Start on the Way to Wellness
Do you count on "store bought" foods to give you the vitamins and minerals yo need? Most grocery stores carry food grown on mega-farms, where the soil can be depleted of vital nutrients through over-use. Much of farming today focuses on production, not quality.
Supplementation - Important and Growing
Over 35% of Americans take nutritional supplements, and for a good reason. Modern diets contain highly processed foods and grown on farmlands depleted of important minerals. So, it makes good "health sense" to support one's vitality by providing natural, organic factors - like nutrients and phytonutrients.
So, if you can't rely upon full-spectrum nutrition being readily available at the grocery store, it means you'll benefit by adding nutritional supplements. Supplements for yourself and for your family. What kind of supplements? We believe the answer to supplementation is NOT is tablets, capsules or pills lining the shelves at the store. We believe the answer is in liquid dietary supplements, and especially those derived from whole-foods.
Liquid have several distinct advantages, including:
* Liquides are easy to take. How many people do you know who have a hard time swallowing pills?
* Liquids are convenient. Why bother with opening bottle after bottle of tablets, and then washing them down with a liquid? Why not just start with a liquid in a first place?
* Liquids are highly absorbable. It just makes sense doesn't it? Before food, or tablets, can be assimilated into your system, they must first be converted to a liquid-type form. And if a tablet or pill is made poorly, or if digestion difficulties exist, some tablets may pass through one's entire digestive system completely intact.
Why Whole-food Supplements?
Having supplements derived from whole-foods is equaly important as having them in liquid form. Most traditional supplements, tablet or liquid, are made with synthesized vitamins, made in a laboratory out of isolated chemicals. If they have minerals, they are usually in an elemental form, which means they are inorganic. The significance of this is that inorganic minerals are far less acceptable to the human body, which is organic.
When it comes to synthetic vitamins, vitamin C is a common example. Almost all vitamin C available at stores is from synthetic form, "ascorbic acid." Yes, it is possible for man to synthesize vitamin C.
However, when Mother Nature makes it, an untold number of supportive phytonutrientsare built in and around the entire nutrient matrix. Man-made laboratories cannot duplicate this process, and we believe that this is where the value lies with whole-food nutrients and phytonutrients.
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