![]() ![]() But I want to give it a review, because it is an amazingly helpful and empowering book, and I believe that all women should read it. ![]() This is not the kind of book that you necessarily want to let all your friends on goodreads know that you have read. Written by a naturopathic doctor with twenty years of experience, this book is a compilation of everything that works for hormonal health. The second half of the book is a comprehensive treatment guide including General Maintenance, and treatment protocols for specific period problems such as PCOS, PMS, heavy periods, endometriosis, and more. Topics include: How to Come Off the Pill, What Your Period Should Be Like, What Can Go Wrong, and How to Talk to Your Doctor. It is a practical, user-friendly manual suitable for women of every age. Period Repair Manual is your guide to healthier periods using natural treatments such as diet, nutritional supplements, herbal medicine, and natural hormones. No matter your age or your situation, it’s time to get to know your period. ![]() What’s happening with your period? Does it come every month? Does it come at all? Is it heavy or painful or difficult in some way? Maybe you’ve just come off the pill, or are thinking about coming off the pill. Please read Period Repair Manual, the SECOND edition with a pink cover. ![]()
0 Comments
![]() “A figure held his daughter in the rocker. ![]() “No, no something is…”and then they all knew.” ![]() She looked at him from the bed with all the nurses and the doctor flitting about the room watching her vital signs, monitoring the baby’s heart rate and her own and of course, guiding the course of the birth itself. She was trying so hard to endure and to get through that he had to ask again. “Are you okay, Babe?” She’d grown extra quiet in the last few moments, tension lines growing deeper in her face, her hands clawing at the bed rails as she pushed. The pain was clearly unimaginable and he wished he could have taken some of it from her, but she’d insisted on a natural birth and that’s just what she was doing. Wendy was sweating and bleary-eyed, focusing so very hard on the movement of her baby down the birth canal that it took her a moment to hear what anyone said to her. It meant that he could be here and he could be at home, helping her as much as he liked after the baby was born. He had never been so glad to be a writer. She was dilated and the tension had been building to this moment all day. “There she was, up on that bed pushing and pushing just as they’d practiced. ![]() ![]() ![]() Low-effort book requests will be removed. Book requests must be specific and request something that cannot be found with a simple search of the sub.“What was that book called” posts are exempt from this rule, as they are unlikely to show up in future searchesīook requests must be specific and contain detail.Book request titles must contain details about the kind of book you’re looking for. ![]()
![]() ![]() Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review) There are small mysteries and deep shadows, figurative as well as literal, that stretch among Rudd’s provocative paint-on-corrugated packing box illustrations in this Australian import.With every visual detail a poignant counterpoint to the simple storyline, there are depths here for older children to plumb. Street artist Rudd’s textured paint-and-cardboard collages create a strong sense of a place (the blaze and shadow of the desert) and the people who live there.Without minimizing the clear references to economic and racial struggle, the words and images in this snapshot story pulse with resourceful ingenuity, joyful exuberance, and layered meanings. In her picture book debut, Clarke’s lines sing with sound and rhythm, evoking the “shicketty shake” sound of the bike on sand hills. ![]() Showcasing the fun to be had in a spare world, this book is just what many of us need right now. ![]() The dark, bright, and desert hues create a blazing-hot world readers can almost step right into. Dreaming and building, we see, go hand in hand no matter where you live. Clarke’s poetically compressed language hurtles joyfully along, while Rudd’s illustrations, made on cardboard boxes with spirited swaths of paint, burst with irrepressible life. ![]() |