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NaturalPedia > Concepts > Paper
Quotes about Paper from the world's top natural health / natural living authors
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"If you find that even after a few wipes, the paper is not clean, wet the paper and then wipe. It is gentler on the skin and helps clean the area.
• Make sure you keep dry. Just like when babies are wet, adults tend to get rashes when damp. Damp and hot areas tend to breed bacteria such as yeast. If you tend to sweat, try to use cornstarch and clothes made of natural fibres like cotton that breathe.
• Use unscented and gentle bath products. Sometimes artificial scents in soaps, bubble bath and even toilet paper can cause allergic reactions." - Heather Caruso, Your Drug-Free Guide to Digestive Health (Get the book.)
| "Blotting Papers ($21 for 150 sheets) are standard, nonpowdered blotting papers that absorb excess shine, but so do many other versions that wouldn't dare charge this much for what amounts to tissue paper. What you're paying for is the elegant Dior-embossed carrying case that includes a built-in mirror. It's definitely a chic way to blot, but what a shame Dior doesn't sell refill packs so you only have to pay for the extravagance once. These serve their purpose, but whether or not to spend this much for elegant packaging is up to you." - Paula Begoun and Bryan Barron, Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me, 7th Edition (Get the book.)
| "Modern paper coffee filters trap the offending chemicals and keep them from entering the cup. Therefore, drinking paper-filtered coffee does not increase cholesterol levels.77, 78 Espresso coffee has amounts of the offending chemicals midway between those of other unfiltered coffees and paper-filtered coffee,79 but there is little research investigating the effect of espresso on cholesterol levels, and studies to date have produced conflicting results.80'81 The effects of decaffeinated coffee on cholesterol levels remain in debate." - Alan R. Gaby, M.D., Jonathan V. Wright, M.D., Forrest Batz, Pharm.D. Rick Chester, RPh., N.D., DipLAc. George Constantine, R.Ph., Ph.D. Linnea D. Thompson, Pharm.D., N.D., The Natural Pharmacy: Complete A-Z Reference to Natural Treatments for Common Health Conditions (Get the book.)
| "I looked out the window and saw what looked like the thin red line you see along the edge of a smoldering piece of paper. The only problem was that the line was ten miles long, and it was not paper but forest that was burning. In 1997, we saw the devastating effect of forest fires in Indonesia, exacerbated by the Pacific's El Nino warming effect. According to the World Wildlife Fund, more forests were burned around the world in 1997 than in any other year in recorded history. At least 12 million acres of forest and scrub ?" - Peter Russell, Waking Up In Time: Finding Inner Peace In Times of Accelerating Change (Get the book.)
| "Take a separate piece of paper and write down a summary showing the dates and the times you ate. Don't include what foods you ate or how you felt. Your paper will look something like this:
Using Your Journal as a Planning Tool
10/12
11:00 3:00 6:30 10:30 12:30 2:30 8:30 10:00 11:00 1:30 3:00 6:00 9:00
a.m.
breakfast
10/13
10/14
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m." - Kathleen DesMaisons, Potatoes Not Prozac: Solutions for Sugar Sensitivity (Get the book.)
| "Many cures focus on controlled breathing via holding the breath, breathing shallow, deep or into a paper bag. These methods may provide short term relief. Breathing into a paper bag creates respiratory acidosis. This increases the amount of carbon dioxide inhaled. Increased levels of CO2 levels in the blood lower the pH which causes depression of the nervous system and increased blood flow to the muscles. Some people may find this makes them dizzy and can have potentially harmful side effects such as passing out and injury." - Heather Caruso, Your Drug-Free Guide to Digestive Health (Get the book.)
"One type of craving is called "pica" and is defined as an appetite for non-food substances such as chalk, paper, coal or dirt. Some people eat foods that are not appropriate such as flour, uncooked potatoes, starch and raw meat. Pica happens in all ages but typically during pregnancy and in children. It sometimes occurs in those who have parasites such as pinworms. Some people who suffer from emotional disturbances or developmental delay may eat things that are unusual such as hair, skin, feces, paint or wallpaper. It is certainly disturbing to witness."
- Heather Caruso, Your Drug-Free Guide to Digestive Health (Get the book.)
| "When the paper was held directly under a bright light and tilted back and forth, however, something happened that set these bookmarks apart from more traditional ones: Suddenly, the images in the foil looked as though they'd come to life and were hovering in the air just above the paper itself. As the bookmark was tilted one way, then another, the image remained present, three-dimensional and lifelike. I remember a number of different versions of these: the face of Jesus, the body of Mother Mary, a dolphin jumping over a pyramid, and a rosebud in full bloom." - Gregg Braden, The Divine Matrix: Bridging Time, Space, Miracles, and Belief (Get the book.)
| "One day, a persistent patient—a retired army colonel—who was tired of repeated treatments without getting better, pressed a research paper into my hand. It discussed the benefits of antioxidant vitamins for cardiac patients. He dogged me until I finally read the paper.
The research made sense. It talked about how antioxidants actually addressed the underlying cause of his blocked arteries. It may sound strange at this point in time, but for a superachieving crisis doctor the concept of treating the causes of cardiovascular disease, not just the consequences, was pretty alien." - Stephen Sinatra, M.D. and James C., M.D. Roberts, Reverse Heart Disease Now: Stop Deadly Cardiovascular Plaque Before It's Too Late (Get the book.)
| "Moreover, people who advocate for neuroimaging claim that their technology is likely to demonstrate less variability upon repeat testing than a clinical examination with paper and pencil tests. This may yet prove to be true. Yet in their private circles they will admit that we know too little about the reliability of scans across time and place and that pencil and paper tests such as the MMSE are often the more reliable?not to mention cheaper—medium." - 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.)
| "You can pick up pH paper specifically designed for this purpose at most health food stores. Make sure you test in the morning before brushing or eating as these things can temporarily alter the pH in your mouth. Just spit out a couple of times into the sink, then onto the pH paper. Ideally, your pH should be about 7.45. If it tests below 7.0, you should get aggressive in tetms of alkalinizing youi body.
• Fasting. There are any number of books on fasting to help guide you through the process. The principles of fasting are simple." - Jon Barron, Lessons from The Miracle Doctors: A Step-by-Step Guide to Optimum Health and Relief from Catastrophic Illness (Get the book.)
| "Clean them with a damp paper towel or a mushroom brush. Store in the refrigerator, either on a shallow tray covered loosely with a damp paper towel or in a paper bag. Use within a few days.
Ripen them in a paper bag.
How to store garlic.
How to keep mushrooms fresh longer.
Onions. Choose only firm bulbs with papery skins. Avoid onions that have begun to sprout. Store in a cool, dark, dry spot, preferably in a net sack for good circulation. Don't store near potatoes, which give off moisture and can cause onions to sprout or to rot." - Prevention Magazine Editors, The Complete Book of Vitamins & Minerals for Health (Get the book.)
| "They eat any sort of vegetable matter, from the obvious—seeds, nuts, leaves, and fruits—to such unlikely choices as paper, soap, and beeswax,' as well as eggs, baby chickens, pigs, even lambs. But for those charting the rat's impact on human history, their most significant dietary choice is grain. Grain is what induces rats to travel at all. A rat eats fifty pounds of grain annually, and spoils twice as much as it eats." - William Rosen, Justinian's Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire (Get the book.)
"In reality, the reason for the loss of so many of the gteat works of the classical world—plays by Aeschylus and Aristophanes, works of science by Archimedes—is almost certainly more mundane: deterioration of the patchment, papyrus, and paper on which they were written. because no other province can suffice for that purpose but the divine Egypt."
- William Rosen, Justinian's Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire (Get the book.)
"Grain, paper, oil, ivory, slaves. During the year 540, the great merchant fleets of Alexandria, by then officially ad Aegyptum, not in Aegypto, awaited their next great export, then making their way up the east coast of Africa. The Nile delta was the place where a boom in the population of R. rattus, the black rat, reached critical mass.
The northward journey of the Nile to Pelusium and Alexandria has a physical inevitability to it, its waters flowing downhill from the mountains of east central Africa to the "flat shore" that Huxley found so unappealing. The northward journey of X."
- William Rosen, Justinian's Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire (Get the book.)
"Had he been writing about second-century Asia instead of the Mediterranean, he might have said the same for the Hans, who oversaw not only the world's most extensive irrigation economy and the invention of water clocks, paper, and block printing but also an agricultural surplus large enough to foster an enormous population explosion. By the time of the Imperial Census of 2 ce., Han China was home to nearly 60 million, probably about the same size as the Roman Empire of the same date.2 (Together, the two empires included nearly half the entire world's population."
- William Rosen, Justinian's Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire (Get the book.)
| "Linus Pauling in his paper in Science in 1968—was based upon his recognition that certain vitamins are effective when they are used in large quantities.
At that time, the conventional wisdom was still that you used vitamins only in tiny amounts and you only needed them for the prevention of deficiency diseases, like scurvy or beriberi. A nutritionist accepted the fact that if you had scurvy you would eat oranges or you would take small quantities of vitamin C. As Dr. Hoffer puts it, "It was unheard of to give someone 1,000 mg of vitamin C." - Gary Null and Amy McDonald, The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing (Get the book.)
"This paper reports on a single case of 37-year-old schizophrenic who was observed to have benefited from ascorbic acid supplementation to his ongoing neuroleptic medication.
Vitamin C Status in Chronic Schizophrenia. Suboticanec K; Folnegovic-Smalc V; Korbar M; Mestrovic B; Buzina R. Biological Psychiatry, 1990 December, 28(ll):959-966."
- Gary Null and Amy McDonald, The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing (Get the book.)
| "The drugs under review at that time, according to the March 22, 2004, FDA Talk paper, were bupropion (Wellbutrin), citalopram (Celexa), fluoxetine (Prozac, Serafem), fluvoxamine (Luvox), mirtazapine (Remeron), nefazodone (Serzone), paroxetine (Paxil), sertraline (Zoloft), escitalopram (Lexapro), and venlafaxine (Effexor). These were the drugs most often cited by the public at the two FDA hearings.17 A more recent product, duloxetine (Cymbalta), shares similar risks." - Peter Breggin, Medication Madness: A Psychiatrist Exposes the Dangers of Mood-Altering Medications (Get the book.)
"The language is startling in its similarity to mine in the 2003 paper that I distributed to the FDA committee in which I described a stimulant syndrome that begins with "insomnia, nervousness, anxiety, hyperactivity, and irritability, and then progresses toward more severe agitation, aggression, and varying degrees of mania." I also went on to describe the hazards of akathisia. The underlying concept of activation is identical to what I call stimulation and the FDA's words often overlap with mine."
- Peter Breggin, Medication Madness: A Psychiatrist Exposes the Dangers of Mood-Altering Medications (Get the book.)
| "Our whole society is geared to go to the medicine cabinet for a painkiller or an antihistamine when we should be geared to get a pencil and paper to record what could be causing this problem at this time."
Dr. Rapp tells how a little knowledge and awareness can go a long way. "After we have educated the parents," she says, "they often come in to see us knowing exactly what is causing their child's problems. They can tell if it's something inside or outside the house, if it's a food or a chemical. They can pinpoint the cause." - Gary Null and Amy McDonald, The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing (Get the book.)
| "In addition to submitting my paper, I made presentations to the FDA's advisory committee at both public hearings in February and September 2004, and was the only expert to emphasize this broad spectrum of antidepressant-induced abnormal behaviors in children and adults, and to identify them as commonly caused by activation or stimulation." - Peter Breggin, Medication Madness: A Psychiatrist Exposes the Dangers of Mood-Altering Medications (Get the book.)
| "Even when fans were turned up high enough to scatter pieces of paper, the original temperature oscillations remained.
What exactly was going on? This could be a magnetic effect, Tiller thought. Perhaps he should check out the magnetic field of the water. He placed an ordinary bar magnet under a jar of water for three days, with the north pole of the magnet pointing upward, and measured the water's pH. Then he turned the magnet over so that the south pole faced upward under the jar for the same period." - Lynne McTaggart, The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World (Get the book.)
| "Beljanski's studies and the recent paper from the International Journal of Oncology).
CLINICAL STUDIES
Some 10 years after his death, the implications of Dr. Beljanski's work continue to be studied ever more intensively, as more and more of the science of the DNA shifts from genetic mutations to the inherent integrity of the whole structure—and it doesn't hurt that Beljanski's research showed promise in a major clinical trial at Columbia University.
Headed by Dr." - Freedom Press, Natural Cancer Cures: The Definitive Guide to Using Dietary Supplements to Fight and Prevent Cancer (Get the book.)
| "In their paper they showed that inertia is what is termed a Lorentz force - a force that slows particles moving through a magnetic field. In this instance, the magnetic field is a component of the Zero Point Field, reacting with the charged subatomic particles. The larger the object, the more particles it contains and the more it is held stationary by the field.
What this was basically saying is that the corporeal stuff we call matter and to which all physicists since Newton have attributed an innate mass was an illusion." - Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
"Hal was eventually to demonstrate in a paper published by Physical Review, one of world's most prestigious physics journals, that the stable state of matter depends for its very existence on this dynamic interchange of subatomic particles with the sustaining zero-point energy field."* In quantum theory, a constant problem wrestled with by physicists concerns the issue of why atoms are stable. Invariably, this question would be examined in the laboratory or mathematically tackled using the hydrogen atom. With one electron and one proton, hydrogen is the simplest atom in the universe to dissect."
- Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
"He sent Green, the CIA boss, up in a small aircraft with three numbers on a piece of paper inside his breast pocket. Numbers and letters were known to be almost impossible to remote view accurately. Nevertheless, there was Pat Price ticking them off, even in order. He only complained of feeling a bit seasick and drew a picture of a kind of special cross, which he'd had the image of swinging back and forth, making him ill."
- Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
"As he wrote in one paper, the ZPF interaction constitutes an underlying, stable 'bottom rung' vacuum state in which further ZPF interaction simply reproduces the existing state on a dynamic-equilibrium basis.20
What this implies, says Hal, is a 'kind of self-regenerating grand ground state of the universe',21 which constantly refreshes itself and remains a constant unless disturbed in some way. It also means that we and all the matter of the universe are literally connected to the furthest reaches of the cosmos through the Zero Point Field waves of the grandest dimensions."
- Lynne Mctaggart, The Field - The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe (Get the book.)
| "He thought,' as Feyn-man once put it, 'that he understood paper.' But he was mistaken. Real, quantum-mechanical paper is wildly different from the abstract stuff that the Turing machine uses. The Turing machine is entirely classical, and does not allow for the possibility that the paper might have different symbols written on it in different universes, and that those might interfere with one another. Of course, it is impractical to detect interference between different states of a paper tape." - David Deutsch, The Fabric of Reality: The Science of Parallel Universes and Its Implications (Get the book.)
| "In what has become a classic paper, "The Need for a New Medical Model: A Challenge for Biomedicine," published in the journal Science in 1977, Dr. George Engel wrote, "The historical fact we have to face is that in modern Western society biomedicine not only has provided a basis for the scientific study of disease, it has also become our own culturally specific perspective about disease, that is, our folk model." - John Abramson, Overdosed America: The Broken Promise of American Medicine (P.S.) (Get the book.)
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