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Yeah, I'm an M.D. and have been trained to treat my patients with chemicals (Allopathic Medicine), but I have been trying to expand my knowledge base about the practice of medicine and luckly stumbled on Dr. Murray's Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine.
I will integrate what I have and will learn about Natural Medicine in my everyday practice (and my own life!). I feel that, with certain exceptions, Natural Medicine should be tried first. Only when that fails or is inappropriate should Allopathic Medicine be used.
There is a growing trend for M.D.'s to use Natural Medicine in their practice. ...
The writing is comprehensive yet precise, including evidence of the therapeutic effect of a given supplement, it's method of action (pharmacology), and even caveats about any weaknesses in supporting studies, including whether evidence comes from statistically meaningful double-blind controlled studies or from clinical or cultural experiences.
If you are the type of person to take supplements, exercise, or eat healthy and natural foods out of a desire to protect your health, I highly recommend you BUY AND READ THIS BOOK! And if, on the other hand, you don't do any of the above, and you have a medical condition or take any presription or over-the-counter medication, or just generally feel yucky, I would definitely urge you to BUY AND READ THIS BOOK!
And Finally, if you are currently in the medical field, or typically prescribe or endorse only synthetic drugs manufactured by American Pharmaceutical companies licensed by the FDA, please BUY AND READ THIS BOOK!
Then again, I'm probably biased; after acting on the information in this book, I feel better than I have in a long time. And as any scientist will tell you, such results are not statistically significant ; )
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This book is a must read for anyone who has doubted that there is peace in death. He reconfirms that the lessons most important in life are to continue to give of yourself every day despite the adversities you face. In his illness, through his false accusation and his wonderful rediscovery of a deeper faith in Christ it makes accepting God's plan for you important.
Anyone who has an ill parent or someone close to them should read this book it will give you a much clearer spiritual understanding of illness, death and living every moment under God's plan.
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There were numerous British words I didn't know what they referred to, but I found I was able to just skip over them & keep reading without losing the essence of the plot or the sense of timing/tension/drama that kept bringing me back to read more.
The story's written with intelligence, as the doctor ponders various ways to deal with the bureaucracy he faces. He deals with incompetent doctors, old doctors that have no desire to learn new treatments, young doctors more concerned with money and prestige than patient care.
And, as he gets absorbed into the system, the doctor begins to be lured in by the money. He starts to prescribe the 'easy' solution to patients, even if it's not the right answer, so that they're happy and he gets more cash. He does finally realize, in the end, that working for the patients is more important than gaining lots of cash, but only after some hard lessons.
I have a few small complaints with the story. One is that the wife could have been a really interesting character, but she's a little flat. She is sad when he becomes money-hungry, and draws back, but that's it. She was a schoolteacher when he met her, and it's made clear that she's very intelligent. But still she just sort of goes along with him, making his meals, wishing things could be better, but far be it for her to actually help out. She tries to get his friends to see him one night to bring back his old ways, but when that fails, "ah well".
My other complaint is that he slides far too easy from a passionate patient-first attitude into a "cash is nice" mentality. But that was necessary for the plot to progress.
Definitely a great book to read to learn about life in the 20s to 40s, from the small towns of Wales to the busy streets of London. Interesting details about the damage that mines caused to the lungs of the mineworkers, and the ways that doctors worked with each other and treated their patients. A great read!
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I found this to be one of those books "you just can't put down". It's seemingly retrousse' chapters are full of twists, turns, and zestful characters, including the author himself. And the anecdotes are easily believable. It is adventurous and intuitive in likeness to James Redfields' Celestine series, yet with a more personal and pointed message. Both educational and entertaining, its' many punch lines may be as disturbing as they are enlightening.
Jenkins has done his homework, literally. Providing not only sound research, there is evidence that he gives credence and practice toward what he writes. He leaves the reader with a feeling of here and now, and compels self-examination. Fortunately, as with all of Jenkins' publications, he provides a wealth of follow-up ideas and information; very tasteful and helpful pointers as to "where to go from here".
Easily "Two thumbs up!"
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Because the writer takes us through time as well as through physical space, he is in a process of growth throughout his work. And because the writing is so vivid, sophisticated yet down-to-earth, we grow with him. Interestingly, he never really leaves home. As much as Mr. Joseph's yearning drive sends him across the United States and then across the world, he always returns, sometimes reluctant emotionally - to an unchanged Queens - where the unchanged view is fixed painfully in Richard Joseph's past. An ongoing connection between the larger picture and the smaller, between the mountain top and the valley - in which the valley's inhabitants cannot see - can never see - the view from the top of the mountain. Yet there is a constancy and an underlying love for family which holds Mr. Joseph in place; while finding his way through a whirling vortex of events and psychological change, is fundamental and draws him back to his roots, perhaps against even his own wishes.
We are a 'guy from Queens' when we first venture out from a movie like cityscape description of that setting. We see the hands of the crowd clawing at the window, trying to reach us with malice, when we are sick and feverish on the train in India. We feel the snake on our boot and the terror. We should all read this book. It is for everyone. Hopefully it is only his first book. You will be spellbound - as I was.
Casually written in the author's own voice, this sojourn goes to many surprising places, and the writing style, difficult for me to follow at times, faithfully mirrors the confusion, dislocation, and transportation out of which this clever book was written.
We need more books that not only tell us, but show us, that personally lived versions of the Hero's Journey are needed to get to the truths that really work for us.
I can't review a book without commenting on the medium: shame, shame on the publishers and editors! The pages are cheap, thin, paper; the text runs all over the page; and the text has a number of typos and spelling errors that it's the house's job (not the author's) to correct. Do it right or don't do it at all.
The author calls for informal groups to discuss the problems of our nation and its place in the world. Amen! (...)
If you're young in spirit, this might be a good book for you to read.
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It is done from the western view with God as angry, spiteful and jealous.
Much of what is explained is very true but is done in a very Impersonal and abrasive manner which is why I give it only 4 stars for the delivery. Who'd want to serve a God who is so evil unless we're into S & M.
I'm just explaining the book and how it comes across. Please don't blame me or get angry with me. Read for yourself. When God says he'll take care of you, that's a con job. You won't be spared suffering. Someone may still kill you or a loved one which is God acting the role of the killer. You'll be killed and torn from your loved ones but you'll wake up on the other side realizing that it was all just a dream, many times a nightmare. You'll keep going through all these lives and experiences until you realize it was God all along playing with you. But this is the funky part. You are GOD. You are all there is. You're talking to yourself. It's like some big kid playing with his toy soldiers. Let's see, "I'll light this one on fire and drop this one of a cliff or run over it with my bike".
See what I mean? I got this from this book. Don't blame me. Blame the God of this book. If we can all get together we can overthrow this tyrannical God. (But I thought we're God?) Paradox...
Elvis Presley read this book a lot. The book says "The Divine Touch is needed. This can only be provided by someone who has sounded the depths and reached the heights of human experience". Isn't that Elvis? He was as successful in this world as you can be in so many ways yet had a horrific life in the end.
But through it all, I felt the love in him. He sang three songs near the end of his career which caused me to sob uncontrollably. They were: Danny Boy, The Last Farewell and My Way (1977 live version). He had spiritual depth despite his dysfunction and God still used him to arouse us to higher ideals while simultaneously destroying his body. The book says, "that man only thinks he thinks but until he realizes God as the one and only thinker he merely takes whatever thoughts that come up, puts a personal construct on them and attracts to himself all his woes." The book also mentions that this statement seems contradictory but what the book is saying is that we all think we are thinking but we are being lived by another being. God who thinks through us, yes even the evil people, people we love, people we hate. You can think to yourself, "This review is stupid", and that is God thinking through you but you think it's you thinking that thought. This God-being apparently likes conflict. It makes people fight and disagree, he creates anger and dissension amongst people all the while blaming us, making us forever guilty in our own minds, the poor beings who are merely hand puppets in the hands of God while he makes us do everything we do and makes us think everything we think. The only way out is to realize it's a game played by an adolescent God full of testoserone. (This is not a license to do evil since it's all God anyway because evil causes pain to us as well). Then in the play God says, "to avoid suffering do good". These scriptures show the way. Some people he awakens to his presence by thinking through them such thoughts others he makes rebel against this authority and doing good. These beings he makes kill or persecute the believers. At other times he'll make the believers persecute the non believers, all for God's play and enjoyment while we suffer it. He sits there laughing completely unaffected watching the movie of life from his comfortable seat in our heart while we experience the good times but often great suffering too.
God created us to experience good and evil. He experiences these things through us like a spectator at a movie but we the actors experience the pain, point blank. Do you still think you love God? As man might make a robot to experience things and go places man would rather not go because of the danger, God made us to enjoy or suffer good and evil while he sits back and watches completely unaffected. We are just characters in a one actor play.
There is some heavy stuff in this book. This trickster-God is letting you in on some secrets of this world through this book. Like a character in a video game you are being allowed some insight into your situation. The only way to fight back is to BRAVELY read on.
I highly recommend this book. Be brave, ignore the vicious attacks of the insecure God of this book on your personality. There is stuff in this book that I've never read anywhere else. Worth the read.
Supplement this book, put a human face on Impersonal teachings. I highly recommend books by Ramana Maharshi, Nisargadatta Maharaj-"I Am That", some Swami Vivekananda perhaps and Adi Da Samraj. These beings speak from the same impersonal plane but are easier pills to swallow.
These beings also explain how to arrive at the impersonal state. This book doesn't explain much about meditation which is needed to be impersonal.
Truly the way out of human pain and suffering and into joy and kindness.
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Stalin was a creature of bureaucracy, the ultimate insider, someone who knew how to use the organization bonding the Communist Party together for his own rise to prominence and power, an increasingly clever, adroit, and masterful practitioner of power politics. He was nothing if not careful, cautious, deliberate, and shrewd. Hitler, on the other hand, was a gambler, a masterful politician, a bold, easily bored, and endlessly distracted dreamer whose natural ability to charm, captivate, and enchant helped him to rise by extraordinary means. In many ways, these men came to prominence in quite different ways; Stalin, by mastering the art of bureaucratic manipulation and quietly assuming key roles within the organization that gave him friendships, alliances, and information that he used masterfully to rise through the ranks of the faithful, and Hitler, the manic-depressive natural leader whose charismatic popular appeal and desperate, authoritarian, and often violent measures were used to gain political power through extraordinary means.
Yet Bullock shows how similar both men were in terms of the way they used their power once established to execute their national responsibilities, and in the way they ruthlessly pursued their goals without mercy, remorse or any concern for others who suffered for their sake. Both used extralegal means to maintain position, both cruelly purged potential rivals through purges or political overthrows. Both bordered on being psychotic; Hitler coming close to being declared certifiably insane, and Stalin by having all the symptoms of classic paranoia. Certainly both had personal histories that can most kindly be described as bizarre in terms of the ways in which they treated those close to them as well as the populace in general. Both also seemed convinced of their own central and unique role in terms of their country's destiny, and indeed each identified his own importance in terms of succeeding in accomplishing that historical mission. Also, both were guilty of massive crimes against humanity, both against the opposing forces they captured and their own subjects. Hitler persecuted German citizens who were Jewish, Gypsies, or otherwise "undesirables", while Stalin persecuted Ukrainians in general and peasant farmers in particular, not to mention the systematic purges of thousands of Army, Navy, and Air Force officers he or his cronies suspected of potential disloyalty.
This is a wonderful book in terms of its insights, unusual research sources, and provocative speculations regarding each of these two quite unique historical figures. The narrative carries itself in an entertaining, edifying, and comprehensible fashion, and his use of photographs and maps serves the text well. All in all, I would have to describe this book as a must-read for anyone seriously interested in how the personalities and characteristics of these two key leaders in 20th century history figured into the unholy calculus of madness and mayhem, otherwise referred to as World War Two. I highly recommend it. Enjoy!
This book is a collection of four books, including the classic Joe Gould's Secret (the last piece he ever wrote). He shows us what writing is meant to be: lyrical, poetic, filled with detail and observation, full of life about life full of meaning.
The Rivermen, which details the life and times of Edgewater, New Jersey, is my favorite piece. It dodges and meanders, building a backdrop and developing some characters, and then WHAM, the meaning of life. I remember my wife asking me what the piece had been about, and I think my only clear response was: everything.
He has style, and he also has meaning. His prose drives the reader toward his final sentence, and like Joyce he manages to leave the reader awed at his conclusions. And wiser.
Of course, the most astonishing aspect of all is that it was all true. I suppose that shows how much meaning we miss in the living of life.