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Five Days to Alkaline: Day One — How to Go Green, the EASY Way for All-Day Energy!

Welcome to my new free course, Five Days to Alkaline, a five-day video training course on the core of getting alkaline. It teaches you, not the basics, but the most important actions that will give you the biggest benefits, easily.

Each day, for the next five days, I will email you each lesson – in the order that makes it easiest for you to consume. Each lesson is a bite-sized chunk, but it’s the core fundamentals – the easiest steps you can take that will give you the biggest impact.

It’s the 20% of actions that will give you 80% of the benefit.

Live Energized and my way of teaching is all about making it as easy, enjoyable and achievable to get to your best ever health & body – and the energy you deserve!

In this first lesson, I take you through the most important thing you can do to get the biggest possible impact on your health & energy.

PLUS I show you the actual, implementable steps you can start to do TODAY for big results.

Alkaline Diet Recipe Book Banner

Day One Downloads:

➞ Dressing Recipes: Mint & Coriander Dressing & 3-Ingredient Alkaline Caesar Dressing (YUM)

➞ Juice Recipes: Powerhouse Alkaline Green Juice & Big Bad Green Juice

➞ Green Smoothie Recipes: Anti-Inflammatory Green Smoothie & Anti-Oxidant Green Smoothie

➞ Liquid Chlorophyll Supplements: Nature’s Sunshine Liquid Chlorophyll & Young pHorever Liquid ChloropHeal

➞ More Reading: The Health Benefits of Liquid Chlorophyll & How to Get 7 Serves of Greens a Day

Research, References & Scientific Literature

  • Spinach as a powerful antioxidant: Manach C, Scalbert A, Morand C, Rémésy C, Jiménez L. Polyphenols: food sources and bioavailability. Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 May;79(5):727-47. 2004. PMID:15113710.
  • Spinach intake and ovarian cancer reduction: Gates MA, Tworoger SS, Hecht JL, De Vivo I, Rosner B, Hankinson SE. A prospective study of dietary flavonoid intake and incidence of epithelial ovarian cancer. Int J Cancer. 2007 Apr 30; [Epub ahead of print] 2007. PMID:17471564.
  • Spinach intake and breast cancer: M P Longnecker, P A Newcomb, R Mittendorf, E R Greenberg and W C Willett. Intake of carrots, spinach, and supplements containing vitamin A in relation to risk of breast cancer. 1997. American Association for Cancer Research.
  • Spinach and reversing motor and neuronal aging: James A. Joseph1, Barbara Shukitt-Hale1, Natalia A. Denisova1,Donna Bielinski1, Antonio Martin1, John J. McEwen1, and Paula C. Bickford. Reversals of Age-Related Declines in Neuronal Signal Transduction, Cognitive, and Motor Behavioral Deficits with Blueberry, Spinach, or Strawberry Dietary Supplementation. 1999. The Journal of Neuroscience.
  • Ambrosone CB, Tang L. Cruciferous vegetable intake and cancer prevention: role of nutrigenetics. Cancer Prev Res (Phila Pa). 2009 Apr;2(4):298-300. 2009.
  • Angeloni C, Leoncini E, Malaguti M, et al. Modulation of phase II enzymes by sulforaphane: implications for its cardioprotective potential. J Agric Food Chem. 2009 Jun 24;57(12):5615-22. 2009.
  • Bhattacharya A, Tang L, Li Y, et al. Inhibition of bladder cancer development by allyl isothiocyanate. Carcinogenesis. 2010 Feb;31(2):281-6. 2010
  • Higdon JV, Delage B, Williams DE, et al. Cruciferous Vegetables and Human Cancer Risk: Epidemiologic Evidence and Mechanistic Basis. Pharmacol Res. 2007 March; 55(3): 224-236. 2007.
  • Zhang Y. Allyl isothiocyanate as a cancer chemopreventive phytochemical. Mol Nutr Food Res. 2010 Jan;54(1):127-35. 2010.
  • Kugler F, Stintzing FC, and Carle R. Identification of Betalains from Petioles of Differently Colored Swiss Chard (Beta vulgaris L. ssp. cicla [L.] Alef. Cv. Bright Lights) by High-Performance Liquid Chromatography−Electrospray Ion. J. Agric. Food Chem., 2004, 52 (10), pp 2975-2981. 2004.
  • Pyoa YH, Lee TC, Logendrac L et al. Antioxidant activity and phenolic compounds of Swiss chard (Beta vulgaris subspecies cycla) extracts. Food Chemistry Volume 85, Issue 1, March 2004, pages 19-26. 2004.
  • Lashinger, L. M., Ford, N. A., & Hursting, S. D. (2014). Interacting Inflammatory and Growth Factor Signals Underlie the Obesity-Cancer Link. The Journal of Nutrition, 144(2), 109-113.
  • Licinio, J., & Wong, M. L. (1999). The role of inflammatory mediators in the biology of major depression: central nervous system cytokines modulate the biological substrate of depressive symptoms, regulate stress-responsive systems, and contribute to neurotoxicity and neuroprotection. Mol Psychiatry, 4(4), 317-327.
  • Maroon JC, Bost JW. (2006) Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil) as an anti-inflammatory: an alternative to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for discogenic pain. Surg Neurol. 2006 Apr;65(4):326-31.