Indianapolis, IN (ContentDesk) August 14 2006 -- Judith Weldon, Indianapolis Woman Magazine's 2005 Dream Make-over contest winner, talks about the physical and emotional effects
one day had on her life. "On May 16, 2005 in the early morning I stood in front of my bathroom mirror and said good-bye to my 63 year old face. I knew my life was about to change and for better or worse it would never be the same," she said.Coming home from the hospital the day after her facial surgery Judith said, "I looked like "The Bride of Frankenstein." Six days later she realized her face was going to look twenty years younger. The contest also included a new smile for the winner.
During her recovery time, Judith thought about her life and the dreams
old and new that she held in her heart."I left work on a Friday night a week after I came back to work and I never returned.It was then I realized just how much of an impact the make-over had on my life," she said.
Judith is retired today and following her dreams of acting and writing full time.
Judith Weldon's uplifting story with before and after pictures will be featured in the #34 issue of National Examiner on the stands August 14- 28 and available in the US and Canada..
After Atkins: The Low-Carb Diet Recovery Program
Like its predecessors, the low-carb diet has failed those hoping for a solution to their weight struggles.
Also like its predecessors, it has left in its wake people who don't know how to eat anymore. Just how are you supposed to eat to manage your weight and stay healthy?
That's the question answered in the upcoming series After Atkins: The Low-Carb Diet Recovery Program, offered January ? March 2005 at Green Mountain at Fox Run, a women's retreat that pioneered the non-diet approach to healthy weights over 30 years ago.
"In the past year, we've received innumerable calls from women who have tried and failed at low-carb dieting," says Alan H. Wayler, PhD, executive director of Green Mountain.
"They're defeated, depressed and desperate, still looking for a way to lose and reach a healthy weight.
They call us -- the country's oldest non-diet program -- because they're tired of dieting and are looking for a new approach that will help them end...
Lanner Discusses Business Intelligence Performance with the B-EYE-Network
In an exclusive interview with Ron Powell and the Business Intelligence Network, Scott Dixon Smith, President of Lanner Group Inc., and Gabrielle K. Boko, Vice President of Marketing, North America, discussed how Lanner can boost business intelligence performance by simulation, or "what if" scenarios, and optimizing proposed metrics and processes.According to the interview, Lanner's Witness simulation can boost overall enterprise decision-making. The company is a leader in simulation and optimization technology, a technology that supports business intelligence by using data to create computer-generated visual representations that validate existing activities and suggest the optimum environment for achieving the best levels of performance.To listen to the interview, please go to
Lanner Discusses Business Intelligence Performance with the B-EYE-Network
Data recovery > Lanner Discusses Business Intelligence Performance with the B-EYE-Network
Former Alcoholics from Ayrshire in Scotland Welcome American Addiction Expert Stanton Peele's New Book on Recovery
Two former alcoholics, Lilian and Murdoch MacDonald, a married couple living in Ayrshire, Scotland, have warmly welcomed the publication of a new book written by social psychologist Dr. Stanton Peele called 7 Tools to Beat Addiction.In his latest book, addiction expert Dr. Peele once again explodes the myth, prevalent in the United States and becoming more so elsewhere in the world, that alcoholism, drug abuse and other addictions are a disease which is bio-genetic in origin, and for which addicts must seek medical treatment or join a support group like Alcoholics Anonymous.Dr Peele argues that addiction is not a disease, nor is it limited to alcohol or to drugs - it can include, for instance food, shopping and sex. He maintains that addiction is a pattern of dysfunctional behaviour and experience that is best understood by examining an individual's relationship with his or her world. Rather than a disease, it is a manifestation of lack of skills for coping with life ? a lack that can...
Former Alcoholics from Ayrshire in Scotland Welcome American Addiction Expert Stanton Peele's New Book on Recovery