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	<title>Health Hope and Happiness &#187; The Future</title>
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	<description>Brian Gosur</description>
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		<title>Don&#8217;t Make Decisions Based on Circumstances &#8211; Make Them Based on Opportunity</title>
		<link>http://healthhopeandhappiness.com/2011/08/20/dont-make-decisions-based-on-circumstances-make-them-based-on-opportunity/</link>
		<comments>http://healthhopeandhappiness.com/2011/08/20/dont-make-decisions-based-on-circumstances-make-them-based-on-opportunity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Aug 2011 22:07:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>bgosur</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[90 Day Challenge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Future]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[weight loss and obesity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[circumstances]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dani Johnson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[decision]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[decisions based]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dewey Bozella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[excuses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fear]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[opportunities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plan of action]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[success]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teachable]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vision]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[This lesson has been one of the hardest things for me to learn and every time I feel I&#8217;ve mastered it, it comes back to bite me. As human beings, we like our comfort, and we like life to be easy, so we will always take the fastest and easiest route to what we want. [...]]]></description>
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<p>This lesson has been one of the hardest things for me to learn and every time I feel I&#8217;ve mastered it, it comes back to bite me.</p>
<p>As human beings, we like our comfort, and <a href="http://www.bgosur.com/business/nobody-will-change-anything-they-are-doing-until-they-are-forced-too/" target="_blank"><strong>we like life to be easy</strong></a>, so we will always take the fastest and easiest route to what we want. This is how we come to most of our decisions in life&#8230;fast and easy. If it takes to long and it&#8217;s going to take some work, we won&#8217;t be on that road, at least I won&#8217;t be.</p>
<p><a href="http://briangosur.hubpages.com/hub/Is-Your-Marriage-Fire-Proof" target="_blank"><strong>That&#8217;s why three out of four marriages in this country fail</strong></a>. 50% of small businesses that start-up will fail within the first five years, because nothing comes easy ladies and gentlemen.</p>
<p>Does this mean you don&#8217;t get married? Does this mean you don&#8217;t <a href="http://www.bgosur.com/business/live-your-dreams/" target="_blank"><strong>chase your dream</strong></a> of building a business and become financially free? Absolutely not!</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t care who you are or where you come from, or what kind of situation you are in, never let your current conditions dictate your future.</p>
<p>Dani Johnson was raised in an abusive home, where her parents lived on welfare and drugs. She had a step dad who constantly told her she was fat, ugly, stupid, and could never do anything right.</p>
<p>She was pregnant at age seventeen. Her family and church condemned her. By age twenty one she was homeless, had $2.03 to her name, desperate, scared, and confused, she had nowhere to go and no one to turn too. <a href="http://www.amazon.com/First-Steps-Wealth-Dani-Johnson/dp/0978955188/ref=sr_1_13?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1313867322&amp;sr=1-13" target="_blank"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-292" title="Dani Johnson" src="http://healthhopeandhappiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Dani-Johnson.jpg" alt="" width="113" height="173" /></a></p>
<p>Today she is a multimillionaire, running a couple of successful businesses, and speaks all around the world to organizations and companies. Read her book how her circumstances didn&#8217;t keep her from making good decisions based on her goals, visions, dreams, and opportunities.</p>
<p>Another very inspiring story of a man who was falsely accused of a crime he didn&#8217;t commit. He never gave up on his dream to be free and the truth of his innocence to be made known. Never did he let his circumstances or the conditions he had to endure, shape the way he looked at things or the dreams and the vision that he wanted to secure. Listen to his story below.<br />
<iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/9AsxLuvHepk" frameborder="0" width="450" height="300"></iframe></p>
<p>Dewey Bozella was awarded &#8220;The Arthur Ashe Award for Courage&#8221;, by ESPN for 2011, and is an inspiration to kids that are growing up in very difficult circumstances in the inner city today, and showing them that life is very valuable, and it&#8217;s not something that you just throw away because times get tough.</p>
<p>What keeps us from making these decisions based on circumstances rather than on opportunities?</p>
<p>There are a plethora of reasons and it would take so long to go into all of them, but fear is one I would like to bring out, because I think it&#8217;s one of the most common reasons we make decisions based on our circumstances and not on our opportunities.</p>
<p>Fear is one that I have always struggled with during my life. Much like Dani Johnson, I was raised in a negative home. I never felt like I could do anything right. I was always told that I was stupid and would never accomplish anything in my life.</p>
<p>I would ask myself often, &#8220;what if you fail? What if it doesn&#8217;t work? What will everyone think about you?&#8221; Fear dominated all my thoughts and actions.</p>
<p>One thing Dewey Bozella talked about in his acceptance speech at ESPN&#8217;s awards night, and something that I have learned in my own life is, <em>&#8220;never let fear determine who you are, and never let where you come from determine where you&#8217;re going.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Having no vision, no mapped out plan of action, and no real expectation to succeed, can be very detrimental to your success.</p>
<p>Do you play to lose? Do you let a fall or a trip up, keep you from getting back up and walking again? No, when you fall you get back up and start walking again.</p>
<p>The one character builder that runs through both, Dewey Bozella and Dani Johnson, and it grew from the circumstances that they both came from, and that is that they were both humbled by them.</p>
<p>They both talk about how their circumstances and conditions of their lives did not crush them down, or dictate the direction they would go, but it humbled them and they became teachable, and when you become teachable&#8230;you will learn, and you will grow, and you will become successful.</p>
<p>Are you where you want to be financially? Do you want to <a href="http://bgosur.myvi.net/loseweight/index.html" target="_blank"><strong>get back in shape and on the road to a healthy vibrant life again?</strong></a> Are you always just making excuses, or have you become teachable?</p>
<p>Sometimes the worst decision we can ever make in life, is to just stay where we are, and make no decision at all.</p>
<p>Listen to Dewey Bozella at the ESPN awards ceremony, as he accepts &#8220;The Arthur Ashe Award for Courage&#8221;. May it inspire you to take that step and follow your dreams and never let anyone or anything move you off your path. To your health.<br />
<iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/qs7lwkCTvKc" frameborder="0" width="450" height="300"></iframe></p>
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		<title>The Future</title>
		<link>http://healthhopeandhappiness.com/2009/07/14/the-future/</link>
		<comments>http://healthhopeandhappiness.com/2009/07/14/the-future/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2009 03:29:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>bgosur</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The Future]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[antibiotic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E. coli]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[epidemics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[flu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[heart]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[heart disease]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[infectious diseases]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Future In the last three decades we have seen several viral and bacterial epidemics take place at a time when we would have expected the eradication of many infectious diseases. Some people say this is due to the over-use of too-potent antibiotics, which eliminate protective infecting agents. Others believe it might be the widespread [...]]]></description>
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<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Future</span><br />
In the last three decades we have seen several viral and bacterial<br />
epidemics take place at a time when we would have expected the<br />
eradication of many infectious diseases. Some people say this is due to<br />
the over-use of too-potent antibiotics, which eliminate protective<br />
infecting agents. Others believe it might be the widespread use of<br />
vaccines. There are even conspiracy theorists who believe they may be<br />
the results of terrorist acts or leakage of viral mutants from research<br />
laboratories.<br />
Whatever the cause, globalisation and the increasing availability of<br />
long distance flights is making the global spread of infections far<br />
easier. In the 21st Century we have already identified a number of<br />
infectious organisms that can and will present a major problem to<br />
patients, physicians, health care workers and administrators the world<br />
over. These include:<br />
MRSA<br />
MDR Tuberculosis<br />
VRE Vancomycin-resistant enterococcus<br />
VRSA Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus<br />
VISA and GISA (Glycopeptide intermediate resistant<br />
Staphylococcus aureus)<br />
All these have proven to be sensitive to allicin and a sixth – PRSP<br />
Penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumonia &#8211; though not yet tested, is<br />
very likely to be.<br />
With MRSA now reported in the ‘healthy community’ (cMRSA<br />
community-acquired methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus) the<br />
writing is already on the wall. We need something that can take on the<br />
superbugs. We need to reduce our dependence on pharmaceutical<br />
antibiotics, or at least make them more effective, by reducing the<br />
extent to which they are used. By not doing that, these powerful<br />
microbes will take over. Already infectious disease is a bigger killer<br />
than heart disease or cancer. The species above cannot be treated by<br />
anything the pharmaceutical industry has to offer. Even the latest<br />
antibiotics, yet to reach the market, are unable to kill certain species of<br />
bacteria. We have seen international panic over SARS, Bird Flu,<br />
Clostridium difficile and MRSA spreading. Bad enough and quite<br />
worrying when you realise doctors routinely encounter organisms<br />
such as E. coli, Helicobacter pylori, Tuberculosis, Herpes virus,<br />
Acinetobacter, Cryptosporidium, Campylobacter, Salmonella, Cholera,<br />
Streptococcus Pyogenes flesh-eating bacteria and others that are<br />
becoming multi-drug-resistant. It is estimated the number of bacteria,<br />
virus and fungal pathogens to be found either in or around every<br />
human being is so large as to be virtually infinite. This is why still,<br />
after 70 years of producing pharmaceutical antibiotics, recent surveys<br />
indicate that 90 percent of visits to doctor’s surgeries are infectionrelated.<br />
It is also why more than one million metric tons of antibiotics<br />
have been dispersed into the biosphere in the past 50 years – half for<br />
human use and half for animal use which means that the indigenous<br />
bacteria of all living species are richly populated with resistant bacteria<br />
we cannot get rid of. Is it any wonder that public health physicians are<br />
so worried?<br />
<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Why are we losing the battle?</span><br />
Recent reports indicate that bacteria may send messages to each<br />
other about resisting antibiotic poisoning (Medicine Today, June 2002).<br />
In fact, bacterial signalling is going on all the time, all over your body,<br />
but especially in your mouth and guts. Finding ways of interfering<br />
with this signalling process is the latest objective of researchers who<br />
are waging the antibiotic arms race. Major results of these bacterial<br />
conversations are bacterial communities! Among the more<br />
extraordinary sights visible through the latest confocal laser scanning<br />
microscopes, which allows objects to be viewed almost in 3D, are what<br />
have been dubbed ‘slime cities’ – armoured defensive communities<br />
where bacteria live and reproduce, safe from antibiotics, your immune<br />
system and other predators. Known technically as biofilms, they are<br />
currently the target of intense research now it is becoming increasingly<br />
clear they are at the root of some of our most intractable conditions.<br />
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate 65<br />
percent of human bacterial infections involve biofilms. Not only are<br />
they responsible for tooth decay and gum disease but they also cause<br />
many of the problems associated with cystic fibrosis, ear infections and<br />
infections of the prostate gland and the heart. They cause an estimated<br />
$6 billion a year of expenditure in the USA by causing hard-to-treat<br />
infections around catheters, artificial heart valves and other medical<br />
implants.<br />
Similarly, irrational prescribing results in over-use of the very<br />
agents used to remove these infectious organisms. It is estimated that<br />
every year in the States, 10 million adults seek treatment for acute<br />
bronchitis and most are given antibiotics even though the pathogens<br />
involved in most cases are viruses, which antibiotics aren’t designed to<br />
work on. We tend to think of bacteria as primitive single-cell creatures,<br />
but when they are organised into a biofilm they differentiate,<br />
communicate, cooperate and deploy collective defences against<br />
antibiotics. In short, they behave like a multi-cellular organism.<br />
Bacteria from biofilms were among the first ever to be seen<br />
through a microscope when pioneer Antony van Leeuwenhoek looked<br />
at plaque – a biofilm – scraped from his own teeth in the late 1600’s.<br />
But it wasn’t until the 1970’s that scientists began to appreciate just<br />
how complex these micro slime cities are. Plaque, for instance, is<br />
founded on a base of dense opaque slime about 5 micrometres thick.<br />
Above this, vast colonies of bacteria shaped like mushrooms or cones<br />
rise to between 100 to 200 micrometres. Enclosed within their highly<br />
effective defensive wall of slime live communities of a variety of<br />
bacterial strains. One researcher described them as ‘cities’ permeated<br />
at all levels by a network of channels through which water, bacterial<br />
garbage, nutrients, enzymes, metabolites and oxygen travel to and fro.<br />
The bacteria inside a biofilm, comprising 15 percent bacterial cells and<br />
85 percent slime, are 1000 times less likely to succumb to antibiotics<br />
than bacteria in a free-floating state.<br />
The notion that bacteria can talk to each other was first proposed<br />
more than 30 years ago by scientists studying ‘glow in the dark’<br />
bacteria such as Vibro fischeri, which inhabit ‘light organs’ of certain<br />
squid and marine fish. The bacteria don’t glow as individuals<br />
swimming freely but when enough of them form a group, their<br />
illuminations are switched on. So they must have some way of letting<br />
each other know when enough of them have gathered. It wasn’t until<br />
the 1980’s that researchers identified the chemical they each put out –<br />
AHL (acyl-homoserine lactone). The more of them in one place, the<br />
higher the level of AHL released. Above a certain threshold the<br />
concentration of AHL triggers the luminescence in a mechanism<br />
usually referred to as Quorum Sensing.<br />
Gradually a better understanding of how biofilms fight off<br />
antibiotics is emerging. The bacteria benefit from pooling their effects.<br />
For instance, in a biofilm some bacteria produce an enzyme that<br />
inactivates the antiseptic hydrogen peroxide, but a single bacterium<br />
can’t make enough to save itself. Another factor is that even if an<br />
antibiotic does get through and kills off some bacterial inhabitants, a<br />
substantial number are likely to survive. This is because bacteria exist<br />
in a spectrum of physiological states from rapidly growing to dormant.<br />
Antibiotics usually target some activity such as cell division, and that<br />
means the dormant ones will usually live to fight another day. Dr<br />
Richard Novick found that Staphylococcus aureus can be divided into<br />
four types, each with slightly different signalling molecules. The<br />
molecules used by one type stimulate activity in its own group but<br />
inhibit it in the others – an example of the way bacteria compete with<br />
each other. This particular bacterium is a worry to every healthcare<br />
establishment in the western world. It has developed a number of<br />
strains resistant to all pharmaceutical antibiotics, even Vancomycin, a<br />
toxic parenteral drug usually reserved as a last resort.<br />
Bacteria are sufficiently well organised to find ways of avoiding<br />
the immune system. For instance, in Vibrio cholerae, the bacterium that<br />
causes cholera, the same genes involved in regulating quorum sensing<br />
also turn on the toxin production (Proc Nat’l Acad Sci, 5 March 2002).<br />
The value of this strategy is that a few toxic bacteria might alert the<br />
immune system and be rapidly engulfed. By waiting to turn on<br />
toxicity until there are enough of them, they have a better chance of<br />
overwhelming the host’s defences. It has been estimated that 40<br />
percent of proteins in bacterial walls differ in ‘slime city dwellers’ from<br />
those that are ‘free ranging’. The implication is that some of the<br />
proteins identified in cultures and targeted by antibiotics simply aren’t<br />
there in city dwellers. Most of the work on quorum sensing has<br />
concentrated on chemicals which allow members of the same species<br />
to talk to one another. However, while Dr Bonnie Bassler at Princeton<br />
University was working on the luminous bacteria that led to the<br />
finding of quorum sensing, she made the remarkable discovery that<br />
signals from other bacteria could also turn on their lights. It seems that<br />
bacteria have some sort of Esperanto – a common language (Nature, 31<br />
January 2002) – which involves a protein known as A1-2. Exactly what<br />
this system is used for isn’t clear yet. However, among the bacteria<br />
that infect humans, those found to produce A1-2 include Escherichia<br />
coli (food poisoning), Haemophilus influenzae (pneumonia and<br />
meningitis), Helicobacter pylori (peptic ulcers), Yersinia pestis (bubonic<br />
plague) and Staphylococcus aureus (pneumonia, meningitis and toxic<br />
shock syndrome).<br />
<span style="text-decoration: underline;">ALL of these bacteria can be killed<br />
by low concentrations of allicin</span><br />
Allicin, mother nature’s defender, is an agent that can break up a<br />
biofilm, destroy a wide range of bacterial species, wipe out fungal<br />
infections, boost an under-active immune system, reduce cholesterol<br />
and blood pressure levels, prevent viral infections, kill off parasites,<br />
remove protozoal organisms, vasodilate when necessary, prevent the<br />
release of histamine, and even prevent mosquitoes from attacking. All<br />
this from an agent that can be produced from fresh garlic!<br />
Work is currently underway, using the latest technology, to allow<br />
us to blast apart a bacterial cell and detect exactly which proteins and<br />
enzymes it can produce. Then the same species is treated with allicin<br />
liquid or powder, blasted apart again and analysed to see which<br />
proteins and enzymes have been disabled and are unable to infect.<br />
We already know that allicin is capable of penetrating bacterial cell<br />
walls and preventing the release of many enzymes that are toxic to<br />
humans. Allicin formulations are also effective against a wide<br />
spectrum of bacterial species, viral infections, fungal and protozoal<br />
disease as well as a large number of parasite problems.<br />
<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Conclusion</span><br />
In this book you have read how allicin, ‘Nature’s Antibiotic’, can<br />
kill TB, smallpox, MRSA, Streptococcus species and many more<br />
troubling micro-organisms, with the additional benefit of<br />
strengthening the immune system to prevent further attack and yet not<br />
disrupting or destroying the existing healthy bacteria. There’s a great<br />
deal going on in terms of research and clinical trials. Barely do I finish<br />
a draft of this book when I immediately have to revise it as many<br />
studies on allicin, added to a wide range of other active raw<br />
ingredients, are underway. Aside from this crucial requirement for a<br />
natural antibiotic/antifungal/antiviral, allicin therapy is nolw being<br />
evaluated for the prevention and treatment of the world’s two biggest<br />
killer diseases: cancer and coronary heart disease. In those nations<br />
where garlic consumption, both cooked and raw, is a strong part of<br />
daily life, much lower coronary death rates and significant protection<br />
from cancer are evident. Obviously, there are many other factors<br />
involved but this book, for the first time, considers the broader picture<br />
of medically approved studies and confirms what great physicians,<br />
herbalists and healers have suggested for thousands of years. Namely,<br />
that something garlic produces is good for human health. Now at long<br />
last, after 80 years of trying to release the ‘mother substance’ – the<br />
HEART of garlic – allicin is finally available in sufficient quantities to<br />
act as an effective, natural antibiotic in your body.</p>
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