It’s been a few weeks since I’ve sent a regular newsletter. Instead, we’ve been celebrating Father’s Day and Independence Day. It is my hope that, over these past weeks, you enjoyed family, friendship, and fellowship. I also hope that you got a few good laughs, because humor is also much-needed medicine during these trying times.
Meanwhile, as good as parties and picnics may be for your mind, they are often rough on your GI tract and the rest of your body as well. Your body has ways of telling you so. That achey, bloated feeling should alert you to the fact that poor dietary choices put you at risk for poor overall health.
Fortunately, you can quickly rebound from the occasional junk-food indulgence. If you quickly get back on the right track, the train will begin to run smoothly again.
But sadly, millions of Americans don’t even know what feeling good really means. For them, poor dietary choices have become a daily way-of-life. The alarm has become disease. Then, professional help is needed, such as the assistance of a doctor who practices functional medicine/nutrition. Please remember that there usually is no pill that will truly fix the damage that poor dietary choices cause. The adverse effects on not only the entire GI tract but the entire body of these long term poor dietary decisions must be understood in order to determine exactly what needs to be done in order to repair the damage.
Thus, I bring you the featured article on the topic of digestive health below. In addition, if you feel that you may need some help with your diet and perhaps even the damage that you have caused to your GI system or your body as a whole due to poor eating habits perhaps you would benifit from our Full System Detoxification Cleanse Program. If you would like to learn more about this program take a look at the date and time of our upcoming Cleanse preview in the Events section of this newsletter.
Happy times with laughter and companionship make life better, but they are their happiest when one can also say, “I feel Great."
We’re here for you.
Stay well,
Dr. Pfeiffer
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