

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Vietnam.
The instant #1 New York Times bestseller with over a million copies sold! A bold new vision for optimizing our health now and in the future What if depression, anxiety, infertility, insomnia, heart disease, erectile dysfunction, type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer’s, dementia, cancer and many other health conditions that torture and shorten our lives actually have the same root cause? Our ability to prevent and reverse these conditions - and feel incredible today - is under our control and simpler than we think. The key is our metabolic function - the most important and least understood factor in our overall health. As Dr. Casey Means explains in this groundbreaking book, nearly every health problem we face can be explained by how well the cells in our body create and use energy. To live free from frustrating symptoms and life-threatening disease, we need our cells to be optimally powered so that they can create “good energy,” the essential fuel that impacts every aspect of our physical and mental wellbeing. If you are battling minor signals of “bad energy” inside your body, it is often a warning sign that more life-threatening illness may emerge later in life. But here’s the good news: for the first time ever, we can monitor our metabolic health in great detail and learn how to improve it ourselves. Weaving together cutting-edge research and personal stories, as well as groundbreaking data from the health technology company Dr. Means founded, Good Energy offers an essential four-week plan and explains: The five biomarkers that determine your risk for a deadly disease. How to use inexpensive tools and technology to “see inside your body” and take action. Why dietary philosophies are designed to confuse us, and six lifelong food principles you can implement whether you’re carnivore or vegan. The crucial links between sleep, circadian rhythm, and metabolism A new framework for exercise focused on building simple movement into everyday activities How cold and heat exposure helps build our body’s resilience Steps to navigate the medical system to get what you need for optimal health Good Energy offers a new, cutting-edge understanding of the true cause of illness that until now has remained hidden. It will help you optimize your ability to live well and stay well at every age. Review: Life Saving Information: The Most Intelligent Health Book You May Ever Read! - I don't know about you, but I'm headed towards 60 and I am finding out there is a ton to learn so I don't feel my age. Right now I have high energy because according to this book I'm doing a lot of things right. I tend to keep fairly active and eat pretty healthy except for a few treats and I try to implement the healthy lifestyle choices in this book whenever I can. The section on the importance of sleep could be lifesaving for a lot of people who struggle with insomnia. I know one person in my life who nearly died because of lack of sleep and so I think he needs to read this book! I was sleeping for 12 hours but now I'm sleeping for around 8. That is healthier! While reading you may ask yourself: "Does one person really know the root cause of our obesity epidemic?" Casey Means believes your health is under your control and this is a very empowering message. Some of the questions this book answers include: What is metabolic dysfunction? Why is there so much chronic disease? What is the real cause of depression? Why do we need to treat disease at the cellular level? What is the difference between good and bad energy? How can you get more good energy? What I found in this book was a fascinating cellular biology lesson. This helped me understand the mechanisms of insulin resistance and more... What I admire about Casey Means is how inquisitive she is and how she is solution focused in curing the underlying condition of most diseases she discusses. Basically she teaches more sunlight, less sugar and more vegetables. I see nothing wrong with that! As I read this book I realized it will probably be the most important book I read this year! The Pros are that it is well organized, super informative and easy to understand. The Cons are that a lot of people can't afford to go the totally organic way but I suggest starting small and expanding into organic as you can. Often I've found organic food makes up for the cost by giving you superior taste. Like organic bananas and organic green beans really are so much more flavorful. As this book implies as the old adage goes: "You get what you pay for. AND...You either pay now or you pay later." Is your health not worth the cost? Too many people find out too late that illness is very expensive and time consuming!! While reading this book I realized I'm eating most of the food that are recommended for getting your key nutrients. I'm also doing well with foods with the highest polyphenol count. My count on what I'm eating as far as antioxidant sources go is 23! And I'm on a budget! So a lot of common foods are discussed. The section on the benefits of sunlight made me think I should eat breakfast outside in the morning! That has inspired me to look for an outdoor table. The section on cold and heat exposure makes me think I'm doing the right thing keeping the heat low during this winter and I feel more energetic because of it. Just wait until you hear how you can increase dopamine! Casey Means lives what she believes and gives lot of tips that prove she's a genius and that is not an exaggeration. Her understanding of mitochondria has helped me understand why I have more energy now than I did a year ago! How to Use this Book! 1. Read it from cover to cover with a highlighter in hand! 2. Read all the highlighted portions again. 3. Write down the foods you want to eat more of to get healthy. Write down the lifestyle changes you want to implement. 4. Go shopping! 5. Prepare healthier meals! That is about it! I personally put turmeric capsules in my shopping cart and looked at cookbooks that were recommended. I can see how this book will help me improve my life right away and in the future too. Sometimes you just need a little motivation and encouragement to do the right things, eat the right foods and leave the house to be in the sun for a few minutes! I feel inspired after reading this book and I think you will be too! I knew nothing about the author before reading this book. I know nothing additional about her except what I've read in this book. I think her book speaks for itself and is all you need to make some great New Year's resolutions! ~The Rebecca Review P.S. On page 257 and 258 there is a description of the author's personal experience with mushrooms. I know nothing about such things so I think read with caution and if you want to feel unconditional love you can will it or get the experience from God, no substances are needed. A decision to love unconditionally and falling in love with God was all I have needed for consciousness expansion. ;) Review: Good Energy Book is a Must Read - Very intriguing, informative, and interesting book. This is cutting edge information on the latest medical news from the perspective of a doctor who has experienced health problems from her former diet. She also writes what she experienced with her own mother, and her fight to become healthy. It's an inspirational book that gives insight on diet, exercise, and health from a doctor's viewpoint. The information in this book is invaluable, and anyone who cares about health should read this book and implement these principles. It's an enjoyable read as well.








| Best Sellers Rank | #1,129 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2 in Nutrition (Books) #5 in Aging & Longevity (Books) #55 in Medical Books (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 5,414 Reviews |
T**W
Life Saving Information: The Most Intelligent Health Book You May Ever Read!
I don't know about you, but I'm headed towards 60 and I am finding out there is a ton to learn so I don't feel my age. Right now I have high energy because according to this book I'm doing a lot of things right. I tend to keep fairly active and eat pretty healthy except for a few treats and I try to implement the healthy lifestyle choices in this book whenever I can. The section on the importance of sleep could be lifesaving for a lot of people who struggle with insomnia. I know one person in my life who nearly died because of lack of sleep and so I think he needs to read this book! I was sleeping for 12 hours but now I'm sleeping for around 8. That is healthier! While reading you may ask yourself: "Does one person really know the root cause of our obesity epidemic?" Casey Means believes your health is under your control and this is a very empowering message. Some of the questions this book answers include: What is metabolic dysfunction? Why is there so much chronic disease? What is the real cause of depression? Why do we need to treat disease at the cellular level? What is the difference between good and bad energy? How can you get more good energy? What I found in this book was a fascinating cellular biology lesson. This helped me understand the mechanisms of insulin resistance and more... What I admire about Casey Means is how inquisitive she is and how she is solution focused in curing the underlying condition of most diseases she discusses. Basically she teaches more sunlight, less sugar and more vegetables. I see nothing wrong with that! As I read this book I realized it will probably be the most important book I read this year! The Pros are that it is well organized, super informative and easy to understand. The Cons are that a lot of people can't afford to go the totally organic way but I suggest starting small and expanding into organic as you can. Often I've found organic food makes up for the cost by giving you superior taste. Like organic bananas and organic green beans really are so much more flavorful. As this book implies as the old adage goes: "You get what you pay for. AND...You either pay now or you pay later." Is your health not worth the cost? Too many people find out too late that illness is very expensive and time consuming!! While reading this book I realized I'm eating most of the food that are recommended for getting your key nutrients. I'm also doing well with foods with the highest polyphenol count. My count on what I'm eating as far as antioxidant sources go is 23! And I'm on a budget! So a lot of common foods are discussed. The section on the benefits of sunlight made me think I should eat breakfast outside in the morning! That has inspired me to look for an outdoor table. The section on cold and heat exposure makes me think I'm doing the right thing keeping the heat low during this winter and I feel more energetic because of it. Just wait until you hear how you can increase dopamine! Casey Means lives what she believes and gives lot of tips that prove she's a genius and that is not an exaggeration. Her understanding of mitochondria has helped me understand why I have more energy now than I did a year ago! How to Use this Book! 1. Read it from cover to cover with a highlighter in hand! 2. Read all the highlighted portions again. 3. Write down the foods you want to eat more of to get healthy. Write down the lifestyle changes you want to implement. 4. Go shopping! 5. Prepare healthier meals! That is about it! I personally put turmeric capsules in my shopping cart and looked at cookbooks that were recommended. I can see how this book will help me improve my life right away and in the future too. Sometimes you just need a little motivation and encouragement to do the right things, eat the right foods and leave the house to be in the sun for a few minutes! I feel inspired after reading this book and I think you will be too! I knew nothing about the author before reading this book. I know nothing additional about her except what I've read in this book. I think her book speaks for itself and is all you need to make some great New Year's resolutions! ~The Rebecca Review P.S. On page 257 and 258 there is a description of the author's personal experience with mushrooms. I know nothing about such things so I think read with caution and if you want to feel unconditional love you can will it or get the experience from God, no substances are needed. A decision to love unconditionally and falling in love with God was all I have needed for consciousness expansion. ;)
H**R
Good Energy Book is a Must Read
Very intriguing, informative, and interesting book. This is cutting edge information on the latest medical news from the perspective of a doctor who has experienced health problems from her former diet. She also writes what she experienced with her own mother, and her fight to become healthy. It's an inspirational book that gives insight on diet, exercise, and health from a doctor's viewpoint. The information in this book is invaluable, and anyone who cares about health should read this book and implement these principles. It's an enjoyable read as well.
A**D
A Must-Read for Anyone Seeking True Health and Vitality – Good Energy by Casey Means
As someone who has spent years studying health, nutrition, and longevity, I can confidently say that Good Energy by Dr. Casey Means is the most profound and transformative books on health I have ever read. This book is not just another wellness guide, it’s a paradigm shift in how we understand the root causes of disease, the power of metabolic health, and what it truly means to thrive. Even more so, her insight into regenerative agriculture, spirituality and environmentalism is profound. Dr. Means masterfully weaves together cutting-edge science, ancestral wisdom, and practical strategies to help readers reclaim their health at the cellular level. Her insights on mitochondrial function, inflammation, and how our modern lifestyle is hijacking our well-being are eye-opening. Unlike many health books that focus on quick fixes, Good Energy provides a holistic framework for sustainable vitality, one that is empowering, deeply researched, and actionable. What sets this book apart is Dr. Means' ability to break down complex concepts in a way that is both accessible and inspiring. She doesn't just tell you what to do, she explains why it matters, making it impossible to ignore the profound impact our daily choices have on our long-term health. Whether you're a seasoned health enthusiast or just starting your wellness journey, this book will change the way you think about food, movement, stress, and sleep. I’ve read countless books on health, but Good Energy stands out as the best. It’s not just a book, it’s a blueprint for a life filled with energy, clarity, and true well-being. If you care about your health, this is a must-read.
T**E
Great advice but overly strict
I was drawn to this book after hearing the author on a podcast. I enjoyed the book, liked the content, and overwhelmingly agreed with the author's main premise/argument that our overall health is an interconnected and interrelated web of biological processes largely driven by metabolic health. The reason for the four stars is that I feel her recommendations were too strictly presented as an all-or-nothing proposition that most people will be unable to adhere to in the real world. For example "no bread ever" (her recommendation) is different from "reduce/limit bread". Same with rice and pasta, as two additional examples. Most people will be able to do the latter (reduce/limit) while not many will be able to follow the former (none, ever). And I don't feel that she did a great job of encouraging readers to at least do the best they can, even if they can't do everything. The end result is that this risks readers assuming that, in order to realize ANY benefits, they need to do EVERYTHING exactly as she suggests, realize they can't commit to that, and throw up their hands and say "what's the use?" and continue in their bad habits. I understand what she is saying, and in an ideal world it may be best to do everything to the full extent of her recommendations. But we don't live in the ideal world. We travel and have to eat out. We make dinner not just for ourselves, but for our families as well. Even if I'm good with eating my healthy bean and avocado burrito in a seaweed wrap (her recommendation), my kids just aren't going to be cool with that. I don't see a huge issue wrapping an otherwise very healthy meal in a thin, flour tortilla (which is more of a serving helper than a main staple of the meal). I think there are many benefits to be achieved by anyone moving in the direction of her recommendations, even if not fully committing to doing them full bore. The author failed to drive that point home, and the fact is the majority of readers are not going to be able to commit fully. I wish she presented a softer stance here. I also have some skepticism around some of the foods to avoid. The idea is that the Standard American Diet (SAD) is unhealthy and driving our bad energy. But then take bread, rice and pasta as examples. She says to avoid these at all costs, throw them in the trash. But our ancestors had been eating bread for millennia, and didn’t suffer the metabolic issues we do now. In addition, there are cultures that eat a lot of rice (Asia) and pasta (Italy) and don’t seem to suffer the metabolic issues to the extent that we do. So is cutting those foods COMPLETELY out of our diet really necessary? Same for seed oils – many cultures regularly use seed oils in their cooking and yet show much higher personal health than Americans. So while it may be good to limit these foods, is absolute abstention really necessary, based on experience from other cultures? For my part, I’ve been trying to adhere to the book as best I can, without going full on. For example, I love to cook worldly cuisine and many of the sauces and marinades and such that I use have sugar and seed oils. In my searching, you simply cannot get these products without that (for example, chile crunch and gochujang). So I just don’t make those otherwise very healthy meals anymore? Nonsense. Here’s what I do: If I can get something without added sugar and seed oils, I do it. If I can’t I’m ok with that. If a recipe calls for seed or vegetable oil, I will sub healthier avocado or olive oil. I may substitute a small amount of honey or maple syrup for granulated sugar. And I’ll shoot for brown rice over white rice when I can. These types of actions, I believe, are worthy compromises that still move me in the direction of better metabolic health. Am I perfectly optimizing my metabolic health? Absolutely not. But am I improving my situation and increasing my odds of avoiding disease? Absolutely. And I’m good with that compromise. In the end, I just could not envision enjoying my life nearly as much if I adhered to everything she suggests, in the exact way she suggests it. Doing so would necessitate an inordinate amount of time trying to find products that fit her criteria, which is not just relegated to food (think fragrance free soaps/shampoo, cleaning supplies, etc.). A strict adherence to the recommendations in the book is not something I can or will sign up for. But I will move in that direction. To those that can, more power to you. But, I believe, most of us are going to fall into the camp of trying our best without perfectly adhering to everything exactly as suggested. And that’s still a good thing. I just wish the author had driven that point harder.
K**S
Best book on maximizing health that I've read in a long time
This is an excellent read. The style is easy to read for the general public but backed up with sufficient technical detail to keep the more advanced reader engaged. It's clearly written from life's experience and from the heart. The advice on nutrition and other lifestyle factors is based on solid science and clinical practice. Health and vitality start from healthy Mitochondria, which are the powerhouses inside every cell in our body. Life is about energy - without generation of energy in our cells, life stops. Optimizing that energy is what Good Energy is all about. Casey makes her advice practical, which is what counts at the end of the day.
L**D
absolutely amazing very important book
important book amazing medical help must have information most Americans don’t know. Thank you so much for writing this book
S**A
A Clear Framework for Understanding Metabolic Health
Good Energy connects many modern health challenges back to basic biology. Rather than treating conditions and symptoms as separate issues, Casey Means links them to a shared driver: metabolic dysfunction at the cellular level. She describes the body as an interconnected system of trillions of cells that depend on a supportive internal and external environment to function well. The book frames modern disease as an evolutionary mismatch. Our biology evolved alongside whole foods, regular movement, natural light and darkness cycles, and restorative sleep. When that environment shifts in ways our biology did not evolve to handle, cellular function can break down, showing up as imbalanced biomarkers of health. A key strength of Good Energy is its focus on upstream drivers. Health is integrated across metabolism, the microbiome, cellular energy, and lifestyle. Food is treated as molecular information that shapes inflammation, oxidative stress, gut health, and metabolic resilience. The book provides practical guidance on lab tests, bioobservable data, and implementation, ending with recipes. Good Energy delivers for all seeking a clear, actionable guide to functional health grounded in human biology.
W**L
A blueprint for lifelong health
Casey Means is on a mission. Fueled by her own experiences as a medical doctor - where economic incentives were to treat the symptoms rather than the causes of chronic disease - she has delivered a treatise on what ails us and what we can do to change it, as well as provided a practical guide for creating good energy. As a rising star in head and neck surgery, Casey saw firsthand what suffering looks like. Patients being treated for the same chronic conditions over and over with painful and invasive procedures. And then coming back for more, living with the fear and uncertainty that they won’t get better, that they will just have to accept debilitating pain and hopelessness. Casey also understood that this state of affairs was celebrated as core to the business model in some corners of medicine. Rather than be weighed down by her outrage at this, she channeled it into a mission. Casey puts our health in the context of wildly changing dietary and environmental toxins over the past decades, while also breaking down the silos around medical specialties to talk about our health at the cellular level. As our diets and environments have rapidly transformed, these nutritional and sensory inputs have left our cells confused. And rather than take flight, they’ve opted to respond fighting, causing various types of inflammation across our bodies. While Casey paints an eye-opening picture, the good news is, like our cells, we too can fight back. The book offers practical steps not just to improve the quality of our diet and the calories we ingest, but also to create the physical and emotional conditions to improve our health as well. This is a painstakingly researched book, but it's not a boring one. Casey's journey is inspiring and her joy is infectious. Beyond creating healthier, better informed readers, this book is an invitation to share that journey, too.
M**Y
Ti svolta la vita
Questo libro mi ha letteralmente aperto gli occhi, non solo sul sistema sanitario e le sue contraddizioni, ma anche sull’importanza di tornare a essere protagonisti della nostra salute. È un libro che fa riflettere, ti mette di fronte a verità scomode ma necessarie e ti dà strumenti concreti per migliorare le tue abitudini. Mi ha ispirata a prendermi più cura di me stessa ogni giorno e credo possa davvero fare la differenza per chiunque voglia capire meglio il legame tra energia, benessere e vita quotidiana
S**E
Help Your Health
Good Energy written by Casey Means offers a deep dive on the deteriorating of health of North Americans. Means paints a picture of horrible health outcomes noting statistics like, “six out of ten adults are living with a chronic illness” and “Seventy-four percent of adults are overweight or have obesity.” Means notes that “preventable lifestyle conditions are responsible for 80 percent of modern human deaths.” To Means what ails us isn’t a complicated mystery but a clear byproduct of lifestyle. Our choices have consequences. She notes that many of the health problems share a common element: metabolic dysfunction. Healthy metabolic function or what Means considers Good Energy is the goal for happy health. Means defines metabolism as “the set of cellular mechanisms that transform food into energy that can power every single cell in the body.” Over the past 100 years, the types of foods we consume, quantities, and our living environments have changed dramatically, not for the better. Means points out that “we are consuming astronomically more sugar (i.e., up to 3,000 percent more liquid fructose), working in more sedentary jobs, and sleeping 25 percent less. We’re also exposed to over eighty thousand synthetic chemicals in our food, water, and air.” There are consequences to these exposures. Our metabolic markers are reflective of our health. “93 percent of Americans are in the danger zone on at least one key metabolic marker.” Means points out, “No animals in the wild suffer from widespread metabolic conditions, nor did humans as little as seventy-five years ago.” We’re consuming 20 percent more calories and eating too many processed foods. The average adult now eats 70% of their calories from processed food. We’re missing numerous necessary nutrients and our metabolic function is compromised as a result. Coupled with increased calorie intake is our decreased activity. We eat more and do less. We get fatter and sicker as a result. Additionally, our lifestyles are also more stressful. This has hormonal impact which impacts our health. The costs of making catastrophic choices is calamitous. Means notes, “more than 75 percent of deaths and 80 percent of costs are driven by obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and other preventable and reversible metabolic conditions we have today.” Means takes her readers on a detailed description of each of these areas highlighting what the consequences are to the body of negative choices. Unfortunately, virtually all aspects of healthcare are incented to manage disease as opposed to promote health. Money is made by treating ailments not in having a healthy population. From medical schools to hospitals to insurance companies and pharmaceutical businesses, all benefit from managing disease as opposed to preventing it. Means writes, “Every institution that impacts your health makes more money when you are sick and less when you are healthy.” Means suggests the solution lies in owning responsibility for our health. Know this NOCLYS: No One Cares Like You Should. Your health is yours. Don’t leave it to the hands of experts or professionals. Care enough to care about your own healthcare. Medical intervention is great for acute emergencies like broken bones. However, we can take greater ownership of “regular” healthcare. Means writes, “You are the primary person in charge of understanding your body.” This is easier now with technology. We can get real time information about what’s going on inside. Means presents five accessible bio-markers we can seek to have tested by our doctors: blood sugar, triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, blood pressure, and waist circumference. She provides values or targets for these bio-markers that are much “stricter” than what the medical industry considers normal. Means writes of the importance of nutrition to our health. “What we put into our bodies is the most critical decision for our health and happiness.” Food is what drives everything inside of us. All of our bodily functions require energy. That energy comes from the nutrients we consume. Unfortunately, what most of us are consuming is not ideal. Our choices as to what to consume are compromising our health. “Refined added sugar causes astronomically more deaths and disability per year than COVID-19 and fentanyl overdoses combined. We need to see refined added sugar for what it is: an addictive, dangerous drug that has been included in 74 percent of foods in the U.S. food system and for which the body needs zero grams in a lifetime.” Amidst the backdrop of deteriorating health of the average person, Means offers an optimistic path forward. She suggests technology and knowledge is available to help us help ourselves. Seek to have the bio-markers she suggests measured by your physician and work to improve these to target levels Means sets out. Then patiently work to integrate more of her suggestions into your daily life. Means suggests monitoring food intake by keeping a food journal, setting nutritional goals like consuming 50 grams of fiber daily, adding fiber to each meal, eating more of daily calories earlier in the day, seeking to narrow the number of hours a day in which food is consumed down to a goal of ten, and to aim for a fifteen-minute walk after eating. She suggests three “rules” of nutrition: avoid refined sugars, refined grains, and seed oils. This narrows down food choices away from processed to natural foods. Sleep, too, becomes a key factor supporting our health. Our sleep quantity and quality has been impaired over the years. We should be aiming to get seven to eight hours a night of quality sleep. Keeping our bedrooms dark, phones far away, and controlling temperature are all factors to assist the quantity and quality of sleep we enjoy. Sleeping and eating better will provide a boost to our energy which can be further enhanced by making movement a part of our day. We’re moving much less than past generations. Means suggests more frequent bouts of exercise throughout the day are more valuable than one vigorous session. We don’t have to go full out to get benefits. Moderate activity works wonders. Moving for a minute or two here and five minutes there several times during the day adds up to material health. There is no right way to exercise. Anything that you’ll do regularly is ideal. Beyond eating, sleeping, and exercising, avoiding chemicals becomes a goal. Chemicals from air, water, packaging, cosmetics, and other hygiene products can all contain things which we either know little about or are developing evidence that exposure over time leads to negative health consequences. Reducing exposure to stress, too, will help our bodies. We become a byproduct of our inputs. The information we absorb has biological impact. Most news is negative and causes cortisol to swim around our bodies resulting in health consequences. Means writes, “A cell living in a body experiencing chronic fear is a cell that cannot fully thrive.” Technology can be addictive which fragments our attention and impacts our bodies as well. Good Energy is a worthwhile read that will give you as much insight as you want to explore related to the threats to our health our modern world offers as well as a detailed and practical approach to taking responsibility for and regaining our personal health.
A**S
📚 If You Have a Body, Read This
✍️ Good Energy by Dr. Casey Means is a must-read for anyone who wants to take control of their health. I first heard her on Jay Shetty’s podcast talking about why we should all become the CEO of our own health—and I couldn’t agree more. 📖 The core message hit hard: stop outsourcing your well-being. You know your body better than a doctor who sees you for 10 minutes. Medical professionals should be there for emergencies and acute care, but day-to-day health? That’s on us. She explains how glucose, metabolism, and energy affect everything—and why small changes can transform your life. 📗 I loved how she broke down blood test numbers and wearable data in a way that finally makes sense. No jargon overload (well, almost). The 4-week program? I didn’t follow it—I just made improvements as I went. Most recipes were not for me (hard-to-find ingredients and I’m not into cauliflower rice or lettuce wraps), but there are a few I’ll try.
M**R
Drs and MDs - where is your voice?
I have read and practiced a lot of these disciplines and principles over the years, but this book brings everything together in such a logical way, and with human compassion and empathy for the patient. The healthcare system is broken by crony capitalism, and through Pharma, Educational Institutions, and government policy all inflicting harm on human life with little care for the consequences. How anyone in this industry can support this agenda, inflicted on society by the usual money men, who have simply used the Ponzi scheme of debt, and taxpayer capital to transfer mass wealth to a very few elites is disgusting and incomprehensible to the everyday person. I read this book, and Dr Casey gives me faith that there are a good few people left fighting against this, but we must all wake up and be tougher with our children and out families to ensure they are eating, resting, educating themselves on the challenges we face in the face of a “Evil System”. I will advocate this book to all, and keep it close to my side to keep me motivated. I wish everyone great cellular energy and spiritual awakening to break the great evil that is upon us from the elites. “United we stand, divided we Fall” bless
U**G
Life changing
I cannot recommend this book enough. The author has thought it through from start to finish and makes the science language easy to understand. There are concrete steps you can take to improve your health. I had always wondered why I have mild health issues and the doctors can never really get to the bottom of it or don’t even try!
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 month ago