
Free Report - Get What You Really Want... To Lose Weight; Have More Energy And H
Posted: Apr 19,2008
Free Report
Get What You Really Need…To Lose Weight; Have More Energy And Happiness In Your Life.
You’ve seen it all before. Before and after pictures that looks amazing. You have watched extreme makeovers by the dozen. But every time you have stuck your neck out and paid your hard earned money to try the latest, greatest weight loss or fitness ideas you have come up empty.
Or sure, you kept it going for a while. But after a few weeks or months the next Real Life problem hits you square in the face and you fall back into your old habits, eating your old foods and getting your old results.
WHICH IS CRAP!!??
So I completely understand your skepticism about another program. I myself have been there and done that more times than I care to admit.
So why should you believe me then?
Well, you shouldn’t!! I could be just another crackpot who says stuff just to get a rise out of people. The first thing I need to do is explain where my ideas come from so I have a leg to stand on.
It’s not just me!
The primary cause for a majority of diseases running today rampant is the American diet. The former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop stated in 1988 in his Surgeon General Report that the American diet was the cause of approximately two-thirds of the deaths due to disease in America. He goes on to say that Americans are not starving from lack of food as people are in many foreign countries, but they are malnourished by simply not eating the proper food. Americans are eating food full of empty calories that make them fat. Quoting from the Report he states the following.
"Food sustains us,… Yet what we eat may affect our risk for several of the leading causes of death for Americans, notably, coronary heart disease, stroke, arteriolosclerosis, diabetes, and some types of cancer. These disorders together now account for more than two-thirds of all deaths in the United States. …… But for most of us the more likely problem has become one of overeating—too many calories for our activity levels and an imbalance in the nutrients consumed along with them. Although much is still uncertain about how dietary patterns protect or injure human health, enough has been learned about the overall health impact of the dietary patterns now prevalent in our society to recommend significant changes in those patterns.
So what kind of nutritional plan is best?
The Associated Press ran a story about the The New England Journal of Medicine article based on more than 82,000 women in the ongoing "Nurses' Health Study. Here is an excerpt from an article by Linda A. Johnson:
Eating a low-carb, high-fat diet for years doesn't raise the risk of heart disease, a long-term study suggests, easing fears that the popular Atkins diet and similar regimens might set people up for eventual heart attacks.
The study of thousands of women over two decades found that those who got lots of their carbohydrates from refined sugars and highly processed foods nearly doubled their risk of heart disease.At the same time, those who ate a low-carb diet but got more of their protein and fat from vegetables rather than animal sources cut their heart disease risk by 30 percent on average, compared with those who ate more animal fats.The findings came from researchers at Harvard University's schools of medicine and public health who reviewed records of 82,802 women in the ongoing Nurses' Health Study over 20 years. The women were not dieting to lose weight. In fact, on average they were slightly overweight and increased their body-mass index roughly 10 percent during the study.Conventional wisdom says risk of heart disease should increase for those eating the lowest-carb, highest-fat diet, said lead author Thomas Halton."It didn't, which was a little eye-opening," he said.Halton said that may be because the women eating the fewest carbs were compared directly to the group eating the highest-carb, lowest-fat diet."Neither diet is ideal," he said. "You need to take the best of both."
How can the food pyramid be wrong?
These are not just my ideas. Some of the most scientific minds in the world are telling the same story."The idea that saturated fats cause heart disease is completely wrong, but the statement has been 'published' so many times over the last three or more decades that it is very difficult to convince people otherwise unless they are willing to take the time to read and learn what...produced the anti-saturated fat agenda."
(Dr. Mary Enig, Consulting Editor to the Journal of the American College of Nutrition, President of the Maryland Nutritionists Association, and noted lipids researcher.)
"Despite abundant evidence that dietary fat bears no relation to development of cancer of the breast, the NIH intends...to try once again to prove a link that is probably not there....Why then does NIH insist on spending $10 million on a study whose hypothesis seems to be little more than wishful thinking? Is it only because of the faddish infatuation with fat as the root of all dietary evil?"
(Editorial in NATURE, Vol. 359, 29 October 1992.)
"The diet-heart hypothesis [which suggests that high intake of saturated fat and cholesterol causes heart disease] has been repeatedly shown to be wrong, and yet, for complicated reasons of pride, profit and prejudice, the hypothesis continues to be exploited by scientists, fund-raising enterprises, food companies and even governmental agencies. The public is being deceived by the greatest health scam of the century."
(Dr. George V. Mann, participating researcher in the Framingham study and author of CORONARY HEART DISEASE: THE DIETARY SENSE AND NONSENSE, Janus Publishing 1993.)
Another popular view has been that the key to weight loss for the chronically overweight is to view fat as the enemy. The popular notion can be phrased in this simple formulation: "Eating fat makes you fat, eat less fat and you'll be less fat." Although this simplistic view is not embraced by most professional dieticians, a surprising number of health professionals, personal trainers, and weight-loss gurus continue to make this claim to a public eager to shed its extra pounds.
"There is evidence that altering the proportion of the calories in the diet from fat, carbohydrate, and protein can have a limited effect on weight loss; however the effects appear to be quite small."
(Methods for Voluntary Weight loss and Control, NIH Technology Assessment Conference Panel, Annals of Internal Medicine June 1992, 116; 11)
A growing number of authors, most of them medical doctors or people with doctorates in fields such as biology or biochemistry, have recently exploded onto the American diet scene with popular books offering easier weight loss and substantial health benefits from diets higher in fat, higher in protein, and significantly lower in carbohydrate than the popular low-fat diets. Time and more research will probably tell whether the likes of Dr. Robert Atkins, Dr. Barry Sears, Drs. Rachael and Richard Heller, Drs. Mary Dan and Michael R. Eades, and other diet book authors who go against the prevailing views on diet are right or wrong. Nevertheless it’s astonishing how frequently and even viciously these people who question the reigning dietary dogma are dismissed, even angrily attacked, by defenders of the low-fat diet. In the meantime, evidence that low-fat diets are by and large ineffective and possibly even dangerous continues to accumulate in some of the world’s most respected medical journals.
OK…but how do I know I can help you?
Well, I don’t. I’m not going to sit here and tell you I can help you. Your situation is unique. You have specific issues and problems I have no clue about. So in order to see if I can help you, I have to meet with you.So the whole purpose of this information is to have you come in for a free consultation. This way I can determine if there is something I can do for you.
I’m not going to lie to you.
Real life Wellness isn’t for everybody. This isn’t a magic pill or the latest miracle diet of the stars. This is a program you create. This program takes planning and effort on your part to get the results you deserve.
“Planning – not sheer willpower – is the key to losing weight for good. Think about how your current behavior fits into your planning. Planning is crucial to success.”
American Heart Association Inc. website
This is why you should take Real Life Wellness for a “Test Drive”.
“Many of the world’s leading dietary experts adopted one-size-fits-all dietary solution that they believe can be universally applied. While there are indeed certain universal truths, such as the danger of sugar and toxins, if one adopts this principle, my experience has taught me that a one-size-fits-all approach doesn’t work”
Dr. Joseph Mercola, Mercola.com
Here comes the money part!!
I bet you’re thinking…. where’s the catch. How much is this whole thing going to cost me? O.K. you got me…here’s the catch. I have recently purchased the latest version of Nutritec software for my Real Life Wellness program. This program has been successfully used in chiropractor’s offices for the last 15 years. I am integrating this technology into Real Life Wellness and I want to document how well it increases your results.
So by offering a free consultation and nutritional analysis this allows us to test this new technology. As an added bonus, you’ll receive a Free copy of my book, Your Body, Your Way and a personalized nutritional report.
You might be wondering why we give things away for free. Businesses are designed to make money, so why do we give stuff away? Here is a little secret. We only want to work with people who are serious about getting the most out of their life.
If you’re serious…let’s talk.
Believe it or not, the best way to know you’re serious is to meet you and talk about your hopes and dreams for the future. During these free services, we will make sure we’re both on the same page about your nutrition and fitness goals. If the light bulb goes on for both sides, we’ll build a win-win relationship together. If there isn’t a fit, we can part friends and move on with our lives.
“I have used just a small part of the Real Life Wellness program and lost 13 pounds in 21 days.”
Alice C.
“My hot flashes have disappeared and I am sleeping better than I have in 20 years. I feel like a newly-wed again and this is only my fourth week using Real Life Wellness.”
Pam S.
“Achieving a healthy weight takes continuous effort – or more correctly, good planning and consistency – but the rewards are clear; better health and more enjoyment from life. Over time, these steps will become a sustainable healthy lifestyle based on proper nutrition and increased physical activity. You’ll feel better immediately and reduce your health risks. More importantly, this change in lifestyle can be an enjoyable way for you to live.”
By Mayo Clinic Staff June 30, 2006 mayoclinic.com
As an added Bonus:
Demonstrate your commitment to yourself and your desire to look and feel your best by contacting my office right now at (217) 253-9355!!!, to learn more about your free , no obligation consultation!.
As a reward for being a person of action and contacting us today…. We will give you a certificate (while supplies last) for a FREE half hour MASSAGE….(a $30 value).
During your FREE consultation you will receive a completely personalized Nutritional report explaining exactly what you are lacking in your nutrition and the entire process to work through to guarantee the results you deserve. You are under NO OBLIGATION to buy any other product or service after receiving your free nutritional report, free consultation or 30 minute massage. There will be no time share sales tactics, hard selling or guilt trips about receiving your free information and walking out the door.
Call (217) 253-9355 Now to schedule your Free consultation, Nutritional Evaluation and 30 minute massage.
1. A Free 30 minute massage ($30 value)
2. A Free personalized nutritional analysis ($150 value)
Call 217-253-9355 to claim your bonuses NOW