When you wash your hands first, you do a great job of preventing a cold, so your hand and feet are warmed up, while you continue to wash your hand, and your feet are warm, so your hands feel warmer than if the milk was on you.
It’s kind of like this with most foods. Most, like milk and ice cream, go flat after you eat them. This is why they only make you get a drink after eating ice cream.
So what happens when you don’t wash your hands? Most likely, you get a cold. And you’re not the only one. According to the Mayo Clinic, about 80 percent of the time you get a cold when you’re out in the cold weather.
When the cold is over, youre going to get a good workout and try to stay warm to get enough rest to keep the cold out of your body.
To help promote its use among children, the Mayo Clinic has just launched a new online video entitled, “Does Milk Coat Your Stomach?” It takes a minute or two to watch, because it shows you a video of someone drinking a glass of milk and then showing you a picture of their stomach. At first it doesn’t look like much, but after a minute or two, it’s obvious that their stomach is being coated.
I’m not sure if it will be necessary but for those of you who enjoy milk, milkcoating your stomach may be a good thing. The most common side effect of drinking milk is a burning sensation in your stomach, but the Mayo Clinic believes that milk also coats the lining of your stomach which stops blood from reaching your stomach more easily. So it is not the best idea to drink milk just to get a cold or stomach upset.
The Mayo Clinic tells us that there is a small but unknown risk of this occurring, but it is far less than the risk of a peptic ulcer. In a word, its not worth the risk.
I don’t really buy the Mayo Clinic’s explanation. They do tell us that there is a small risk of food poisoning, but the risk is extremely small. This is a good thing. As a result, the Mayo Clinic doesn’t recommend consuming milk too much.
I have a small but serious stomach that i take for granted, that seems to be a known risk to me.
The Mayo Clinic also warns of the increased risk of certain diseases from milk consumption. What I found odd was that it was the very same words used by the Mayo Clinic to warn us of the threat of peptic ulcers. As an example, they refer to the “risk of peptic ulcer disease…from an early age, when you drink milk.”.