Excerpt from “The Business of the 21st Century”

An Economic Foundation for Peace

I flew helicopter missions over the jungles of Vietnam, and I know from firsthand experience what war is like. I also know that inequity is one of the core causes of war. As long as the gap between the rich and the poor widens, it is going to be tough to create conditions of peace. We can march for peace, give speeches endorsing peace, form committees to study peace, and promote peace, but it’s going to be impossible to actually create that peace we talk about unless and until we can begin to bring substantially more economic opportunity to many millions of people.

And as huge a goal as that sounds, that is exactly what network marketing is doing.

Today, many network marketing companies are spreading peace through economic opportunity all over the world. Not only are network marketing companies thriving in all the major capitals of the world, but many are also working in developing nations, bringing financial hope to millions of people who live in impoverished countries. Most traditional corporations can only survive where people are rich and have money to spend.

It is time that people all over the world had an equal opportunity to enjoy a rich and abundant life, rather than spend their lives working hard only to make the rich richer.

It’s time you had that opportunity.

Welcome to the 21st century.

excerpted as the final thoughts from “The Business of the 21st Century”

by Robert Kiyosaki

Core Integrative Health Technologies for Wellness

Glyconutrients – the eight essential biological sugars (saccharides) you need for immune support, cellular communication, proper organ function, proper glad function…

Part1

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Part2

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Plant predigested multivitamin, mineral, phytonutrient supplement. First of it’s kind!  Offers powerful antioxidant protection, supports the production of energy with a full complement of B vitamins, provides immune system support, healthy heart and healthy eyesight, too!

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Antioxidant cell protection formula with immune support.  Help protect against cellular damage caused by oxidative stress (free radical) in the body.  Formulated with powerful antioxidants to help protect cells against the harmful effects of toxin, environmental stress, poor diet and daily physical and oxidative stress – all of which can damage DNA, cells, and tissues, and lead to premature cellular aging.

Endocrine system supportt – unique blend of standardized nutrients that provides a full array of hormones that can provide balance to your cells and organs.

Ultra Pure Omega-3 provides the essential fatty acids your body needs to maintain good health, especially brain and heart health.  Provides support for healthy triglyceride levels already within normal levels.  Proprietary, two-step molecular distillation process results in a pharmaceutical grade standard of purity that’s among the highest in the industry.

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Cracking the Stem Cell Code

Stem cells have received a lot of media attention in the last few years. What we know is that every human being has them, in varying amounts, depending on several factors. I think the important question is, “How do we increase our bodies’ production of these cells when we need them?

Tuesday, April 27th

US Time: 6pm PT, 7pm MT, 8pm CT, 9pm ET

For Information on How to Participate, Click Here

Here’s what to expect from tonight’s webinar:

“In this presentation, we will describe stem cells and explain the differences between embryonic stem cells and adult stem cells, thus giving viewers a more accurate understanding of the information shown in mainstream media pertaining to stem cells.

The core of the presentation will focus on the natural roles of adult stem cells in the body and what we can do to support those roles. Finally, we will describe the discovery and development of the first stem cell enhancer and the implications of this discovery to health and wellness.”

~ Christian Drapeau, Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer,

STEMTech HealthSciences


About Christian Drapeau:

Mr. Drapeau is an author (Cracking The Stem Cell Code), research scientist and neurophysiologist with over thirteen years of research experience in the fields of natural foods and nutrition. While pursuing scientific research in collaboration with various universities and research centers on the health benefits of certain botanical raw materials, he has lectured on nutrition to thousands of people since 1994, presenting profound health information and insights with clarity and humor.

Mr. Drapeau has been the Director of Research and Development at Cell Tech International and then Desert Lake Technologies, before co-founding STEMTech HealthSciences and becoming its Chief Science Officer.  Based on research he produced and information he researched produced by numerous scientific teams, Mr. Drapeau and his collaborators proposed in 2001 a breakthrough theory on adult stem cell physiology. He is the co-inventor of the revolutionary product StemEnhance and author of the Stem Cell Theory of Renewal, detailed in his new book Cracking the Stem Cell Code.

Healthcare Reform or Packaging?

Did you know that there are some companies that have been experimenting–successfully–with a healthcare model that is working?  Take Safeway, for example.  Rather than simply provide blanket coverage for everyone without consideration of their lifestyle choices, they have promoted Wellness.  See the Article we included from the Wall Street Journal written by none other than the CEO of Safeway himself.  What he shows is that the solution is really quite simple.  But its not easy!  Its not easy because it requires each individual to take responsibility for their own actions and choices when it comes to their health.

Read on, though and tell us what you think!

CLICK HERE FOR ARTICLE

Here’s to healthy choices!

You can do anything!

HAVE YOU SEEN THIS?  It’s a short video clip that really inspired me.  It came at the end of a very motivating presentation given by entrepreneur, Cameron Herold.

You know how sometimes–more often than not–we get so busy making a living or ‘existing’ that we fail to even enjoy life?  Well, this clip inspired me to keep hope alive.  And more than that, it motivated me to take action towards the dream that is still alive in my heart.

This isn’t a video clip pitching anybody’s ‘stuff’ or ‘system’ to get ahead.  Its simply a clip that inspired me to become like a little child again-to dream, to live life with enthusiasm and courage.
Hopefully it will inspire you too:)

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This is what we do: give life to your dreams.  So, what are your dreams? We want to hear from you!  Please leave your comments here:

Living Life Intentionally

I met John at a weekend training event in Hutchinson Island, Florida and was inspired by his wisdom and how he is so great at communicating massive life-transforming ideas through small experiential games and stories!  Klemmer events are something you have to experience to really understand what they do!  They change lives! Enjoy! ~Suji

Living Life Intentionally

Have you ever had a dream or goal that was so huge that it seemed to consume your every waking hour?  One that was the first thing you thought of in the morning and the last thing you thought of or even prayed about at night.  That something that burned deep within you with an intensity that was like nothing else?

If you have never experienced such feelings then maybe you have stopped dreaming.  People just like you live life based on circumstance rather than choice and commitment.  Life unfolds and they live with the hand they are dealt.

Big Dreams And Goals

What if you decided, in this moment, what your life would look like and actually took the action to create that life?  Some of you, right now, are thinking, “I wish I could do that but too many people make decisions that impact my life.”  “I have no control over what they want.”  And you are right.  But you do have control over what you want, your dreams, and your goals.

Eight years ago when I first attended a Klemmer & Associates Personal Mastery seminar, I experienced such a life altering weekend that I wanted every person on the planet to have this same opportunity.  For me, it was as though I had been awakened after a lifetime of walking dead.  You too may know the feeling of sucking up oxygen and taking up space.

I had worked in a career for 30-years and really didn’t have much to show for all that time.  But now, I was feeling fully alive and I wanted to get the word out.  My wife and I began to pray for family and close friends who we intended to receive this gift of life.

Notice I said “intended.”  Brian Klemmer says in his book, If How-To’s Were Enough We Would All Be Skinny, Rich & Happy, that “Intention is not merely will power but a deep state of knowingness that comes from a deeper level.  It is a deep clarity with intensity.  It is focus, certainty and commitment.”  And boy did I have that after Personal Mastery.

Our children, grandchildren and extended family were the first ones we held an intention around attending a Personal Mastery.  Even when they said there was no way they’d ever attend such a seminar, we didn’t back off our intention.  By becoming so clear about what we wanted to create we noticed that how we showed up changed.  My Beingness shifted.  I became more open, trusting, compassionate and vulnerable in my relationships.  And it was noticed by others, so much so that in 2005 I became a team member of Klemmer & Associates’ Advanced Leadership Seminar.

Stephen Covey says, “Anytime you think the problem is out there, that is the problem.”  For me that means, one cannot solve issues in relationships until one’s own Beingness shifts.  I shifted and created myself into a completely different person.

One who is accepting of others; one who loves humanity because it is God’s creation; one who trusts easily; one with compassion for mankind; and one who is vulnerable in relationships.  And in so many other ways there is not room here to describe them.  The short of this is by BEING different, I DO different and I HAVE exactly what I want.

Over the years fifteen of my family and extended family (and countless friends and strangers that we have invited) have attended one or more of the Klemmer & Associates seminars.  And this month one more, my son, will attend and all because we declared an intention and maintained focus, clarity and commitment.  My wife, Linda and I are creating the life we desire out of choice and commitment.

You too can live life intentionally.  Join us at a Personal Mastery Seminar at locations across the globe or check out Klemmer & Associates Champions Online Webinar by enrolling at www.klemmer.com.

John Edwards

Advanced Leadership Facilitator

The Skinny on Fats

Our Essential Source Omega can give you what you need to ensure you are getting adequate amounts of the ‘right’ fats.  Ask us how and a free consultation on your current diet!

What the Latest Research Says About What You Should Be Eating from US News and World Report

http://www.usnews.com/health/diet-fitness/diet/articles/2010/04/01/the-skinny-on-fats-what-the-latest-research-says-about-what-you-should-be-eating.html?PageNr=2

There are plenty of confusing topics in nutrition, but fats may take the cake. Are saturated fats like butter and animal fat terribly harmful? Should you worry about whether you’re eating too much of one kind of polyunsaturated fat and not enough of another? What about olive oil? And shouldn’t we be eating as little fat as possible, since so many of us are, well, fat? The distinctions are “enormously confusing unless you’re a lipid biologist,” says Marion Nestle, a professor of nutrition at New York University. There’s a way to translate it all into relatively simple eating advice–more on that later. But first, here’s the skinny on fat.

First, toss out the notion that the lower the fat content in your diet, the better. A certain amount of fat is essential to your body’s functioning. And as you’ve probably heard, all fats are not alike in their effects on blood cholesterol levels, which can affect heart disease risk. Saturated fat, for example, generally increases levels of LDL, or “bad” cholesterol. But while this information was known when the surgeon general issued the first report on nutrition and health in 1988 and the National Academy of Sciences issued its own report in 1989, public health authorities felt that a message to reduce total fat would be best understood by the public. The thought was, says Nestle (who was managing editor of the 1988 report), that since saturated fats from meat and dairy products were the main sources of fat in the American diet, lowering total fat would automatically reduce consumption of saturated fat. That’s certainly true, in theory.

But here’s the rub in practice: “If you take out saturated fat, and you assume someone is in energy balance [i.e. their total calories haven't changed], what do you put in?” says Alice Lichtenstein, a nutritional biochemist and director of the cardiovascular nutrition laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University in Boston. As it turns out, what you substitute for saturated fat seems to be important. “People reduced fat and replaced that fat with simple carbohydrates and refined sugar,” says Mimi Guarneri, cardiologist and medical director of the Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine in La Jolla, Calif.

That switch was aided by food companies, with their lines of “low-fat,” yet sugar-filled products. A review published online in January in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition said that research actually shows that subbing in a higher carbohydrate intake, especially refined carbs like white bread and sugary cereals, can actually “exacerbate” blood cholesterol problems, including elevated triglycerides and reduced HDL (“good”) cholesterol levels. To improve cholesterol, people should focus on limiting those refined carbs and reducing excess body weight, the review said. So much for unlimited SnackWells.

By contrast, trading saturated fats for polyunsaturated fats–the omega-3 fatty acids found in certain fish and the omega-6 fatty acids in vegetable oils such as safflower and soybean oils–does seem to offer a heart benefit. An analysis of existing research published in March in PLoS Medicine found that consuming those polyunsaturated fats instead of saturated fats reduces the incidence of heart attacks and cardiac death. Based on the evidence, “polyunsaturated fats are the best…fat to be increasing in the diet,” says Dariush Mozaffarian, an author of the study and an assistant professor at the Harvard School of Medicine and co-director of the program in cardiovascular epidemiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

Ronald Krauss, senior scientist and director of atherosclerosis research at Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute, and an author of the ACJN review, agrees. In fact, he says, it’s unclear whether the benefits to cardiac health spring from removing the sat fat or adding the poly. But isn’t saturated fat a “bad” fat? Possibly, but his research, including a meta-analysis also published in the ACJN, found that despite its effects on LDL cholesterol, there’s no evidence dietary saturated fat alone is tied to the risk of coronary heart disease or cardiovascular disease. He also says that even in trials where saturated fats were swapped out in favor of polyunsaturated fats, there was not much benefit in reducing saturated fats below about 9 percent of calories. It may be that saturated fats aren’t as evil as has been thought, but simply allow atherosclerosis to happen without conferring any protection; they raise both LDL and HDL cholesterols, leaving the ratio of the two little changed. By contrast, polyunsaturated fats “move the numbers in the right direction,” says Krauss.

But polyunsaturated fats aren’t free of controversy: namely, whether people should be worried about a too-high ratio of omega-6 fatty acids to omega-3 fatty acids in the diet. Omega-3 fatty acids, found in albacore tuna, sardines, walnuts, and tofu, are linked to improvement in some measures of heart-disease risk; omega-6 fatty acids, found in eggs, certain fish, and safflower and soybean oils, may cause inflammation. At one point the ratio of omega-6s to omega-3s in the American diet was about 2:1; now experts say it might be as high as 40:1 or even 50:1. But there’s no good evidence that they can actually cause clinical harm in humans, says Lichtenstein, who suggests people not fixate on the ratio.

What about olive oil, sesame oil, canola oil, and other oils high in monounsaturated fats? While they’re a good replacement for saturated fats, they don’t seem to have the same level of benefits as do polyunsaturated fats, says Mozaffarian. Most of the evidence of benefit has come from observations about the so-called Mediterranean Diet, but the health-conferring element in that eating pattern hasn’t really been nailed down, he says. And if olive oil itself is beneficial, it may not be the monounsaturated fat it contains, but the phytochemicals, But again, Lichtenstein urges people not to get too hung up on that point. Instead, focus on unsaturated fats, period. If you want to cook some things with soybean oil, stir-fry veggies with sesame oil, and make salad dressing with olive oil, that’s fine.

And that brings us to the easy guideline for consuming fat in the most healthful way possible: Think about foods, rather than chemistry, when you head to the supermarket. The fats in food are all mixtures, and you’ll drive yourself crazy attempting to figure out exact proportions, notes Nestle. Besides, fussing over components ignores the way people actually eat. “I’ve never known anyone to sit down to a tub of saturated fat,” says John La Puma, an internist and author of ChefMD’s Big Book of Culinary Medicine: A Food Lover’s Road Map to Losing Weight, Preventing Disease, and Getting Really Healthy. “People eat food, not saturated fat or trans fat or starch or sugar.”

Lichtenstein agrees, saying we should focus on the pattern of eating, not any single dietary component. And research is fairly consistent on what constitutes a healthful eating pattern: a varied diet that’s heavy on the fruits and vegetables, emphasizes whole grains rather than processed ones, focuses on fish and a limited amount of lean meats and lowfat dairy, and includes liquid oils for food preparation. Following that sort of pattern will naturally lead you to “good” sources of fat, and will reduce levels of the not-so-good–including most trans fats, which are still considered the worst of the bunch. (Hydrogenated oils “have nothing but adverse effects,” says Krauss.)

And of course, remember that the quantity, not just the quality, of your food is important, says Nestle. Rather than having his patients count calories, La Puma recommends foods that will make them feel satisfied, gives them smaller plates, advises against skipping breakfast if it makes them ravenous later on, and suggests they try to sit down when they eat. “It reinforces the feeling of eating as something deliberate rather than just grazing,” he says. But even healthy eaters should focus on portion control. “If you eat a lot of nuts, avocados, or olive oil, you’ll get fat,” says Guarneri. And once it’s around your middle, it’s definitely no longer “good” fat.

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