Your time here is very appreciated. The video that accompanies this blog post is a two part strategy breaking down how you can inexpensively and easily begin protecting yourself from the long-lived radio isotopes, which have now become a regular part of our habitat. This began 65 years ago, and has become particularly disconcerting in the last few months since the damage to the Japanese facility at Fukushima.
The reason I share these videos and information is to demonstrate that the issues with radiation did not begin Fukushima, or even with Chernobyl, but with the “silent” nuclear war that has already happened on Earth.
So what do we do? This video is about the strategies that I have been employing since the Japan disaster earlier this year. Knowing what I know now, I wish I had started the day I came into this world. Regardless, taking actions like these has put me at considerable ease about the radio-isotopes in our environment. This allows me to operate without fear, but remain in a dominant emotion of confidence.
Hello Friends,
Join me in Western Massachusetts’s celebrated Kripalu Center May 20th – 22nd for our Invincible Health workshop, a weekend of inspiration, invigoration, and community building with other’s who share your passions, your insights, and your lifestyle.
What an opportunity it is for me to spend three days with you amidst Kripalu’s gorgeous spring settings, with [...]
Adaptation: the process by which an organism becomes better suited to its environment.
And now its more important than ever!
I believe we are standing on the edge of a truly profound event horizon, one that holds within its grasp the seed of the greatest human evolutionary renaissance since our species first emerged into the world [...]
Ok, so of course Maine hasn’t got any coconuts, but we do have something that tastes just as good – maybe better – and is just as nutritious.
Its the sap of the Maple tree.
There are not many wild foods that taste particularly sweet here in New England, but Maple Syrup is certainly the exception. [...]
Tampa Bay was the site of another example of an urban forage, and this time with an exotic invasive that produces more food than I could ever hope to harvest.
Branches bowed under the weight of pinkish-red berries as I sped across the highway on a recent trip to Southern Florida last December. [...]