Recommended
My book's come out!
18111/05
Finally, after long waiting and half-forgetting about it (just kidding), I'm holding my own book in my hands! Looks totally cool, I tell you.
Now I'm a "published author", and thus an authority on everything. Go me!
Sorry if that came on a bit strong, but I am very excited and enthusiastic about it. The next entry will be boring and depressing again, and I can tell you now, it will be about -- depression. Or more accurately, about the depression article in the current TIME magazine. But that will be tomorrow, because now I will go party!
See you then!
Now I'm a "published author", and thus an authority on everything. Go me!
Sorry if that came on a bit strong, but I am very excited and enthusiastic about it. The next entry will be boring and depressing again, and I can tell you now, it will be about -- depression. Or more accurately, about the depression article in the current TIME magazine. But that will be tomorrow, because now I will go party!
See you then!
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Dr. Andrew Weil in the Time Magazine (Oct. 17, 2005)
23110/05
Dr. Andrew Weil is a medical doctor whom I value for his medical farsightedness and apparent integrity.
His article "Dr. Andrew Weil on living better longer", an excerpt from his newest book "Healthy Aging" is featured in the Time magazine of Oct. 17, 2005, and I thoroughly recommend it to anyone interested in sound and down-to-earth advice on health and aging gracefully.
Different to most of his colleagues, Dr. Weil does not endorse the anti-aging hype, because he accepts aging and dying as the natural course of things. "The best we can do - and it is a lot - is to accept the inevitability of aging and try to adapt to it, to be in the best health we can at any age."
Dr. Weil is pretty clever when it comes to marketing his information, too, so of course, there's more information on his website www.drweilonhealthyaging.com

Different to most of his colleagues, Dr. Weil does not endorse the anti-aging hype, because he accepts aging and dying as the natural course of things. "The best we can do - and it is a lot - is to accept the inevitability of aging and try to adapt to it, to be in the best health we can at any age."
Dr. Weil is pretty clever when it comes to marketing his information, too, so of course, there's more information on his website www.drweilonhealthyaging.com