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Recent Posts
- The Daily Tweets 2012-02-11
- The Daily Tweets 2012-02-10: Dan Savage at UAA
- The “friendly snowplows” of Anchorage: Making things livable for cars & (some) homeowners, but creating unnavigable nightmares for people who walk
- Sweetheart lived up to her name. May she rest in peace.
- Space travel can mess up your digestion
Tweets
- Here's my photos of Savage Love Live at UAA, 9 Feb 2012. I'll have a story up later at Bent Alaska. #dansavage http://t.co/XHT4IilS @KTVA 18 hrs ago
- Just got an snow emergency test on all UAA phones from a member of Slow Talkers of America. http://t.co/prHrE0Je #fb 22 hrs ago
- My tweets should automatically compile on my blog, & I'll repost w/ story & more pics at http://t.co/Epr3LaFg tomorrow #dansavage 1 day ago
- More updates...
Recent Comments
- Brooke Petersen on James Dobson’s God is a child abuser, & so is Jerry Prevo’s
- Heather on The “friendly snowplows” of Anchorage: Making things livable for cars & (some) homeowners, but creating unnavigable nightmares for people who walk
- Celia Harrison on The “friendly snowplows” of Anchorage: Making things livable for cars & (some) homeowners, but creating unnavigable nightmares for people who walk
- ManxMamma on Sweetheart lived up to her name. May she rest in peace.
- ptery on Sweetheart lived up to her name. May she rest in peace.
Tag Archives: How to Prevent and Treat Diabetes with Natural Medicine
State of my art 2
On January 27, I wrote a post called “State of my art” (based on a post I wrote to the list LowGlycemicEating@yahoogroups.com) which detailed where I was at on matters dietary at that time. A few weeks later, I’ve added … Continue reading
Posted in Insulin resistance, Nutrition
Tagged books & resources (insulin resistance), books & resources (nutrition), carbohydrates, glycemic index (GI), How to Prevent and Treat Diabetes with Natural Medicine, Melz history, Melz state of my art (health/fitness), Schwarzbein Principle (book)
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Blogging health
The timeline goes something like this: On an unspecified date in the late 1950s (I won’t get more specific to evade identity theft), I was born in a hospital in small-town Montana at 11 pounds, 12 and 1/4 ounces. Two … Continue reading