Dr neil nedley biography books
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The Gut Brain Connection | Dr Neil Nedley | Nutrition | NEWSTART
Doug Batchelor has experienced great extremes in his life. His long and winding journey from anti-social drug user to president of a worldwide ministry has helped shape him into an engaging speaker with whom audiences the world over can identify.
Today he is the senior pastor of Granite Bay Church in California and the president of Amazing Facts. He hosts the weekly television program Amazing Facts with Doug Batchelor and the Bible Answers Live radio broadcast.
As the teenage son of an aviation tycoon, young Doug could have had anything money could buy, yet he couldn’t find true peace and happiness. A troubled youth, he fought at school, entertained suicidal fantasies, and eventually ran away from home when he was just 15 years old.
Disgusted with life and convinced it had no meaning, Doug was determined to experience life with reckless abandon. He turned to drugs, committed crimes, and spent time in jail, while al
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Our commitment
In 1989, Dr. Nedley moved to Ardmore, Oklahoma and joined the Lifestyle Center of amerika, a center focused on treating heart disease and other physical diseases from a natural, lifestyle approach. During his time in Ardmore, he wrote his first book, edited by Dr. David DeRose, called Proof Positive. This book quickly circulated the health community as a professional, comprehensive resource for lifestyle medicine. As time went on, Dr. Nedley began to realize the extensive number of patients that were suffering from something completely unrelated to his internal medicine specialty.
By 1997, one in four of Dr. Neil Nedley’s patients struggled with depression or anxiety. As an internist, his job was to get to the bottom of his patients’ challenges. Because of his ongoing study of the latest scientific research related to diseases of the mind, combined with years of clinical experience, Dr. Nedley committed han själv to finding the root causes of depression and/or anxiety
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Depression: The Way Out
Eu desconfiei bastante por causa das propostas de "cura em 20 semanas" (quase nunca dá para fazer esse "prazo") e pelas orelhas do livro ficarem falando dem como ele tem várias citações a artigos científicos e blablabla. É meio estranho isso, né? Essa panfletagem toda para dizer: "Olha, nossas informações são 'comprovadas cientificamente'". Mas citar artigos científicos não cria nenhum casulo dem "verdade inabalável". A verdade é que este livro é um livro de autoajuda com a intenção de parecer científico, mas que tem muita panfletagem religiosa (que eu também já estava ciente, mas não esperava dessa magnitude).
O Neil Nedley é limitado tanto pela visão médica tradicional (que já e