Full Story
“We have marked on our own bodies what it means to live a life with symptoms of allergies, eczema, hormonal imbalance, low energy, cancer, worries, and therefore we want to help as many people as possible to increase their quality of life, just as we improve our lives with simple dietary changes.
Our motivation really stems from when my mother fell ill with cancer, and we had to take the bull by the horns to get her through the process as well as possible. She was lucky to have Lene Hansson at her side, who had a slightly different insight and knowledge about the curative and preventive effects of the diet. My mother followed some simple dietary advice that actually helped her maintain her energy levels because they were purifying - and that way she got rid of all the waste and radiation stored in her cells.
The crazy thing about it was that we actually lived very healthy, since my mother is a trained exercise and health coach. But through the advice she received, we found that there were some pretty wild effects on the other side of some small adjustments in one's everyday life. It rests on a more holistic approach to health, which focuses on prevention more than on symptom management. Because you treat symptoms when you don't get to the core of the problem - and that's why symptoms will continue to appear. So in that way, my mother's outlook on health changed, and thus also our lifestyle in our family. We thought we lived healthy, but soon realized that you need to pay close attention to your body, as this way you can prevent a lot of discomfort.
Although we benefit from paying attention to the body, it must be remembered that it is also not good to become hysterical about health in everyday life. After all, we hope that healthy lifestyle will become a natural part of our lifestyle, rather than a discipline we practice as a kind of sport. Don't worry, because it's all connected.
In the modern world, everything is going strong, and we are met with a lot of demands from the outside world. Some of those demands are simply not healthy for us to try to comply with. As we try to navigate what is good for us and what is not, we are so used to being in the hamster wheel that we have not noticed that we have come off balance. If there is one thing that is important in preventing disease, it is that we are in contact with our bodies. When there is so much we have to decide on and so, we often end up living in our heads. You can probably nod in recognition that from the morning you have all the chores and plans running around, trying to get it all in the 24 hours of the day. That is, before you even get to work, then the brain is already in full employment. When most of us get to work, it is also a sedentary job, which means that our work requires full focus - and thus we end up in our heads most of the day, if we are not good at landing in our bodies after work.
It is therefore no wonder that we see an increasing tendency towards illness and mental distress when there is a preponderance of stress on our brains and an underemphasis on the physically stimulating activities that promote both physiological as well as neurological health and well-being.
Our main message is probably that it should all be seen as an investment in quality of life and longevity: what you put in it is also what you get back. It's all connected. The life we live requires that we compensate for the many disease-promoting activities that have become part of the norm of reality in our society.
Our environment is therefore paramount to our health and our health: both in the long AND the short lane.Life is not to wait - you must live WITH your intuition and not AGAINST your intuition. We simply need to become better at listening to our body's signals, and we do that by getting down into the body and into the present moment.
As Thomas Helmig says “life is great, but we live too little” - and we will do away with that.
You only have one life and one body to experience it with - therefore the symptoms must also be lived away, with a long-term life rearrangement.”