NewsTarget
survey results, part 2: Healthy actions = healthy results
This is part two of the NewsTarget survey results analysis, continuing
with healthy actions and healthy results. Sixty-five point four percent
of NewsTarget readers reported experiencing an improvement of their
overall health. It shows the incredible power of information to change
people's lives for the better. I don't know that any other publication
or book can claim to help improve the health of almost two-thirds
of its readers. In fact, I don't know of any prescription drug, surgical
procedure or medical technology that can make that claim. This is
an astonishing number, and I believe it goes to show the power of
health freedom.
When we have free access to information that improves our lives,
we, as free-thinking individuals, can use that information to make
better decisions about what we eat, how much we exercise, what we
avoid and essentially how we choose to live our lives. It doesn't
mean that every single person who reads these articles is going to
instantly become a super-healthy human, but it does show that everyone
can be healthier than they used to be, and that making those changes
is often spontaneous once people have the right information. That
makes a lot of defenders of organized medicine really nervous. They
simply don't want patients to have access to information.
The FDA, for example, is deep into the business of censorship, believing
that the public must be "protected" from too much knowledge.
For example, the agency recently sent threatening legal letters to
29 cherry growers who were posting scientific studies describing
the health benefits of the many phytochemicals found in cherries
(cherries work better than anti-inflammatory drugs at easing arthritis
pain, rendering COX-2 drugs utterly obsolete, if you didn't already
know). The FDA warned the cherry growers that if they continued to
post scientific studies about cherries, the agency would consider
cherries to be "unapproved drugs" and ban their sale in
the United States while arguing that cherries have never been proven "safe
and effective." That's the FDA for you -- blatant censorship
and a good dose of plain old racketeering to boot. Only in today's
outlandish system of monopoly medicine could someone look at a cherry
and call it a drug.
Take back your health power by educating yourself
But it's not just the FDA that wants to censor information. Many
old-school MDs also hate it when patients come into their clinic
quoting something they learned on the internet. Many doctors simply
don't want patients to have information. They want to be the sole
conduit of information.
Organized medicine believes that information, just like chemicals,
needs to be centrally controlled. I, on the other hand, believe that
information needs to be free. I'm a believer in the open-source movement,
and I believe that information about health should be made freely
available to anyone, so that they can search for solutions to their
health problems and educate themselves on what to do better. That
stance is something that scares organized medicine half to death,
because it recognizes that if people really knew how easy it was
to prevent chronic disease, reverse cancer, or replace dangerous
prescription drugs with natural alternatives, then organized medicine
would utterly collapse overnight.
The whole system depends on people not having access to good information.
By writing these articles, I feel like I'm playing a small but important
role in boosting the health literacy of everyone who cares to participate.
Look at this in comparison to the history of the United States in
the 1800s. In the slave-trade days, plantation owners wanted to keep
their slaves illiterate, because they knew that if their slaves could
read, they would educate themselves and realize that there's a bigger
world out there, and they could no longer be easily controlled. Today,
we're all treated like slaves by the censorship efforts of the FDA
and organized medicine in general.
You see, organized medicine doesn't want people to be self-educated
about health, nutrition or disease prevention. In fact, medicine
has its own secret language and medical jargon created to isolate
everyday people from medical conversations. Even disease names are
created to cloud their true meaning. "Hepatitis" just means "inflamed
liver." "Osteoporosis" simply means "bones with
holes in them." But conventional medicine insists on using Latin,
not plain English. Part of the purpose for that is simply to confuse
people and make medicine seem more complicated than it really is.
If you've been diagnosed with "osteoporosis," that sounds
a lot more official than a doctor saying, "Your bones are fragile
and full of tiny holes." When the word "osteoporosis" is
used, it sounds like a bona fide disease (which probably calls for
some kind of drugs, by the way), but if someone says your bones are
fragile, that's merely an observation, not a disease.
What I like to do is translate so-called complex health concepts
into everyday language that anyone can understand. The results of
that are what we're seeing right here in this survey: Sixty-five
point four percent of the people are saying their health has improved
because they're taking the initiative to read and apply this information
that was made freely available to them.
Give up prescription drugs, boost your energy and look better!
Almost 22 percent of readers say they have completely eliminated
their dependence on one or more prescription drugs. That's a strong
number -- a little more than one out of five. I hope that number
will climb as people learn about the natural healing alternatives
to prescription drugs that can be found in food, herbs and other
natural modalities such as sunlight.
Almost half of the readers, 48.4 percent, reported experiencing
improved energy. It's a big issue for a lot of people. They feel
fatigued all the time. They feel like they can't get up in the morning
or focus at work, so 48.4 percent experiencing improved energy is
a good milestone.
Thirty-six percent reported boosting their appearance. This means
they now look younger or healthier. That's a good, strong number,
as well. I'm happy to see it, because as we get healthier and change
our diets for the better, we do look younger. We actually appear
to reverse in age. I know that today I look at least 10 years younger
than I did five years ago. Some people think I'm still in my 20s.
That's what can happen when you take care of your health. Your biological
age actually begins to reverse and the signs of aging can reverse
or disappear. It doesn't mean you're going to live forever. This
is not about immortality, but it is about living longer and better
with the body you've been given.
Twenty-four point five percent reported eliminating mood swings,
anger or irritability, and this was probably due to avoiding refined
sugars, refined grains or soft drinks. When you eliminate sugars
from your diet, your mood stabilizes. You're no longer depressed
or irritable, and your nervous system has an easier time dealing
with the pressures of everyday life.
Twenty-four point five percent reported losing at least 10 pounds
of body fat. This indicates that this information has helped a quarter
of the readers lose a significant amount of body fat. That's an amazing
number because most diets don't even have that kind of success. Yet
this information isn't packaged as a diet. It's packaged as general
health information that talks about weight loss or fat accumulation
from time to time.
Ten point eight percent reported lowering their cholesterol by at
least 30 points, and 13.7 percent reported lowering their blood pressure
by at least 20/10 points. These numbers aren't all that impressive,
but that's probably because not all the readers have actually measured
their cholesterol.
Nearly 50 percent (49.4 to be exact) reported increasing their mood
and outlook on life. Just by following this basic health advice,
almost 50 percent of our readers are reversing depression and improving
their outlook on life. I think that's a phenomenal number, and I
know that if the antidepressant drug manufacturers could see this
report, they would be alarmed to learn that simple, open-source health
information is helping people overcome depression without dangerous,
expensive prescription drugs.
Eleven point six percent reported receiving praise from their doctor
for making positive health changes. This is an interesting number
because it shows that when patients rise to the challenge and are
able to put some of those positive changes into play, that a little
over one out of 10 of their doctors will actually praise them for
it, and I think that is one sign of a good doctor. If you have a
doctor who's noticing your positive health changes and giving you
praise for it, that's probably a good doctor to stick with. Doctors
are not just people who write prescriptions and diagnose disease;
they can also serve in some way as coaches, and they can help motivate
people to continue making those positive changes.
Thirty-one point four percent reported receiving positive comments
from their friends on their improved health or appearance. So, while
some were being positively praised by their doctors, three times
that many were receiving positive praise from their friends, and
this just goes to show you the power of peer pressure in making positive
changes. If you get healthier and lose weight and have more energy,
your friends will notice.
Improve your relationships through health education
As an interesting side note to that, 27.4 percent reported an improvement
in the quality of their personal relationships. Now, if you're
new to health, you might ask, "How can that be? What does
health have to do with your relationships?" The answer is
that health has everything to do with your relationships, because
every relationship is a mental and emotional experience, and if
your brain and nervous system are damaged or impaired by nutritional
deficiencies, consumption of refined sugars, wild insulin swings
and other common health imbalances, you're going to experience
mood swings and distortions in your perceptions, especially in
relation to others. When you improve your health, your relationships
automatically improve as a result. You become more tolerant, stable
and mature, and basically become a nicer person to be around, whether
or not your partner is. When you are a nicer person to be around,
it makes every relationship easier.
So, that's the wrap-up of the healthy results section of this survey.
In the next section, we'll talk about how this information is helping
people enhance their career performance and work performance. The
bottom line is this information has the power to dramatically improve
the health outcome of people who choose to read it, learn it and
apply it. |
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