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NaturalPedia > Organized
Quotes about Organized from the world's top natural health / natural living authors
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"I have organized this book by the number of drug prescriptions written, starting with the most frequent and ending with the least prescribed of those drugs that are most commonly used. Vitamins and supplements are included at the end, and I have also covered the topic of children and medicine. The chapters themselves have been organized by classes of drugs (which have similar risk factors) prescribed for certain health conditions. Organizing material by drugs typically prescribed for these conditions will help you compare different drugs prescribed for the same condition." - J. Douglas Bremner, Before You Take that Pill: Why the Drug Industry May Be Bad for Your Health (Get the book.)
| "Schwartz-now had his answer about the nature of conscious thought: healing intention creates waves of light—and indeed these are among the most organized light waves found in nature.
The theory of relativity was not Einstein's only great insight. He had another astonishing realization in 1924, after correspondence with an obscure Indian physicist, Satyendra Nath Bose, who had been pondering the then new idea that light was composed of little vibrating packets called photons. Bose had worked out that, at certain points, photons should be treated as identical particles." - Lynne McTaggart, The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World (Get the book.)
| "Our goal is to create an organized study with at least 200 people total from both the U.S. and Israel with our attention on the percentage of people who are able to maintain a healthy physiology over a year's time.
In the third week of the 21-Day+ Program, there is training in how to prepare Phase 1.0 plant-source-only 80-100 percent live foods. This is a five-day course in which we like to include the family. The focus is to empower people in the fundamentals of the Phase 1.0 Culture of Life live-food plant-source-only cuisine. This will be covered in depth in the recipe section of this book." - Gabriel Cousens, There Is a Cure for Diabetes: The Tree of Life 21-Day+ Program (Get the book.)
| "The first organized clinical trial of ribose in human subjects was reported in 1989. This study showing the effect of ribose in patients with the genetic muscle disorder myoadenylate deaminase disease (MAD), was overwhelmingly positive. It also created a torrent of clinical investigations around the world studying the effects of ribose administration on heart disease, genetic disorders affecting muscle energy metabolism, arthritis, athletic performance, and neuromusclular disease.
The first clinical investigation on the role of ribose in cardiovascular disease was published in 1991." - Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D., The Sinatra Solution Metabolic Cardiology (Get the book.)
"It was not until 1974 that large enough quantities of coenzyme Q10 could be harvested to support organized clinical trials in large groups of people. Scientists in Japan perfected the industrial technology to produce pure coenzyme Q10 in sufficient quantities for distribution. It was at this point that coenzyme Q10 gained widespread acceptance in Japan and became more available for those with heart disease.
Meanwhile, one night, at about 3:00 A.M., English scientist Peter Mitchell was struggling to sleep. Envisioning an incomplete schema in his mind, he suddenly had an "Aha!"
- Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D., The Sinatra Solution Metabolic Cardiology (Get the book.)
"The first organized clinical trial of coenzyme Q10 in human subjects was performed by Dr. Y. Yamamura and his colleagues at Osaka University in 1965, where the nutrient was given to patients with heart disease. In 1971, Drs. Folkers (United States) and Littarru (Italy) reported that patients with periodontal disease were often deficient in coenzyme Q10, and one year later they demonstrated a deficiency of coenzyme Q10 in cases of human heart disease.
In 1973, Dr. Folkers completed a double-blind study with Dr."
- Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D., The Sinatra Solution Metabolic Cardiology (Get the book.)
| "Light weight training, jogging, aerobics, and organized sports such as golf and Softball are excellent, if your body is up to it. Any type of exercise can improve your balance and energy level and can provide psychological and social benefits that contribute to your well-being.
Use your head to save your brain
When exercising, you must be sure to protect against head injury, which increases the risk of accelerated brain aging, especially when there is loss of consciousness or when the injured person is older than seventy. Head injuries at any age can be detrimental to neurons." - Peter J. Whitehouse and Daniel George, The Myth of Alzheimer's: What You Aren't Being Told About Today's Most Dreaded Diagnosis (Get the book.)
"Once you find your doctor, how do you make sure that you and your family are organized and prepared for your visit, and that you ask the right kind of questions before, during, and after your appointment? finding the right health team
Whether you are seeking care for yourself or for a loved one, the search for a good doctor is not always easy. The key is to maintain your composure and common sense, use the resources at your disposal, and realize that you are not alone and that you are in control of the situation."
- Peter J. Whitehouse and Daniel George, The Myth of Alzheimer's: What You Aren't Being Told About Today's Most Dreaded Diagnosis (Get the book.)
"In 2004 a conference organized by the International Psychogeriatrics Association was held in Washington to gather consensus on the clinical usage of MCI. During the conference, Henry Brodaty, a friend and colleague of mine, and I tried to point out the social and cultural difficulties with the use of the label. After the conference ended, we polled participants (all experts who were invested in the concept of MCI) as to whether the term MCI should currently be used clinically. Only 57 percent of those polled answered yes. The results probably should not have been so surprising."
- Peter J. Whitehouse and Daniel George, The Myth of Alzheimer's: What You Aren't Being Told About Today's Most Dreaded Diagnosis (Get the book.)
"She frequently forgets the time and date and has become anxious, and even obsessive, about her bills and mail, which she's been stowing in shoeboxes underneath her bed in an elaborately organized system. Three weeks ago, she became disoriented behind the wheel and drove into a nearby Baltimore suburb, where she was given a ticket for nearly causing an accident by turning left from the right-hand lane. Fran's family has been worried about her, especially because her father died twenty-five years ago with severe dementia."
- Peter J. Whitehouse and Daniel George, The Myth of Alzheimer's: What You Aren't Being Told About Today's Most Dreaded Diagnosis (Get the book.)
| "Tiller had never observed these types of "organized" oscillations in his conventional science labs at Stanford. Indeed, they had never been observed anywhere else before. Just to be sure that this phenomenon was not being caused by the boxes themselves, he and his colleagues carried out three control experiments, in which devices that had not been imprinted with intention were placed in the spaces and turned on. In those cases, all the readings of air and water behaved normally.
Tiller still puzzled over the meaning of the effects, and whether they might be due to some physical disturbance." - Lynne McTaggart, The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World (Get the book.)
| "To find out where our fruits are headed, I visit the laboratories of "The Family organized to Improve Fruit Worldwide."
When I arrive at Zaiger Genetics' research facility in Modesto, California, the front door is nudged open by a friendly leopard-print dog with a furry black back, a gray wolf neck, auburn thighs, a Dalmatian's flank and terrier ears. "He's a real Heinz 57," chuckles Floyd Zaiger, a smiling man in his eighties wearing a baseball cap and overalls." - Adam Leith Gollne, The Fruit Hunters: A Story of Nature, Adventure, Commerce and Obsession (Get the book.)
| "Although the monks were middle-aged, their brain waves were far more coherent and organized than those of the robust young controls. Even during their resting state, the Buddhists showed evidence of a high rate of gamma-band activity, compared with that of the neophyte meditators.
Davidson's study bolstered other pieces of preliminary research suggesting that certain advanced and highly focused forms of meditation produce a brain operating at peak intensity." - Lynne McTaggart, The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World (Get the book.)
| "Warren organized the first national research workshop on fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). This conference set a research agenda on FAS and also recommended that NIAAA alert the medical community about FAS and the risks posed by prenatal alcohol. Dr. Warren secured the approval of the then Department of Health Education and Welfare for the issuance of a health advisory, which first appeared in June 1977.
Subsequently, Dr. Warren took the lead in developing a congressional report on the health hazards of alcohol use. Dr." - Deirdre Imus, Growing Up Green: Baby and Child Care: Volume 2 in the Bestselling Green This! Series (Green This!) (Get the book.)
| "If their use wasn't supported by powerful interest groups, such as the pharmaceutical industry and organized psychiatry, they would be rarely used at all."
The medical establishment often claims that the use of psychiatric drugs helped to "empty" the US mental hospitals. "That is a myth," counters Dr. Breg-gin. "Psychiatric drugs were in widespread use as early as 1954 and 1955, but the hospital population did not decline until nearly ten years later, starting in 1963. That year the federal government first provided disability insurance coverage for mental disorders." - Gary Null and Amy McDonald, The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing (Get the book.)
"After falling behind economically in competition with psychosocial approaches, psychiatry formed what the American Psychiatric Association admitted is a 'partnership' with the drug companies. organized psychiatry has become wholly dependent for financial support on this unholy collaboration with the pharmaceutical industry."
- Gary Null and Amy McDonald, The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing (Get the book.)
"They need to get connected in some kind of organized way perhaps. There is power in people working together toward trying to get connected spiritually. We have to slow down and say, hey, where am I going? What am I doing with my life? Nothing changes if nothing changes then nothing changes. People expect to continue their same behaviors with their same attitudes and their same thought patterns, but it doesn't work that way. We find great power in helping other people. In AA [Alcoholics Anonymous], people can stay sober because they are helping other people."
- Gary Null and Amy McDonald, The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing (Get the book.)
| "In the circumstance of Braud's studies, in which two people have a 'synchronized' bandwidth, the observer with the greater degree of coherence, or order, influences the probabilistic processes of the less organized recipient. The more ordered of Braud's pairs affects some quantum state in the more disordered other and nudges it to toward a greater degree of order." - Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
"Were the more organized of us - biologically speaking - better at accessing this information and drawing it to the attention of others?
In 1983, Braud tested out this theory with a series of studies in collaboration with an anthropologist called Marilyn Schlitz, another consciousness researcher who'd worked with Helmut Schmidt. Braud and Schlitz selected a group of highly nervous people, as evidenced by high sympathetic nervous system activity, and another calmer group. Using a similar protocol to the staring studies, Braud and Schlitz by turns tried to calm down members of both groups."
- Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
"In 1992, FASEB (the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology) held a symposium, organized by the International Society for Bioelectric -ity examining the interactions of electromagnetic fields with biological systems.-7 Numerous other scientists have replicated high-dilution experiments,'8 and several others have endorsed and successfully repeated experiments using digitized information for molecular communication.9 Benveniste's latest studies were replicated eighteen times in an independent lab in Lyon, France, and in three other independent centres."
- Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
"These sudden surges of energy may be physical evidence of a healer's greater coherence - his ability to marshall his own quantum energy and transfer it to the less organized recipient.
Elisabeth's study and the work of William Braud raised a number of profound implications on the nature of illness and healing. It suggested that intention on its own heals, but that healing is also a collective force. The manner in which Targ's healers worked would suggest that there may be a collective memory of healing spirit, which could be gathered as a medicinal force."
- Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
| "Residents in the village had organized a ceremony honoring four of them. "They invited me to participate, but I had no data," Poulain said. "I could not publicly confirm that theirs was a long-lived village. I am a scientist, and with no data, no conclusion.
But a half hour before the ceremony, I stopped by the city hall and looked at the birth and death records, and right away I found some preliminary indications that these documents were very accurate." - Dan Buettner, The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who've Lived the Longest (Get the book.)
"Kids don't play organized sports or do homework. Instead families do things together, such as hiking, that bring them together and make them feel closer to God. For the Adventists, it's a time to put the rest of the week in perspective and to lessen the din and confusion of everyday life.
The result seems to be a greater sense of well-being. But how does slowing down help you live longer? The answer may have something to do with chronic inflammation. Inflammation is the body's reaction to stress. That stress can come in the form of an injury, an infection, or anxiety."
- Dan Buettner, The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who've Lived the Longest (Get the book.)
"That was especially true of the period between 1844, when White had her first vision from God, and 1863, when the Adventist Church was officially organized.
"Along with Ellen G. White, there were two people crucial to the way the church was formed. One was James White, Ellen's husband, who provided the administrative genius and ran a publishing company. The other major figure was Joseph Bates, a very successful sea captain and intellectual who introduced this whole health emphasis," Giang said. "
- Dan Buettner, The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who've Lived the Longest (Get the book.)
| "Because most field guides are organized by flowers, it was difficult to identify the plant by the leaf alone. That same week she went to an acupuncturist who was helping her with menstrual irregularity and cramping during her cycles. After her session the acupuncturist gave her a formula to bring home and begin taking. The day after the treatment, she was cleaning her shelves at home and her field guide fell off the shelf to an open page with a picture of a plant whose leaves looked very similar to the one in her garden." - Pam Montgomery, Plant Spirit Healing: A Guide to Working with Plant Consciousness (Get the book.)
| "According to the Hartmann Boundary Questionnaire test, developed by Tufts University psychiatrist Ernest Hartmann to test a person's psychological armament, people with thick boundaries are well organized, dependable, defensive, and, as Hartmann himself liked to put it, "well armored," with a sturdy sense of self that remains locked around them like a chain-link fence. People with "thin" boundaries tend to be open, unguarded, and undefended." - Lynne McTaggart, The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World (Get the book.)
| "Though a gifted diplomat and strategist—he wrote the definitive text on warfare, the Strategikon, and organized the western provinces under governor-generals, or exarchs—the emperor apparently assumed that authority ex officio could replace personal command, which he left to carelessly chosen underlings. He thus forgot both the lessons of Diocletian, who never let an army stray too far from a tetrarch, and Justinian, whose talent for surrounding himself with loyal retainers was legendary even in his liferime. The results were predictable." - William Rosen, Justinian's Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire (Get the book.)
| "Hunts Point's biggest produce wholesalers, Caggiano is also an associate of the Genovese organized crime family, according to Police Commissioner Raymond W Kelly. "We are determined to rid these markets of any mob activity whatsoever," he announced at a press conference, linking other wholesalers to the Luchese and Bonanno families.
Members of the public aren't allowed past the security gate. Fortunately, I've set up an interview with management. After getting clearance from a uniformed official, I enter the colossal factory complex." - Adam Leith Gollne, The Fruit Hunters: A Story of Nature, Adventure, Commerce and Obsession (Get the book.)
"The produce is organized by temperature requirement: some of the chambers are frigid, others are nearly warm.
The different climates are divided by thick strips of plastic curtains that Jimmy pushes through with confidence. They always seem to bounce back at me, pinching and scraping. Honking forklift drivers nearly mow me down on several occasions. "Yeah, watch out for them," says Jimmy. "They're grumpy."
While we walk around the warehouse, Jimmy makes calls to other wholesalers to compare prices. "Everybody's trying to buy low and sell high," explains Jimmy. "It's like the stock exchange."
- Adam Leith Gollne, The Fruit Hunters: A Story of Nature, Adventure, Commerce and Obsession (Get the book.)
"A kiddie taste test organized by the Denver Post deemed it "ucky." Eating one calls to mind biting into lip gloss. It is not organic, nor is it certified kosher. On a website where users can leave their feedback, the comments are often vitriolic. "I am disgusted," writes one. "The fact that these people have the audacity to charge $5.00 for Dimetapp-flavored apples is just wrong. The inventor should be shot in the foot." The litany of complaints continues: 'Yuck! I can't believe these folks are marketing this crud.... Blech!"
- Adam Leith Gollne, The Fruit Hunters: A Story of Nature, Adventure, Commerce and Obsession (Get the book.)
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