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JAMA article “MultiVitamins in the Prevention of Cancer in Men”

carriesuepepper • Oct 23, 2012

This is from the Dr. Oz show.  Please watch this – it’s about 5 minutes.
 
Published online October 17, 2012, this study shares invaluable information regarding a long-term study on supplement intake and its correlation to the reduction of cancer.  The article is readily available online, or I will send to you if you are interested.  In the fight against cancer, Dr. Oz’s show: Cancer Fighting Antioxidants, the link below will give you valuable information in the assessment of your own personal antioxidant level.

Call me @ 916-342-5668 or contact me at carriesuepepper@gmail.com to schedule your own screening.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fG3eChWvx9Q
 
This particular episode, “Cancer Fighting Antioxidants,” involved the use of the Pharmanex BioPhotonic Scanner.  This is the only patented, non-invasive instrument that conducts a live tissue measurement in only 90 seconds for personal antioxidant assessment.

Carrie Pepper

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Out on my morning walk, street signs acted as memory joggers. Perhaps they were nudges so that I could remember, and be grateful for, these two women who were there for me as a kid. BRADFORD was the first sign. Grammy Bradford. I never called her anything else and I have no idea what her first name was, but I do remember she was there to tend to me when I was little while my mother went off to work at her government job "in procurement," which she hated. I know nothing, really, of what she did there, but I do remember the room. It seemed there were hundreds of desks in this huge room, no partitions. Dark grey desks and heavy black telephones. I visited her there a few times and she'd give me tablets and pens to keep me busy. I was ALWAYS thrilled to have a tablet and a pen! What she did there is a mystery to me, but when she and my father would argue, which was often, she'd always say, "I want my own money," and so off she went to work every morning at the Defense General Supply Center. He told her she didn't need to work, that he could support her, but, again, she wanted her own money. Back to Mrs. Bradford, Grammy. She was a bit on the heavy side (which I thought made for the best, most cuddly hugs) with long grey hair that she wore up with tons of bobby pins. She always wore a floral bib apron with large pockets and she'd fill them with pears when we'd go to that special corner of our back yard. Oh the smell! Those yellow pears and the carpet of yellow leaves. Memories of Grammy Bradford brought back memories of Thelma Massenburg. She looked exactly like Aunt Jemima (OH FOR HEAVEN'S SAKES, we can't say Aunt Jemima anymore!) Recently a friend told me he'd made pancakes and I asked what kind of syrup he used. When he said, "Pearl Milling," I thought it sounded kinda cool, but when I looked it up I found out it was the new name for Aunt Jemima syrup. SERIOUSLY? Anyway, she was wonderful. She cleaned our house, scrubbed the floors and walls and worked harder than anyone I'd ever seen. I loved her. She always wore a bandana tied around her head. She lived in a tiny reddish tar papered house with ten children. Who knows where they all slept! She was diabetic and I was a little stinker and liked to tease her with Hershey Bars. I'd wave one in front of her nose and she'd smile and say," "You bad, chile." The last time I saw her she was in the hospital and her eyes were very, very yellow. Liver disease. The scarf that was always wrapped around her head was gone and I am sure that I could hear her say, "You bad, chile," although she probably didn't. Thank you my sweet Thelma. My Aunt Jemima.
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