Wednesday, December 2, 2009

How I Lost 36000 Pounds or Mind Food and Smart Pills

How I Lost 36,000 Pounds: Real Cause of and Cure for Obesity

Author: Mel Anchell

Do you struggle with a weight problem? Are you disappointed with low calorie and fad diets? In the revolutionary weight loss guide How I Lost 36,000 Pounds: Real Cause of and Cure for Obesity, author Mel Anchell, M.D. advocates a re-education of the person with the clinically proven, healthful, non-starvation diet resulting in a permanent normal weight without debilitating exercise.

Dr. Anchell draws on verified, scientific obesity research and more than forty years of real clinical observations substantiating this research with thousands of everyday patients in a real clinical setting. He shares his findings on the following topics:
-Understanding obesity - The TRUTH
-The Real Obesity Cause and Cure
-Practical concerns
-The cholesterol craze - an Expose' [absolute must reading]


The dietary TRUTHS in How I Lost 36,000 Pounds results in normal and healthy permanent body weight. Caloric intake or exercise are not the answer. However, those not under the personal physical care of Dr. Anchell should not regard any communication from him, including the information contained in How I Lost 36,000 Pounds, as a doctor-patient discussion.

An obesity textbook for laymen and physicians. How I Lost 36,000 Pounds is based on scientific obesity facts substantiated by repeated, critical clinical observations.



Books about: Last Train to Paradise or Discover Your Sales Strengths

Mind Food and Smart Pills

Author: Ross Pelton

Sharpen your memory and enhance your mental alertness using this clear, accessible guide to the foods and drugs that can affect and improve cognition.

Library Journal

My grandmother urged me to eat fish and carrots because they were brain food and were good for you, anyway. In essence, that is the message of this book (adding vitamins, minerals, herbs, and some drugs, both established and experimental, to my grandmother's list). At least the authors (a pharmacist and his wife) recommend at the beginning of the book that the reader should be guided by a ``qualified health professional'' in taking these nutrients or drugs. Yet much of the research cited in the bibliography on the effect of these substances on mental function is either out of date (more than 10 years old) or published in periodicals of questionable medical authority. Not recommended.-- Eleanor Maass, Maass Assocs., New Milford, Pa.



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