Bruce H. Lipton See book keywords and concepts |
But remember, when cells band together in creating multicellular communities, they follow the "collective voice" of the organism, even if that voice dictates self-destructive behavior. Our physiology and behavior patterns conform to the "truths" of the central voice, be they constructive or destructive beliefs.
I've described the power of the subconscious mind, but I want to emphasize that there is no need to consider the subconscious a scary, super-powerful, Freudian font of destructive "knowledge. |
Richard Bartlett See book keywords and concepts |
Yes," the first voice answered in agreement, "he thinks it is because of the way he was treated when he was little." The second voice boomed laughingly, "Just imagine it not there!" "Huh?" I thought, and looked at my patient's frozen shoulder. Shocked by the strange events occurring around me, I stepped out of consensus problem-driven reality. I was "seeing" instead of just looking, as don Juan talked about in the Castaneda books, and the frozen shoulder was gone!
Fast-forward four years. Here I was with another man complaining of a frozen shoulder. |
Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., C.N.S. See book keywords and concepts |
Finally, the dentist came into the room and started talking in his deep, comforting voice, telling me to relax, that nothing was going to hurt, and that everything was going to be fine. He happens to have a particularly reassuring bedside manner and a very sonorous, trustworthy voice. I felt myself relax even further.
He also gently put his hand on my arm while speaking. Touch. Ten more degrees of relaxation.
Now I was ready for my procedure, and, largely because of my physical and mental state, it went easily and without a hitch. |
Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts |
The simultaneously soothing and authoritative voice continues: "Zoloft, a prescription medicine, can help. It works to correct chemical imbalances in the brain, which may be related to symptoms of depression." The face returns, now smiling, and bounces along after the fluttering butterfly. An appealing logo for Zoloft appears, and then the voice intones, "When you know more about what's wrong, you can help make it right."105
The genius of the advertisement is that it made the symptoms of depression cute, funny, and accessible. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
And it is to YOUR credit that the people have any voice at all in the Senate.
So keep hammering those phone lines today. Make the call to your Senators. This battle is about to be concluded, as a vote is imminent, but how it concludes is up to you, and the final decision may very well rest on the calls placed to Senators today!
You can also send an email or fax. See below for a sample letter.
What follows is the update from Byron Richards, republished with permission.
S1082 -- The voice of the People is Being Heard; There is still time to stop FDA, Inc. |
Bruce H. Lipton See book keywords and concepts |
But remember, when cells band together in creating multicellular communities, they follow the "collective voice" of the organism, even if that voice dictates self-destructive behavior. Our physiology and behavior patterns conform to the "truths" of the central voice, be they constructive or destructive beliefs.
I've described the power of the subconscious mind, but I want to emphasize that there is no need to consider the subconscious a scary, super-powerful, Freudian font of destructive "knowledge. |
Stacy Malkan See book keywords and concepts |
As the voices grew louder, Avalon CEO Gil Pritchard stood up from the middle of the crowd and addressed the room in a booming, very CEO-like voice. Avalon was just trying to do the right thing, he said, and if they didn't like it, tough. He said the company would share their information about alternatives with anyone else who wanted to get out of parabens.
Morris has no regrets. "To the allegation or the claim that we did that as a marketing device to differentiate ourselves from the competition, the answer is, yes we did," he said. "But was that the only reason? No. |
Gary Null and Amy McDonald See book keywords and concepts |
They may hear a voice and believe that the voice is real and represents some real event or real person. They'll act on that. An example would be, if I hear somebody calling my name, if I don't think it's my thought anymore but that there really is somebody calling my name, I will act accordingly. If I think that people are looking at me and making faces, I might think there is something very wrong with me and feel bad or upset about it. If I'm eating my meal and there's a piece of moldy cheese, I might think I've been poisoned and that someone did it to me purposefully. |
Peter J. Whitehouse and Daniel George See book keywords and concepts |
By creating space for the sharing of stories, the Internet also empowers consumers to voice their opinions and join in protest against ineffectual drugs. These amplified voices give the pharmaceutical industry incentives to stay permanently attuned to their clients' subjective experiences with drugs, and to keep bringing innovative treatments to the market that will enhance quality of life. |
Dr. Arthur Janov See book keywords and concepts |
When the patient gets on his knees, hands clasped together, and begs in the child's voice, the sobs stream forward. When patients beg their parents for help, their voices become that of young children, not because they are directed to, but because they are in the grip of that brain that dealt with the emotions at the time. And for all the tears they did not shed back then, they will have to shed them now; the tears go on for a very long time. Left inside, they will eventually make us sick. Tears are a natural process; blocking natural processes makes the system unnatural. Dr. |
Gary E. Schwartz and Linda G. S. Russek See book keywords and concepts |
Finally, imagine that Linda heard a voice in her head, and it sounded just like Henry's? How could Linda tell if this voice was her father's or an imposter's (let alone a creation of her own imagination or memory) ?
Linda would say that science needs to create a "TEFA"—a device that performs a "Total Energy Frequency Analysis" of the voice and its systemic memory history. We should remember that the science fiction envisioned today is the scientific technology created tomorrow. This is a deep challenge for the future.
Does the Same Logic Apply to Claims of Alien Abduction?
Yes. |
David Winston, RH(AHG), and Steven Maimes See book keywords and concepts |
The American Herbalists Guild represents the goals and voices of many clinical herbalists, the American Herbal Products Association represents the voice of the herbal products industry, and the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, which is part of the National Institutes of Health, is doing research and providing information on complementary and alternative medicine (including medicinal herbs) to the general public.
The future looks relatively bright for herbal medicine in the United States. |
Paul D. Blanc, M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
William Dodd lends another powerful voice from an even earlier time. On the basis of his own experiences as a child laborer, he agitated for factory reform. In 1847 Dodd, also known as the Factory Cripple because of a disabling industrial accident that he had suffered when but a youth, published a slim volume titled A voice from the Factories. Although the book is in prose form, it concludes with a heartfelt poem written by the author. It includes this verse:
What is it to be a slave? Is't not to spend
A life bowed down beneath a grinding ill? |
Herbert Ross, DC with Keri Brenner, L.Ac. See book keywords and concepts |
In TCM, the practitioner considers the flow of vital energy (qi) in a patient through close examination of the patient's pulse, tongue, body odor, voice tone and strength, and general demeanor, among other elements. Darren's tongue was flabby and slightly pale with a red tip; he also had scalloped "teeth marks" on the sides of his tongue and his pulses were "slippery." All of these signs indicated that Darren's spleen and stomach were deficient in energy, meaning he was not producing enough blood or digestive power. |
David Wolfe See book keywords and concepts |
First, tell your voice it is in harmony with the sounds of Nature. Then, tell your skin it glows with smooth perfection. Next, begin to talk health into every organ of your own or another's body. Tell yourself or another that their muscles are limber, shapely, and beautiful. Tell your mind, or another's mind, that it is functioning at peak efficiency. Master personal communication skills. Choose your body language, tone of voice, and words carefully.
Be aware of the 55:38:7 communication equation. 55% of your communication (as it is perceived by others) is non-verbal. |
Tori Hudson, N.D. See book keywords and concepts |
Testosterone is not well absorbed orally, and it has potential health risks such as permanent voice change, hair growth on the face or body, loss of head hair, lipid elevations, acne/oily skin, and emotional side effects. More research is needed on the role of hormones in sexual dysfunction in women.
In summary, the conventional practitioner's use of hormone therapy and the standard of practice these days is limited to three areas of use: menopausal symptoms, osteoporosis prevention or treatment, and vaginal or urogenital atrophic symptoms. |
| However, it is a male hormone and can cause facial hair, voice deepening, and other androgenic changes, quite unacceptable side effects for most women, and it can cost more than $200 per month. It is no longer used to treat fibrocystic breasts.
Similarly, GnRH agonists work at the hypothalamic level to eradicate estrogen via a temporarily induced menopausal condition. This class of drugs may make danazol obsolete, but they again do not present a good long-term solution due to the side effects, including reversible bone loss, and they cost even more money. |
| However, male pattern hair growth, irreversible low voice, hot flashes, depression, weight gain, acne, reduced breast size, muscle cramps, fatigue, and other symptoms related to the medication have caused danazol to become a less popular alternative, and it has mostly fallen out of use.
Prescription drugs called gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists (GnRH agonists), such as Lupron, Synarel, and goserelin, are used to produce a menopausal state. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Because going back to what we said in the beginning, it's the authentic voice that works. As the representative of your company, you have the authentic voice that works, that connects with people online. It just does -- the corporate speak and marketing buzzwords don't really work. So, the answer is, hire an editor, but don't be afraid to try it yourself.
Mike: Sure. No one else is going to understand your organization more than you do. But that brings up an interesting question. Let's take an index page of a typical website. |
Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts |
Kandel's writing in "A New Intellectual Framework for Psychiatry" builds to these remarkable statements:
These arguments suggest that when a therapist speaks to a patient and the patient listens, the therapist is not only making eye contact and voice contact, but the action of neuronal machinery in the therapist's brain is having an indirect and, one hopes, long-lasting effect on the neuronal machinery in the patient's brain: and quite likely, vice versa . . . |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
You do not have to live in Maryland to make your voice heard on this issue. This impacts us all, because if Maryland officials learn they can get away with this kind of Big Brother Medicine scheme, other states may be inspired to pull out their guns and try the same thing. It is crucial that we remind these officials of what country they live in, and here in the United States, We the People still demand our freedoms and our right to choose what kind of medicine is best for our children. |
Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr., M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
Toward the end a man in a straw hat approached me, and near tears, with audible anger in his voice, said, "I've been doing everything my doctor told me to, and now I have to have a second bypass. I can't believe no one told me there was another option!"
That's the point of this book: to tell the world what I have learned.
2
"Someday We'll Have to Get Smarter"
When I returned in 1968 from duty as an Army surgeon in Vietnam, I was offered a position in the Department of General Surgery at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio. |
| Frustrated on his behalf, I raised my voice over the phone: "Gordon, for God's sake, just give me sixteen days and I will get you out of prison." He agreed.
After sixteen days, his angina was almost gone—and it disappeared entirely over the following two weeks. That doctor is now a fierce advocate of my program, a complete believer in plant-based nutrition.
And here is something that gives me great pleasure—and a good deal of hope: these days, more patients are coming to me before they go through interventional procedures. |
Donna Jackson Nakazawa See book keywords and concepts |
You might not get any better than you are right now," she warned, her voice soft for the blow. "But that doesn't mean you should give up hope."
I had no intention of giving up hope. As a child, I had watched my father suffer through a constellation of what I have since learned were autoimmune illnesses: inflammatory bowel disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and leucopenia. By the time my father was forty-two years old, he could barely walk a step without wincing with joint pain, and his bowels were continually inflamed. |
| I tried to hide my wet eyes and clear my voice.
He pressed his face into the back of my neck, quietly, tentatively. "Mom?" he asked. "Don't you know that I'm old enough to know that even grown-ups can get scared?" Then he hesitated. "The only time I get really scared is when it gets all quiet at school," he said, his fingers tapping the ends of mine, one at a time, gently, rhythmically. "Like when we're about to take a test, and the only thing I can hear is the rustling of paper. And then I worry . . . what if you die before I get back home to see you again? |
Craig Pepin-Donat See book keywords and concepts |
Books and Nutrition link)
The trusted voice of the complementary and alternative medicine field provides natural remedies and healthy solutions for your most pressing health concerns as well as practical strategies for self-care and prevention.
American Association of Integrative Medicine www.aaimedicine.com
AAIM's advocacy for broader treatment options facilitates a bond between integrative and Western medicine. |
Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts |
An appealing logo for Zoloft appears, and then the voice intones, "When you know more about what's wrong, you can help make it right."105
The genius of the advertisement is that it made the symptoms of depression cute, funny, and accessible. In other words, the exact opposite of what mental turmoil is actually like. Furthermore, when the dread side effects—sexual problems, diarrhea, and nausea—of Zoloft are mentioned in rapid and obligatory fashion, the accompanying image is of the recovered and happy Dot. |