Study: What ½ Cup Soybeans Everyday Did To Women


For more great Instant Pot recipes, please visit InstantPotEasy.com

Are soy products healthy for us? Should we consume soy products every day? Are soy products safe for postmenopausal women …

20 replies
  1. Anne D
    Anne D says:

    I have been vegan for a year (vegetarian for 40 years), I have tofu 2 or 3 times a week. I have had soya yoghurt and soya milk with my breakafast for the last 6 years. ….and I still have (for the last 7 years) at least 12 hot flushes a day including night sweats.

    Reply
  2. RAW FOOD PHILOSOPHY
    RAW FOOD PHILOSOPHY says:

    Overall, genetically modified soybeans from corporations and the government are detrimental to a person's health. Instead of eating soybeans and all the other grains from corporations focus in on eating fruits vegetables and a little bit of meat

    Reply
  3. Mike Skylark
    Mike Skylark says:

    The vast majority of the ''healing effect'' than vegan doctors ''use'' is mere FASTING-MIMICKING effect of their diet interventions… Yet they're not even aware of it OR deliberitelly hide it. We live in the world of half-truths.

    Reply
  4. Aly Kat
    Aly Kat says:

    But for those of us not low in estrogen…. I experimented with soy not thinking it would effect my hormones and after 4ish months I developed mild symptoms of estrogen dominance (breast tenderness & edema bloating before my period- which I never had pms before) that increased until I cut soy out of my diet :/
    So maybe in menopause I’ll eat soy again.

    Reply
  5. Y
    Y says:

    Still won’t eat them ☹️. Already had bc and it was the estrogen kind. Even though my doctor gave me good reason why the research regarding soy and bc was bs and he gave me the ok to eat them, I still don’t think it’s worth the risk. Still going through my reconstruction process 🥵. To be clear I don’t think it was soy that cause my bc. I think it was the pollution and the environment. I think my healthy eating and getting my annual check ups kept this thing in check, early detection and “low risk”. To be clear I didn’t have the genetic kind.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *