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Jimi's Daily Health Articles

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Just a quick reminder that today is the last day to sign up to watch the new award-winning documentary GREENFIELD - that I personally directed - during its world premiere global screening event.​
If you’ve been meaning to check it out, don’t wait. If you’ve seen it, please share it, by sending friends to www.GreenfieldFilm.com
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
This truly does work well, thank you @Bliss Doubt :hug:

If falling asleep isn't your problem…

But somewhere around 3 AM your eyes snap open, your brain starts spinning, and getting back to sleep feels impossible…

You're stuck in the dark, watching the minutes crawl past… 4 AM… 5 AM… 6 AM…

Then you somehow have to function on what feels like no sleep at all…

Here's what catches most women off guard: those middle-of-the-night wake-ups throw your body straight into a stress response…

And once that kicks in, your metabolism hits the brakes and your body starts packing fat around your midsection.

Which is exactly why cutting calories or adding more walks barely moves the needle.

So what actually works?

Try this 30-second cherry trick tonight before you climb into bed.

One sleep researcher who's spent 18 years studying this says it calms your overactive brain and lets your body drop into the deep, restorative stages of sleep…

And woman after woman over 50 reports the same thing:

Once the 3 AM wake-ups disappeared and real sleep came back, pounds started falling off and their energy went through the roof.

Sarah's story says it all:
“Thanks to this cherry trick I sleep like a baby every night, I’m down 24 lbs, my mind is sharp once again and my husband can’t keep his hands off me! I can hardly believe it’s real!”

Here's the cherry trick you can try as early as tonight…

>> Click here to see the 30-second cherry trick.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Dear Jim --

mail


Due to travel, we will not be having our Moms Connect Call tonight, but we thought you would enjoy our next article on the Glyphosate Immunity Shield.


When a product deeply embedded in society is linked to widespread harm and begins to generate large waves of litigation, something interesting tends to happen in American regulatory history. The conversation often shifts away from the original question of “Does this product cause harm?” towards a very different type of inquiry: “What happens when the cost of accountability threatens the survival of the industry itself?”

From nuclear energy to cigarettes and vaccines, there are several points in U.S. history where the federal government has intervened when serious concerns about a product begin to accumulate, changing the rules about how the companies in question can be held responsible. Today, a similar situation is unfolding around glyphosate, the most widely used herbicide in the world. As thousands of lawsuits alleging links between glyphosate exposure and cancer move through the courts, chemical manufacturers and their allies have increasingly argued that existing federal pesticide regulations should protect them from liability. In other words, if the government approved the product and its label, should companies still be held responsible when people claim they were harmed?<

Read more...
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
I want to share something with you today, and I genuinely mean today, because this is the last day you'll be able to watch it for free.



My friends at Earth Conscious Life and The Sacred Science just released a new documentary called Greenfield.



It follows activist Robin Greenfield as he explores what it would actually take to grow, source, and truly understand your own food, with far less dependence on the systems most of us have never questioned.



And it asked a question I hadn't sat with before: could I actually feed myself if the grocery store shelves were empty for a month? Not in theory. In practice.



As someone who's been passionate about food since I was a kid, that question hit me.



What I loved is that Robin doesn't approach this from fear. He approaches it with curiosity and integrity. He's not lecturing. He's simply testing his own ability to be self-reliant, publicly and honestly, and inviting you to consider what that might look like in your life.



It's a really beautiful, grounded look at how far we may have drifted from the natural world, and whether we can find our way back.



>> Watch the Greenfield trailer and reserve your free screening spot here.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Episode 470: A FOOD CRISIS, AUTISM COMMUNICATION RIGHTS, AND STEM CELL SECRETS
The HighWire with Del Bigtree delivers a powerful episode covering vaccine messaging, an impending global food crisis, autism communication rights, and cutting-edge stem cell science.
First, One of the most powerful human events The HighWire has covered centers on the film Spellers, and the communication method that allows non-speaking individuals with autism to express themselves through spelling. Dawnmarie Gaivin, AT-ACP, founder of the Spellers Freedom Foundation, joins Del, along with Spellers cast member Elizabeth Bonker, for an inspiring conversation exposing the growing battle over the right to communicate.
As Robert F. Kennedy Jr. works to reconstitute the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), we examine the new media narrative being deployed against so-called anti-vaxxers and what it signals about the next phase of the public health debate.
Then, Jefferey Jaxen reports on the growing fertilizer supply crisis linked to instability around the Strait of Hormuz, a key global chokepoint through which roughly one-third of the world’s fertilizer ingredients move. What could this mean for food supply, energy, fuel prices, and the risk of a broader international food crisis?
Finally, Del sits down with Ed Clay, a former MMA fighter whose family health crisis led him deep into the world of stem cell therapies and cancer research. He now leads one of the biggest clinics in the world doing this work — in Mexico. It’s a jaw-dropping conversation about why this science is happening outside the United States and what it could mean for the future of medicine.
Guests: Dawnmarie Gaivin, AT-ACP, Elizabeth Bonker, Ginnie Breen, Ed Clay,​
 

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