Subject: ~Alyssa Milano Committed For Postpartum Anxiety?

“I read Over-The-Counter Natural Cures Expanded last May after
downloading the 3-Step Sugar Detox from Shane's website. Since then, I have
weaned off my antidepressant meds that I'd taken for almost 30 years and
weaned myself off blood pressure meds that I'd taken for over 20. I feel
better than I have in years!”

This mom made it out alive.

Most don't.

Moms are the biggest target for meds courtesy of labeling them with
"mental illness." And celebrities like Alyssa Milano who push this,
"I have a mental disorder" agenda, are unknowingly part of the scam.

(Their script is ALWAYS the same!)

When I worked for the drug giant as a young chemist, Prozac (fluoxetine)
was being marketed to moms and everyone else as a “happy pill.” Eli
Lilly developed it in the 1970s. Newsweek hailed it as “a breakthrough
drug for depression.”

Sales raked in enough profit to solve world hunger for a hundred years. I
thought it was ridiculous. “Breakthrough” for depression?

“Is it going to be better than Mountain Dew and oatmeal cream pies when
it comes to taking the edge off a depressing day?” I wondered. What about
beer or wine? Heck, will it beat a thickly rolled joint from a
Volkswagen-loving hippie? What about party drugs? My college roommates
were happy on those. Nobody called ’em a “breakthrough,” just awesome.
Why would we need antidepressants?

There’s no question that postpartum brings suffering! A dad of 4, my
wife and I have seen the biological phenomenon first hand! It's a part of life,
not an illness. And when you know this, you can treat it naturally as
outlined in www.bestcurebook.com!

Depression can make life feel unbearable, crippling willpower,
productivity, and responsibility. It can cause physical symptoms such as
fatigue, decreased appetite, and pain. But are prescription drugs really the
answer to this problem?

Fortunately, I didn’t have to try antidepressants to know they weren’t
going to help, because in-house studies proved they didn’t work. Astute
doctors followed the research trail as well. In Your Drug May Be Your
Problem, Harvard-trained psychiatrist Peter Breggin, MD, showed that
antidepressants were no more effective than dummy (sugar) pills in his
clinical trials. To his dismay, he also discovered that antidepressants can
actually push depressed people further over the edge.

Furthermore, a landmark review published in 2009 in the Journal of the
American Medical Association found that, in many cases, antidepres- sants
are no better than placebos at halting depression. Those results were
duplicated the following year. And Harvard scientists concluded through
their own studies that “the difference between the effect of a placebo
and the effect of an antidepressant is minimal for most people.”

In response, Big Pharma buried the detrimental findings in an avalanche of
false advertising. This marketing triumph played out like the tobacco
conspiracy and was well documented in David Healy’s Let Them Eat Prozac:
The Unhealthy Relationship between the Pharmaceutical Industry and
Depression. Yet antidepressant sales are still soaring.

When you walk into a doctor’s office in the United States, you’re more
likely to be prescribed an antidepressant than any other drug. Since the
late ’80s, their use has skyrocketed almost 400 percent. Today, one in
ten Americans is on some type of antidepressant.

This swell in prescribing habits is driven by the theory of a chemical
imbalance, which antidepressants aim to correct. Psychiatrists believe
that depressed people have brain chemicals that are disproportionate to one
another—as if the brain is somehow low in happy neurotransmitters and
high in stressful ones. This theory was born from the imagination of
doctors in the 1950s. But the science isn’t there. Marcia Angell, MD,
former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, wrote that “after
decades trying to prove [the chemical imbalance theory], researchers have
still come up empty-handed.”

The cause of depression is hotly contested in the medical community, and
there’s no blood test or medical exam to diagnose it. This shouldn’t
detract from the suffering depression brings.

Headaches, airsickness, and even being homesick or having a broken
heart lack reliable blood tests, too. But we know they’re real and have
physical outcomes than can make life unbearable. Relying on the
unproven chemical-imbalance theory is an atrocity. The fact is, depression
is hard to treat. Emotions, after all, are not diseases. So if you don’t know
the enemy, how can you fight the war?

If the ineffectiveness of antidepressants doesn’t deter you, perhaps
antidepressants’ side effects will. According to the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), antidepressants can cause suicidal thoughts and
behavior, worsening depression, anxiety, panic attacks, insomnia, irrita-
bility, hostility, impulsivity, aggression, psychotic episodes, and
violence. Physical side effects include abnormal bleeding, birth defects,
heart attack, seizures, and sudden death. More than one hundred and seventy
drug regulatory warnings and studies have been issued on antidepressants
to sound the alarm about these side effects!

Meanwhile, the warnings go ignored in the media.

Want to escape being labeled and the meds that go with it?

Learn how to use nature's hidden alternatives with Over-The-Counter
Natural Cures Expanded at www.bestcurebook.com

Dare to live young,

The People's Chemist

P.S. My latest book, 3 Worst Meds is on sale at Amazon! Get it with
Over-The-Counter Natural Cures Expanded at www.amazon.com