Thursday, January 15, 2009

The Power behind Your Eyes or Partial View

The Power behind Your Eyes: Improving Your Eyesight with Integrated Vision Therapy

Author: Robert Michael Kaplan

Good vision is more than the ability to see 20/20 on an eye chart. Any vision problem is a message alerting us to an unbalanced inner state. Eyeglasses, medications, and surgery may correct poor vision but they cannot correct this inner imbalance. In The Power Behind Your Eyes, Robert-Michael Kaplan presents Integrated Vision Therapy a comprehensive daily program that can actually improve as well as treat the inner causes of poor vision. More comprehensive than other vision care techniques, Integrated Vision Therapy takes a holistic approach to identifying the causes of vision problems and developing noninvasive, natural strategies for treatment, including clear, easy-to-follow exercises, diets, and changes in daily habits. 



Table of Contents:

Power Behind Your Eyes
Improving Your Eyesight with Integrated Vision Therapy

Foreword
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Doorway to Vision
Chapter 2: Opening the Door to the Brain
Chapter 3: Focusing Your Mind
Chapter 4: What Do You Want?
Chapter 5: The Challenge to Be Clear
Chapter 6: What You Say I What You See!
Chapter 7: Your Secret Purpose
Chapter 8: Renewing Your Vision
Chapter 9: Life's Opportunities
Chapter 10: Living Your Daily Vision
Appendix: The Essential Integrated Vision Therapy Program
Bibliography
Resources
Additional Programs and Services 

The author of Seeing Without Glasses, Dr. Robert-Michael Kaplan, O.D., M.Ed., has spent 22 years exploring the frontiers of vision healing in his research and private practice. Trained both in optometry and in the Tibetan Dur Bon healing tradition, he combines both Eastern and Western medical philosophies in his Integrated Vision Therapy. Dr. Kaplan lives in Gibsons, British Columbia.

New interesting textbook: Scripting Recipes for Second Life or Call to Action

Partial View: An Alzheimer's Journal

Author: Cary Smith Henderson

In 1985 Cary Henderson, a history professor, learned he had Alzheimer's disease. Frustrated by his failing memory and his physical inability to write, he began to use a tape recorder. The recorder became his confidant and his means for reaching out to communicate not only with his family but also with others afflicted with the disease. In describing his narrowing world, Cary hoped to help other Alzheimer's patients and their caregivers cope with and understand the disease.



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