Suppressed
Inventions is one of those books that you can easily read a chapter,
put down and then go back to weeks later because each chapter can be
read alone. It is only the totality of all that he writes that leaves
you looking for a very stiff drink after you finally put his book down.
#Dr. Max Gerson's Nutritional Therapy for Cancer and Other Diseases
#Introduction to Bread From Stones
#Sunbeams From Cucumbers
#Never a Straight Answer: A Book Review of NASA Mooned America!
#The Stonewalling of High Strangeness
#Transmission of Electrical Energy Without Wires
and many other important suppressed inventions & other discoveries
This book reveals what people have wanted to know about the human
condition from the very beginning of time: What are feelings for?
Within its pages, you will discover the secret language of feelings.
That language is a voice within us. Sometimes it is as soft as a
whisper; sometimes it is as loud as a roar. It is an important voice,
which, when fully understood, gives you a kind of guidance that no
other voice can.
Perfect Eyes in 30 Days
How Well Do You See?
Want To See Better?
I thought I’d be chained to my glasses for the rest of my life.
I didn’t know you could improve your vision with only 15 minutes of simple eye exercises each day.
I thought my eyes would just keep getting worse, year on year, as I got older.
I didn’t know you can attain perfect eyesight, at any age, and then keep it.
It doesn’t matter which eye 'problem' you have, your eyes always retain the ability to heal themselves. YOU can see perfectly.
An excellent book for those traveling in remote areas of the world.
Information in the book will allow the non dental care person to give emergency care to those they may come in contact with in third world countries as well as themselves or companions.
This book and a small dental kit will get one through the journey and back to civilization with reduced or "cured" pain fron the dental demons.
Alan Axelrod reveals that Edison actually developed and practiced an
efficient system for innovation that can break the barriers of
creativity for anyone, anytime. In Edison on Innovation, Axelrod brings
"the wizard of Menlo Park" down to earth so than anyone can learn to
develop the mental habits conducive to generating new ideas,
technologies, and creative breakthroughs.