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Alternative |
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 | | Drink Tea for Good Health and Fitness | | by Jennifer Mint, May 4, 2008 | | Tea has been the soft drink of choice in Asia for centuries. Today we seem to be learning more and more about the positive health effects of tea. Here is why you should include a few cups of tea per day in your diet, fitness, or exercise program. | | Comments(8) Liked It: 30 |
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| | | | Aromatherapy is for Everyone | | by fishfry aka Elizabeth Figueroa, Jan 6, 2009 | | Taking the time to smell the roses, and thinking about how that scent makes you feel. That is how aromatherapy works. If you take just one day, notice all the aromas around; as the day goes on, you will become more conscious of the everyday odors around you. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 0 |
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 | | Hypnosis: America and the Dark Side | | by Alchemist, Jan 6, 2009 | | This part of the series deals with the early 20th century and America's influence on the development of hypnosis. It also goes into the darker side and the dubious utilisation of hypnosis within the intelligence world. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 0 |
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 | | Clock Watchers: Tips for Sleeplessness, Restless Minds and Insomnia | | by MissVerona, Jan 5, 2009 | | According to a 2007 Census poll, clinically diagnosed insomnia is experienced by 15% of Americans, while 20% to 30% of adults have experienced sleeping problems including sleeplessness and restless minds at some point in their lives. While some sleep disorders are clinical, others can make an appearance due to lifestyle or environment changes. There are natural ways to curing mild cases of sleeplessness; many people are turning to herbal ways to cure ailments instead of using addictive sleeping pills. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 0 |
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 | | Hypnosis: The French Influence and the Disaster of Freud | | by Alchemist, Jan 5, 2009 | | This article, the fifth in the series, surveys the influence of the French neurologist Charcot ant the Nancy school and also examines the way that Sigmund Freud erroneously led psychology and psychiatry down a cul de sac and almost caused the demise of therapeutic hypnosis. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 0 |
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 | | Hypnosis: British Developments in the 19th Century | | by Alchemist, Jan 4, 2009 | | This article examines the further development of Mesmerism and the start of modern day hypnosis. It also examines the contributions of some of the key characters in this developement, Rober Elliotson, James Esdaille, James Braid and the English novelist, Charles Dickens. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 0 |
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