Carol Alt
Super Model Turns
Super Healthy Role Model
By Linda Sivertsen
You've probably seen Carol Alt in the national media lately,
promoting her new book, 'Eating in the Raw', and
revealing the bizarre fact that for the last eight years
she's eaten almost no cooked food. Huh? Come again? A life
devoid of bread and pasta and baked potatoes and steamed
vegetables and chocolate-chip cookies straight from the
oven? No candy, gum, or even a hot cup of coffee on a cold
winter's day (or a chilled beer or soda in the blistering
sun)?! How is that possible? Besides extolling their virtues
and eating them, is this woman NUTS?
My current starch-rich diet fails to come close to resembling
the vibrancy of Carol's diet, but my past makes me uniquely
qualified to delve into this little-known subject with the
still stunning cover girl-a German raised, bread-lovin'
woman for whom starving herself prior to photo shoots for
Sports Illustrated (swimsuits), Cosmo,
or Vogue was for many years a source of all-encompassing
agony. Being named "the most beautiful woman in the
world" by Playboy magazine, or "the next
million dollar face" by Life magazine only
increased her stress of having to stay rail thin. "I
hated being hungry and was miserable to the people around
me," she says. "No wonder fat people are called
jolly; it's much easier to maintain happiness when you're
not starving! But we all know that doesn't last. Personally,
I didn't come from a long line of thin people. My grandmother
was 300 pounds when she died and my sister is a large size
model. As gorgeous as she is, it's not in our nature to
be thin. Weight was a battle for me every single
day."
No longer an issue, Carol now eats "all day long,"
with dramatic side benefits, including easily keeping her
model weight, and even more importantly, experiencing that
her food actually gives her energy rather than depletes
it. "I used to sit down to a big plate of spaghetti
and sausage and fall asleep in front of the TV," she
says, going back in time and sounding suddenly sad. "I
had no awareness of the concept of food as actual fuel."
Carol reveals that stumbling across this way of eating is
the greatest miracle of her life. "I think all across
the board, most raw food eaters consider making the switch
to an all-raw diet the most momentous thing that's ever
happened to them. Whenever we get together we never talk
about what we miss. It's all about how much better our lives
are. We are all so incredibly grateful." When I ask
her if she's seen what I saw-that raw foodists appear more
calm and peaceful, she laughs. "Definitely! There's
a serenity that's so different. Whenever I go into a raw-food
restaurant, the waiters are all so damn happy!" But
Carol wants to add that you don't have to go to a raw restaurant
to eat. "I can eat anywhere," she says. "I
can be social, go out and have dinner with people, and if
what they have at the restaurant doesn't suit me for some
reason, I have a little bit of something and then I go home
and I eat. It's no big deal."
Reading Carol's book was like coming home, instantly transporting
me into memories of a lifestyle I once embraced, but had
somehow-in the hussle-bussle to meet deadlines and the accompanied
frenzy to fuel their completion with handfuls of sugar-nearly
abandoned. Fourteen years ago, just prior to getting pregnant
with my son, I chose to temporarily eat an all-raw diet
in an attempt to cleanse my body of years of junk food indulgence
better known as the "eat anything that isn't nailed
down" college years. The impact on my energy and health
was immediate and I never felt so alive, so thin, or so
beautiful. My newfound verve for life made me suddenly want
to have a child and I continued eating an all-raw diet once
my husband and I watched our home-pregnancy testing stick
turn baby blue soon afterward. Determined to support my
decision to be the healthiest mom I could be, my husband
also began eating almost totally raw; together we wholeheartedly
kept it up during the following nine months.
My experience of being "with child" on an all-raw
diet was so totally heavenly, with none of the common complaints
of edema, nausea, fatigue, fluid retention, or mood swings
that I didn't even miss my once obsessively treasured goat
cheese pizzas, angel-hair pastas and oatmeal pancakes. As
if by magic, everything tasted so much better and more fulfilling,
and I somehow found all-fruit meals or fresh corn (on the
cob), red peppers (eaten like an apple) and macadamia nuts
blissfully satisfying. Doesn't sound like much to get excited
about, I know (and Carol's version is far more alluring,
I promise), but all exaggeration aside, my husband and I
both contend that the experience is not to be believed until
you've lived it. Not for a day or even a week (although
you'll notice the benefits right away), but for months on
end, where it becomes glaringly obvious that you really
are what you eat. In other words: without crap in your system,
you no longer feel like crap! What a concept! Say goodbye
to popping pills to mask your disorders, as Carol had to
for years-for everything from her incessant sinus infections,
hypoglycemia, headaches, allergies, insomnia, to indigestion.
"I can hardly believe what I used to put in my body
when I look back!" she says. "I ate Tums like
it was candy, and I actually got in the habit of starting
off my day with scotch and coffee to wake me up! I believe
that I would have had a much bigger career if I had had
the energy to do more outside of modeling. As it was, I
barely made it through my days because I was so hungry and
tired, desperately trying to stay between 120 or 125 lbs
at 5'11" (Carol's current weight). Our experiences
may not be everyone's. While a doctor wrote the forward
to Eating in the Raw, and there's loads of scientific
data to back up her work, we encourage anyone contemplating
making the switch to consult with his or her doctor, and
to introduce raw food in stages. (Certainly pregnancy is
a good time to add more whole, raw foods into your diet,
but it's not the time to go cold turkey on all cooked food,
as the sudden clean-out effect could be too difficult on
your baby.) While most doctors spend precious little time
studying nutrition in medical school (some as little as
an hour or two in total-one of the great ironies of the
medical field), your doctor knows you and can help keep
tabs on your individual health concerns.
You're Doing What?!
According to Carol, it's more than a cliché to say
that nothing tastes as good as health feels, and I agree
because the only thing I gained while being pregnant (other
than eighteen pounds) was nine months of nausea-free joy
and endless get-up-and-go. Thus, the worries of others about
my "freakish" diet and the health of my unborn
baby were none of my concern. "I know all too well
how people worry when you forgo 'normal' food and start
'grazing greens like a cow,'" jokes Carol. "That's
one of the reasons I decided to write this book-to dispel
people's unfounded fears." Friends and loved ones fret
("Where will you get your protein? What about germs?");
they poke fun ("My grass out back needs mowing…you
hungry?"); and sometimes they become downright irascible
("You've got to have your head examined. Have you joined
a cult?"). Carol has heard it all, and is grateful
for the opportunity to address these issues. I, too, remember
being plagued by people's paranoia, especially from my midwife,
who shrieked, "You're going to bleed to death during
delivery!" (For the record, I was the ONLY client she
ever had who didn't bleed a drop while giving birth.) Carol
has learned to have patience with people who have never
been introduced to this practice, although she can't help
but notice the irony. "You know," she says shaking
her head, "somewhere along the line we've failed to
realize that human beings are the ONLY living species that
cooks its food. The ONLY one in the history of the planet.
If cooking was so very important, maybe we wouldn't be the
only ones doing it."
A Little History Lesson
This brings up an interesting point, and one that Carol's
book discusses in depth-food spoilage. There was a time
not too long ago-before advances in refrigeration and transportation-that
our food didn't last as long, and cooking, or pasteurization
(developed by Pasteur nearly a century ago), was a way to
eliminate harmful bacteria. "The tradeoff," Carol
explains, "is that in doing so, we also started killing
the essential, living substances-the enzymes and proteins
in food that are necessary for long-term health. Doctor
Nicholas J. Gonzales speaks more eloquently about this in
my book than I ever can, but enzymes, without which health
is impossible, are sensitive to heat and begin deteriorating
at around 106-107 degrees (and become completely inactive
above 116 degrees), which is why fevers above 107 degrees
often kill because at that point our enzymes start self-destructing
throughout all our tissues." There have been widespread
and radical advances in maintaining the quality of what
we eat, Carol explains, "and pasteurization has become
more of a low-cost way for companies to keep their food
longer without spoilage." While many raw-fooders are
vegans and refuse to eat animal products, Carol loves fish
and meat and dairy and has found ways to enjoy all of the
above without ever getting sick, especially raw fish in
sushi and raw milk (straight from a local farmer). She uses
the milk in raw milkshakes and also pours it over her raw
granola, sweetened with raw honey, "which is good for
the pancreas" she says.
If She Only Knew Then…
Carol and I both have parents who died in their fifties
of cancer-a disease that has or will touch everyone reading
this article (and we believe her father and my mother would
still be alive if they had followed this regimen), thus
we've chosen here to focus mostly on this topic. But, even
if fending off disease doesn't concern you, maybe your weight
and beauty do. Let's face it: It's swimsuit weather, ladies,
and you may be looking for a sure-fire way to shed those
excess pounds you've been carting around all winter-like
you actually needed those extra reserves!
Amazingly, Carol's longtime boyfriend is also a professional
hockey player (as her husband was) and chose to follow her
lead and become a raw-food eater. "You know what? I
didn't even have to push it on him," she says. "He
just watched me, and studied other people eating this way
and made the choice for himself. We met when he was 25 and
I was 38. I thought he was older than his 25 years, and
now people think he's younger. He says it's the easiest
thing he's ever done because he can eat as much as he wants
and doesn't have to worry about his weight. His muscle tone
is much better and helps him recover from injuries much
faster. And because his blood is so alkaline, it carries
a lot more oxygen, and he doesn't have to worry about being
tired. There are just so many fantastic things to eat. We're
real sashimi eaters, although we try to keep fish to 3-4
times a week."
Birds of a Feather
Carol isn't the first celebrity to make the headlines for
her passion for raw-food. Demi Moore, Pierce Brosnan, Woody
Harrelson, Sting and Bill Cosby are just a few of those
who can afford any food in the world, but have often chosen
to keep it simple the raw way. Woody is perhaps the most
famous, or infamous, for his choice of raw, organic foodstuffs,
and having interviewed him myself at a raw food restaurant
years ago, I asked Carol if she had ever met the Woodrow.
"Oh, sure," she says. "He eats at Quintessence
here in New York-one of my all-time favorite raw-food restaurants."
(Carol has included several of their recipes in her book.)
I ask if she thinks he is as beautiful in person as I found
him to be. "His skin is amazing!" she squeals.
"I met Woody maybe 15 years ago and he still hasn't
aged at all. Aging is normal when you eat cooked foods,
but people who eat all raw age much more slowly. But, weight
and looking fantastic aside, this for me was all about my
health. I'm so filled with gratitude. I really, truly believe
that we are a three trillion dollar a year health industry
because we are definitely doing something wrong. I think
the plethora of diseases out there are a wakeup call from
God. We have made great strides in terms of curbing viruses
and plague, but we have gone too far in stripping our food
of its vitality and have shortchanged our quality of life.
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, MS, Cancer? It's horrifying. We
are living longer, but we're more miserable. Not to mention
how the mass production of our food is quickly poisoning
our planet as well as our bodies."
Carol is now an actress and has just finished filming her
third film of the year. She owns a line of skin care products,
Le Mirador, that are selling around the world, and she was
just asked to do a part on Broadway, so she's enjoying her
options. When I ask what she most hopes for in the coming
years, she answers, "I hope to have what you have:
a healthy, happy child. It's just never happened for me
and I think that was because my health was so bad. I was
married for 15 years and never got pregnant; I truly believe
that my body wasn't healthy enough to hold a child. I think
that's true for a lot of women today. So, I'm hoping and
praying that one day it will happen for me, and this is
one of the reasons I keep eating raw and I stay so faithful
to it, because if it does happen, I want to have a beautiful
house for this child to grow into."
Before departing, I want to know, as always, if this enormously
busy woman has any thoughts to share on the topic of balance.
"Of course!" she replies. "It's so important,
especially when you're extremely busy, that you have a balance
between your work, your health and your personal life. I
was always working so hard that I didn't care about my health.
Therefore everything else fell by the wayside-my family
life, my spiritual life, everything. But in order to be
healthy, you have to have energy to nurture all of the areas
of your world. Otherwise, when one area starts failing,
it's like a domino effect. If I could say anything to you
about what I've learned, it's to start adding more raw food
into your diet. And, if you can even try going all raw for
a time, it will definitely touch your life if you give it
half the chance."
Yes, I say to her. But, it takes a very strong mentality
to stick with it, knowing all too well how easy it was to
stray from my once all-raw regime (although it's so enjoyable
that I could never imagine dropping it completely and have
maintained approx. a 40% raw diet ever since). "Well,
sure," Carol agreed, "because so many people are
afraid to be different. But you know what? I like being
different! If 'different' means that I'm going to be healthy
and happy when all the people around me are moody and tired
and feeling older than their years and getting diseases,
then hey, sign me up!"
Postscript: It's been over a month since my interview
with Carol and my life has already changed. I haven't eaten
sugar since, and I've incorporated things like Thai coconuts
(a must try) and many more fresh juices to curb my sugar
cravings, and raw nuts into my diet. I have to say, I feel
decidedly better! My swimsuit and I are grateful for the
reminder.
Linda Sivertsen—West Coast Feature Editor
linda@balancemagazine.com
© 2005 Balance Magazine