A healthy microbiome may help in preventing allergies and other immune-related issues by promoting a balanced immune response.

The idea is that exposure to a diverse range of microbes, particularly in early life, can help train the immune system to differentiate between harmful and harmless substances, potentially reducing the risk of allergies and autoimmune conditions. This aligns with the "hygiene hypothesis," which suggests that reduced exposure to microbes in modern, sanitized environments may contribute to the rise in allergies and autoimmune diseases.

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i definitely have a diverse microbiome but what i eat filters that down as well

but intolerances to a specific set of common vegetable proteins found in many foods that the EU approves for sale is not quite the same because it's my immune system literally flagging the food as a pathogen and this triggering antibodies that are coded for proteins that are part of my own body and thus leading to anaphylaxis

definitely helps to get the microbiome in better shape though... this is why i have been switching up my diet, i've added some seafood, peas, beans, carrot, potato, i stopped drinking red wines that seem to be contaminated with some kind of plant protein that gives me a really upset intestines

and i also now have a cat, who is transiting all kinds of new microbes into my gut, possibly helping reassert balance of some of them, i'm sure... and i don't feed him stuff that isn't actually mainly meat... pretty much all of it is pasteurised shredded fish and beef and similar...i remember a couple of years ago those pasteurised sachet bag foods from brands like Whiskas and i looked at the "meat" in it and i didn't see meat i saw textured vegetable protein and the cat did not like eating the solid, only the gravy with it... the stuff i feed now i can see it's actually meat

I know everyone has their own opinion on this, but 100,000 years ago, I don't think we ate that stuff. We have domesticated ourselves into what we are today, and I think that is part of the problem.