Healing with Organic RN

Healing with Organic RN Holistic solutions for health, wellness and youth renewal. Start Your Healing Path here! Shipped all over. Drug-free and affordable too.

My passion is teaching the many ways to begin achieving extraordinary health! I utilize many avenues to assist you:
-Heavy Metal Detoxification, Epstein-Barr and Shingles Virus clearing using Medical Medium's Protocols with Healing Foods, Supplements and awareness.
- Discounted highest quality Vimergy supplements for Anit-Viral, anti-Strep protocols. Contact me for details outside No America.

— LifeWave independent distributor. Use your body’s reflected light to ACTIVATE STEM CELLS to help almost any ailment! Order: www.lifewave.com/OrganicRn/ Read synopsis www.organicRn.com/lifewave

I offer these effective products:

--IntelliBED safe, non-toxic sleep, made in UT; 10%+ discount using code "ORGANIC RN" see video www.sleepexposed.com

--Tribest Juicers, dehydrator, vacuum blender, self watering sprouter
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— IQ Air purifiers

06/03/2026
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06/03/2026

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06/01/2026
05/29/2026

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DAILY MICRO HABITSThe biggest factor determining where you will be five years from now isn't your intelligence, your con...
05/25/2026

DAILY MICRO HABITS

The biggest factor determining where you will be five years from now isn't your intelligence, your connections, or your opportunities. It's the tiny, almost invisible things you do or don't do every single day. Not the dramatic decisions or the New Year resolutions — the micro habits. The ones that take under 5 minutes and feel almost too small to matter. Science keeps proving the same thing: small, consistent actions don't just add up, they compound. Here are 20 of them:

1. 10 Seconds of Sunlight — The moment you wake up, get natural light into your eyes within the first 30 minutes. Research shows this anchors your entire biological clock, regulates cortisol, and stabilizes your energy throughout the day. Even 10 seconds by a window helps. Just stop reaching for your phone first.

2. The Two Glass Rule — After 6 to 8 hours of sleep your brain is dehydrated, and even mild dehydration reduces cognitive performance and increases fatigue. Before coffee, before email, before anything — drink two glasses of water. The habit takes 45 seconds and creates a measurable shift in alertness within minutes.

3. One-Line Journaling — You don't need a full journal practice to get the psychological benefits of reflection. Research on expressive writing shows that brief daily writing reduces stress, boosts immune function, and improves mental clarity. One sentence is enough — a thought, something you noticed, or a feeling from the day before.

4. The Visualization Minute — Before your day fully starts, spend 60 seconds imagining it going well. When you vividly picture performing an action, the same neural pathways fire as when you actually do it. Olympic athletes have used this for decades, and studies show that people who visualize practice improve nearly as much as those who physically practice.

5. The Intention Statement — Write down or say out loud one specific thing you want to accomplish today. Research on implementation intentions shows that people who state a clear intention are two to three times more likely to follow through. Vague goals create vague results. Your brain responds to precision.

6. The Two-Minute Startup — Procrastination is not a character flaw — it is a neurological response to perceived difficulty. Your brain predicts discomfort and avoids it. The fix: tell yourself you will only work on a task for 2 minutes. Starting reduces the psychological resistance to continuing, and most of the time you won't stop at 2 minutes.

7. Single Tasking Windows — Multitasking doesn't exist. What your brain actually does is rapidly switch between tasks, and each switch costs cognitive energy. Studies show it takes an average of 23 minutes to fully regain focus after an interruption. Commit to one 25-minute single-focus block per day. The depth you access in that window will outperform hours of scattered effort.

8. The Two Breath Buffer — Before checking any notification or social media, take two slow, deep breaths. This micro pause activates the prefrontal cortex — the rational decision-making center — instead of the reactive amygdala. You will send fewer messages you regret and feel far less hijacked by your phone.

9. The "And Then What" Chain — Before any significant decision, ask yourself "And then what?" — then ask it two more times. This forces you to think three to four steps ahead instead of one. Research shows that people who connect present behavior to future outcomes make dramatically better decisions. Three questions in 30 seconds could save you months of backtracking.

10. Movement Snacks — Your body was not designed to sit for eight hours. Breaking up sedentary time with even 90 seconds of movement restores blood flow to the brain, reduces cortisol, and resets focus. Every hour, stand up, do 10 squats, walk to the window, or stretch. You're not exercising — you're maintaining the biological conditions your brain needs to function.

11. The One Genuine Compliment — Every day, give one real, specific compliment to another person. Research on the positivity ratio shows that expressing genuine appreciation boosts the giver's mood, strengthens social bonds, and creates upward spirals of positive emotion. Your brain also begins scanning for good things rather than defaulting to criticism.

12. Use Their Name — In every meaningful conversation, use the other person's name once naturally. Hearing your own name activates the brain's self-referential processing regions. People feel more seen and more connected to you when you use their name. It costs nothing but changes everything.

13. The Assumption Check — Once a day, catch yourself assuming you know what someone else is thinking and ask instead. A 2021 meta-analysis confirmed that we dramatically overestimate our ability to read others' emotions. Most relationship friction isn't caused by what happened — it's caused by the story we invented about it. One real question prevents that.

14. The Gratitude Anchor — Attach one moment of gratitude to something you already do every day — making coffee, brushing your teeth, sitting at your desk. In that moment, name one specific thing you are grateful for. Research shows gratitude activates the medial prefrontal cortex and measurably reduces anxiety and depression over time.

15. Micro-Kindness — Look for one small opportunity to help someone today. Hold the door, send a short encouraging message, help carry something. Research shows performing small acts of kindness meaningfully boosts the giver's happiness levels — sometimes more than receiving kindness. You're not just being a good person; you're literally improving your own well-being.

16. The Cold 30 — At the end of your shower, turn the water to cold for 30 seconds. Research shows cold water exposure increases alertness, reduces inflammation, and triggers the release of norepinephrine, a neurotransmitter linked to focus and resilience. The deeper benefit is psychological — you're practicing voluntary discomfort and proving to yourself every day that you can do hard things.

17. Five Pages a Day — Reading five pages takes about 10 minutes. Over the course of a year, that's 15 to 20 books — putting you in the top 5% of knowledge consumers in almost any field. Research on reading is extensive: it builds vocabulary, improves working memory, increases empathy, and reduces cognitive decline. You don't need an hour. Just five pages.

18. The Weekly Reset — Once a week, spend 20 minutes reviewing what's coming, clearing your space, and capturing any unfinished thoughts onto paper. Research on the Zeigarnik effect shows that unfinished tasks create low-grade mental tension that drains cognitive resources. Writing them down turns off that background noise. A weekly reset is not productivity theater — it is mental hygiene.

19. The Bedtime Cue — Pick one small action that signals to your brain it's time to wind down — making tea, dimming the lights, putting your phone in another room. Do it at the same time every night. Consistent sleep cues improve both sleep onset and sleep quality, which in turn consolidates memory, clears metabolic waste from the brain, and restores emotional regulation.

20. Never Hit Zero — This is the meta-habit that holds all the others together. Whatever happens, on whatever kind of day it is, don't let any key habit hit absolute zero. Not zero words written, not zero minutes moved, not zero pages read. On your worst days, do the minimum — one push-up, one sentence, one page. It's not about the output. It's about telling your brain "this is who I am."
None of these habits takes more than 10 minutes. Most take less than two.

Don't try to implement all 20 at once — pick two or three, do them for a week, then add one more. Transformation doesn't happen in one decision. It happens in the quiet decisions you make every single day until one day it obviously has. Start small. Start today. Don't stop. 💡
—Author unknown

05/24/2026
Non-organic strawberries have been found to have 12 different Forever chemicals as pesticides in them. These can wreak h...
05/24/2026

Non-organic strawberries have been found to have 12 different Forever chemicals as pesticides in them. These can wreak havoc with your health.
Check out info about Organic produce below. Know what you are consuming and the body burning it creates.

Not all pesticides are equal. Learn what separates organic from conventional and the facts on organic pesticides.

This is very interesting for people on a carnivore diet or those who eat processed meats like bacon, ham, and hotdog. Pr...
05/22/2026

This is very interesting for people on a carnivore diet or those who eat processed meats like bacon, ham, and hotdog. Protect yourself with vitamin C after a meal.!

If you eat bacon, ham, salami, or hot dogs, this is for you.

A new paper published last week in the Journal of Theoretical Biology mapped out what actually happens in your stomach when you eat processed meat, and offers something practical you can do about it.

Cured meats contain sodium nitrite, added as a preservative and to fix the pink color. In your stomach, that nitrite meets stomach acid and turns into a reactive form. That reactive form attacks proteins from the meal and produces a class of compounds called nitrosamines. NDMA, NDEA, and NMBA are the most studied. They are the same compounds that triggered the FDA recalls of valsartan, ranitidine, and metformin in recent years. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies them as probable human carcinogens, and they are a leading hypothesis for why processed meat consumption tracks with elevated risk of stomach and colorectal cancer in large epidemiologic studies.

Vitamin C disarms this reaction. It converts the reactive nitrite compound back into nitric oxide, which is harmless and diffuses away. This chemistry has been known since the 1970s, which is why the meat industry already adds ascorbic acid during processing. The question is whether you can do anything on your end, after the meat is already in your gut. That is what the new model addressed.

McNicol, Basu, and Layton at the University of Waterloo built a mathematical model that tracks how nitrite, vitamin C, and the resulting chemistry move through saliva, stomach, and intestine over the hours after a meal. They ran simulations across realistic dietary patterns and found two things.

First, when vitamin C is naturally present in the meal, as it is in leafy greens and most fruits and vegetables, the protective effect is substantial. The vitamin C is right there when the chemistry happens. This is likely why dietary nitrate from vegetables does not track with cancer risk the way nitrite from processed meats does.

Second, for meals where vitamin C is not naturally present, like a bacon sandwich or a charcuterie board, taking vitamin C after the meal produced a moderate predicted reduction in nitrosamine formation. Not transformative. Measurable.

A few important things to know. This is a modeling study, not a clinical trial. The model is calibrated against decades of published chemistry, but no trial has yet measured nitrosamine biomarkers in people randomized to take vitamin C after meals versus placebo. Treat the predicted effect as a reasonable hypothesis backed by mechanism, not as proven outcome.

Practical version. If you regularly eat vegetables with your meals, the vitamin C is already there and you are doing most of the work. If you eat cured meats without vegetables in the same sitting, taking 200 to 500 mg of vitamin C with water 30 to 60 minutes after the meal has a defensible mechanistic basis and a modest predicted effect. The dose matters less than the timing. Above about 200 mg in a single oral dose, absorption efficiency drops sharply, so megadoses are not the answer.

The bigger idea is that a meal is a chemical environment you can shape. The same food can be a problem or a non-event depending on what else is in the gut at the same time, and when.

McNicol et al., J Theor Biol, 2026
Tannenbaum & Wishnok, Am J Clin Nutr, 1991
Hord, Tang & Bryan, Am J Clin Nutr, 2009

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