Hi, Linda,
I wasn't trying to be funny - I was giving a serious opinion on something that you, obviously, seriously promote.
Synchronistically is certainly a word as is mystically - and I hope both were used in their correct sense.
Losing weight is not about 'attracting a thinner body', getting help is not about 'attracting assistance'.
Getting help to lose weight is easier than it has ever been. What is harder to do is to maintain the will power necessary to follow a simple programme of eating less and eating wisely.
How is this helped by invoking some mysterious law that has no definitive meaning?
How is this helped by trying to achieve a balanced metabolism - whatever one of those is?
The desire to lose weight has to be greater than the desire to eat too much food. If this is not the case, weight will not be lost - and that is a simple biological law.
We seem to live in an age where people are desperately seeking mysticism on a material level.
It doesn't work that way.
If your belief system allows your head to be ruled in such a way that you can attribute a result to something other than that which actually brought it about, but the result is what is desired, I have no problem with that.
What I do have a problem with is the burgeoning estate of mumbo jumbo in the world at large which seems to be trying to replace the vaccuum created by the loss of religious belief.
As a very simple example, how many more magic juices from mysterious plants are going to be marketed as the latest 'complete' health suppliment?
It is not that long ago since tomatoes were treated as the great aphrodisiac and even more recently that tobacco was hailed as the latest in health enhancers.
Regards
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