Posts tagged Passion

Bariatric Advantage Chewable Iron Passion Fruit 90 Ct

0

  • Iron 29 mg;Vitamin C 60 mg; Fructoligiosaccharides 10 mg

Our Chewable Iron was designed to meet the iron replacement needs of patients who have undergone bariatric surgery. Our iron is in a form that is both easy to take and tastes great. We suggest that iron supplements be taken at least two hours away from calcium supplements and dairy products. Some features and benefits of this product include:

Ferronyl® carbonyl iron. Ferronyl® carbonyl iron powder is elemental iron (Fe) with > 98% iron content. A key physical property of Ferronyl is its small particle size, which is considerably smaller than other forms of elemental iron. As a result, Ferronyl has higher human bioavailability than these other forms.
Ferrous Fumarate (Passion Fruit only). Ferrous fumarate is a well-tolerated and well-absorbed form of iron. The ferrous forms of iron are known to be among the best-absorbed of the salts.

Vitamin C. Vitamin C is known to enhance iron absorption. Vitamin C benefits the absorption of iron by reducing ferric iron (Fe3+) to ferrous iron (Fe2+) and forming an iron-ascorbic acid complex.
Short-Chain Fructoligosaccharides. Fructoligosaccharides (FOS) have been studied for their ability to improve the uptake of select minerals (including iron, calcium and magnesium) from the colon. In animal models, use of FOS with iron has been shown to increase ferritin levels and aid in the recovery from anemia. In one study in rats who had been subjected to total gastrectomy, the combination of FOS with iron was successful in preventing the development of anemia. This strategy makes sense for individuals who have undergone weight loss surgery where there is both partial gastrectomy and short bowel to aid in the optimization of iron uptake and support the maintenance of body stores.

Great Taste. When it comes to our iron, tasting is believing. Our great taste helps patients comply with your recommendation.

Price: $ 24.95

Mayfield Village man uses personal tragedy to channel artistic passion

0

Mayfield Village man uses personal tragedy to channel artistic passion
As most artists do, 42-year-old Marc Ranallo uses a slow and steady hand to paint with. But unlike most artists, Mark doesn’t have a choice. As a child he was struck by a vehicle while walking home one night and left with a traumatic brain injury.

Read more on The Sun Messenger

Spa sprang from a passion for healthy medicine

0

Spa sprang from a passion for healthy medicine
Amanda Gorecki is a nurse practitioner with a background in surgery and critical care —”sick medicine,” she calls it.

Read more on The Wichita Eagle

A Successful Life. . . Living Your Passion!

0

A Successful life begins with living your passion. So what is your your personal passion in life? What do you do and think about the most?
We all begin thinking about what we are going to be when we grow up at a very early age. We may think we want to be a doctor, lawyer, journalist or other professional. Others may think they want to be a police officer, fireman or some type of public servant. As we grow and learn more about ourselves and life, those career ideas change and grow. In fact, many people will enter college with a definite plan of action to get their degree in a specific area only to find in their final year of school that their interests and career desires have changed tremendously.
New relationships and experiences can lead to new passions in life. As we experience new relationships, hobbies and events in our lives, we develop interests and, ultimately, we become passionate about some of them. It is these passions that create the drive and purpose for our life.
As human beings, we are always maturing and evolving.
What may have been a passion in our twenties may very well change in our forties or fifties or beyond. We may find that the career we chose in college no longer
satisfies our needs, once our basic financial needs have been met. We may no longer be fulfilled by our job or career.
While as a younger person our passion was making enough money to pay the bills and take care of our growing families, our passion in our fifties may become a desire to help others or to explore our creative side as an artist or entrepreneur.
As we have developed personal skills, we may find that we are gifted in public speaking; what could be better than talking about your passion and making money at the same time? Or maybe a tragedy or life-changing illness has inspired us to help others with a similar plight. It is from these signficant life-changing events that ordinary people begin to do extraordinary things.
Nancy Brinker is a good example of this. Nancy promised her dying sister, Susan G. Komen, that she would do everything in her power to end breast cancer forever.
In 1982, Nancy’s simple promise became a burning passion and soon the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation began and launched a world-wide breast cancer movement. Twenty-five years later, Komen for the Cure is the largest network in the world of breast cancer survivors and activists fighting to save lives. Nearly $1 billion has been raised and invested to help breast cancer patients and fund research to find a cure because of one person taking a tragedy and turning into their life’s passion.
Unfortunately, many people fail to live a life filled with passion. Fearful of rejection or of success keeps many people from pursuing their dreams; many people simply do not have enough faith in themselves to reach for the stars.
True success and happiness comes through living a purposeful, passionate life driven by your desire for personal achievement. Not the desires of your employer, parents or spouse, but by your own interests, hobbies and desires. If we follow our true interests and not focus on the money, we will find complete fulfillment.
Dave Ramsey, the Christian financial advisor heard on radio and television stations across the country, recently said that the first step to financial freedom is finding contentment in your life. When we quit chasing that new car, new home or other luxury in life and begin to enjoy the things we already have, then we will find true happiness.
What makes you happy? Do you have a hobby that you just can not get enough of? What motivates you? Your new successful life can begin now. Take the step of writing down any way that you could make money at doing your favorite thing and try it in your spare time. You might find a new career doing exactly what you are passionate about!

Deborah Schaefer, publisher of http://www. SuccessOrate. com,
the Center for Extraordinary
Achievers, is a WAHM who is lving her passion by
helping people improve their lives through her informative,
inspirational and motivational writing.

Manchester Township artist shares her passion for henna

0

Manchester Township artist shares her passion for henna
Growing up in northern India, Manju Gupta looked forward to her aunt decorating her hands and palms with henna.

Read more on York Daily Record

Go to Top