
emphasis on disease treatment without the slightest attention to disease prevention.
And as a result, most doctors are shockingly ignorant about the most fundamental
aspects of healthy living.
The hypocrisy of healthcare hit me hardest when I was a surgical resident. During
my albeit brief tenure as an orthopaedic intern, I spent over one hundred hours
per week within the dreary confines of County Hospital. In my profound state
of sleep deprivation, things like regular exercise and healthy eating quickly
fell by the wayside. Unfortunately, the only reliably palatable items dispensed
by the hospital cafeteria were baked goods. Dessert became the main source of
pleasure in my life.
As someone who has always reveled in the joys of the outdoors and physical activity,
as someone who needs regular exercise, healthy foods, and adequate sleep to
feel sane, I have never been more miserable. As the months passed, I found it
increasingly impossible to reconcile the fact that my chosen profession, that
of a "healer," required me to adhere to a schedule that was destroying
my own health and well being. And for what? I found myself wondering. After
all, many of my patients would return to a life that had been permanently altered
by their illness or injury; things would never be the same for them. My entire
existence began to feel like an ironic exercise in futility.
After devoting a decade of my existence and six figures in student loans to
becoming a physician, all I had to show for it was endless frustration, overwhelming
exhaustion, a rapidly expanding rear end, a bleeding ulcer, and utter disenchantment
toward my chosen profession. I took a step back and tried to remember what had
drawn me to medicine in the first place. I realized that more than the promise
of a fat paycheck, more than the prestige, more than my parents' approval, more
than anything else, I had once dreamed of being a doctor because I felt a sincere
desire to make a difference in people's lives. So, I did the only thing that
seemed to make any sense at the time and I quit my residency. It was the toughest,
and BEST decision I ever made. Since that fateful day in October of 1994 when
I bade farewell to County General, I've made it my life's work to educate people
about healthy eating, efficient exercising, disease prevention, and non-pharmaceutical
alternatives for increasing longevity. Many of my fundamental beliefs about
good health fly in the face of the western medical establishment, contradicting
the conventional wisdom embraced by physicians who have been lulled into complacence
by the monumental influence of the pharmaceutical industry. An unfortunate number
of American doctors are openly hostile to any therapeutic practice which does
not involve a prescription pad or an operating room. The very notion of disease
prevention has been systematically wiped from their collective consciousness.
Even the most progressive health care providers are shockingly ignorant when
it comes to the basics of healthy living. It's not their fault-- they've been
brainwashed into thinking that they are health experts, when in actuality they
are disease experts.
Obviously, I cannot single-handedly revolutionize health care. Shifting the
emphasis from disease treatment to disease prevention would involve a large-scale
overhaul of the entire medical establishment-- something that is not likely
to happen any time soon. Unfortunately, that does not change the fact that,
in the real world, the only completely reliable way to "cure" disease
is to stop it from happening in the first place. But don't expect to unearth
a wealth of knowledge about disease prevention at your doctor's office.
Although medical school taught me the basics of physiology, anatomy, and biochemistry,
virtually everything I now know about good nutrition and effective exercising
I learned after receiving my degree. Had I completed my residency training and
gone on to practice medicine like most of my peers, it's doubtful that I would
know the first thing about healthy living. If I was like most practicing physicians,
I would eat a diet rich in processed foods, chemical preservatives, saturated
fat, and artificial ingredients. I would consume too much coffee and alcohol
and not enough fiber. I would suffer from emotional stress, lack of exercise,
and lack of sleep. My body would be gearing up for a myriad of pathological
processes including cancer, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders, diabetes,
and chronic fatigue syndrome. In other words, I would be the typical unhealthy
American.
Tallying all the perils of modern living can be overwhelming. Who will save
you? Who will be there to tell you what to eat? How much to exercise? Which
supplements to take? Even if your GP happens to be one of the enlightened few
with a grasp of what healthy living entails, your doctor can't force you to
adopt a healthy lifestyle. The only person who can make your healthy life choices
is YOU!
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