Discover the secret laws of attraction – one day seminar in London

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London: Internationally acclaimed Master Certified Coach and bestselling author, Talane Miedaner, knows the secrets to becoming a magnet to success – attracting the relationships, money and opportunities that you
want without even trying!

Find out at the SECRET LAWS OF ATTRACTION ONE DAY EVENT TAKING PLACE AT THE RITZ HTEL, LONDON ON SATURDAY 4TH OCTOBER.

Miedaner’s approach draws on two powerful truths about human nature: “If you don’t NEED it, you are more likely to attract it” and “like attracts like.”

Her famous 7-step program shows how to stop struggling and start going with the flow, how to expand your willingness to have your emotional needs fulfilled, how to orient your life around your core values and passions, how to indulge in excellent self-care and how to become effortlessly successful.

These advanced life coaching techniques will help you reach your goals and attract whatever your heart desires – effortlessly. The old way of reaching goals was to create a strategy with a timeline and specific action steps.
This works for some, yet Talane stresses “why not have a notion of what you want and then have what you want ‘magically’ appear? Once you learn how to effortlessly attract the opportunities and relationships you desire, you will have no wish to achieve these the hard way! It’s time to learn how to structure your life so you can be irresistibly attractive to whatever you desire!”

THE 7-STEP PROGRAM TO INCREASE YOUR POWER TO ATTRACT:

1. Increase your natural energy
2. Make the space
3. Identify and fulfil your emotional needs
4. Orient you life around your passions and values
5. Clarify what you really really want
6. Indulge in excellent self-care
7. Leverage the natural Laws of Attraction

Based on the Principles of Attraction:

v Like attracts like
v If you don’t need it, you are more likely to attract it
v The present really is perfect
v It’s all good, even the bad stuff
v You can have whatever you allow yourself to have .. and more!

The Secret Laws of Attraction One Day Seminar in London costs £250.00 which includes a copy of the book, The Secret Laws of Attraction and luncheon.

Places can be booked on line at www.uklifecoach.comor by calling 01395-271061. The timings for the day are 9am-4:30pm with book signing to follow. Delegates will be able to ask Talane any questions.

About Talane Miedaner

The Secret Laws of Attraction is led by Talane Miedaner, Master Certified Coach, founder of www.lifecoach.com and www.uklifecoach.com and international bestselling author of Coach Yourself to Success – 101 tips for reaching your goals at work and in life, McGraw-Hill.. A leader in the cutting-edge field of personal coaching, Talane is a sought-after international speaker and coaches executives of Fortune 500 companies, entrepreneurs and business owners around the world. She is also author of the audio program: Irresistible Attraction: a way of life and The Secret Laws of Attraction: the effortless way to get the relationship you want is published by McGraw-Hill.

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Older women are happier than men

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London: UK scientists who questioned nearly 9,800 people over the age of 50 about their lives and found women were more optimistic than men.

Wealth also helps you live longer with the poorest people more than twice as likely to die at any given age than the richest, researchers at University College London discovered.

Report co-author Dr Elizabeth Breeze said that women could become happier as they get older as they no longer have to worry about looking after their families.
She said: “There is a difference between the way men and women view their quality of life and they are influenced by slightly different things.”

“Women are affected negatively by caring for someone else or if they are not in employment but if they see their children and family more they are positively affected.”

Examples might be actresses Meryl Streep, 59, Helen Mirren, 62, and Judi Dench, 72.

Last year, Mirren said: “A weird thing happens to male actors, especially movie stars, in my experience.

“They become grumpy old men. A young male actor feels that all the girls want him – he’s a star. As actors get older that sense of not being in control of their destiny grates on them and they get grumpy.”

Researchers interviewed people born before 1952 at two year intervals.

They found that the poorest fifth of the population were over twice as likely to have died by 2008 as those in the wealthiest fifth.

In some age groups, the difference was even greater with the poorest women between 60 and 74 six times more likely to have died than the richest women of the same age.

According to the study, you have more chance of living longer if you are married, educated to degree level and a professional.

Single people are twice as likely to die early as those who are married or living with a partner.

The study found that exercise increases life expectancy with the physically inactive twice as likely to die before those keeping fit.

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Is 100 the new 80?

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Centenarians have become the fastest-growing demographic in Australia, creating a new boom generation of sprightly golden oldies.

At last count, 3154 Australians are currently aged 100 or older, with one-third of them from New South Wales.

But the latest forecasts estimate this will spiral to 12,000 by 2020 and 50,000 by 2050, according to new research published in the Medical Journal of Australia.

This will also mean more “super-centenarians” aged 110 or older, as well as more “semi-super-centenarians”, from 105 to 109.

Shattering the stereotype of immobile elderly people, more than half of the centenarians live in their own homes rather than in care homes.

Women are far more likely to reach 100, accounting for 75 per cent of the total, but male centenarians tend to be healthier, more independent and are far less likely to suffer from Alzehimer’s or dementia.

The study, by Professor Robyn Richmond, a NSW University public health expert, found Australia has one of the highest proportion of centenarians.

Japan, with more than 30,000 centenarians, has traditionally been associated with longevity but, according to Prof Richmond’s study, only Norway, Sardinia (Italy) and the US have a similar rate of over-100s to Australia.

Professor Richmond attributed the rising longevity to improved survival from diseases and improving health and lifestyles for the elderly.

“Many Australians are unaware of how many centenarians there are and how little we know about them,” she said. “It is amazing that these extremely enduring old people, whose lives carry a wealth of history, are living among us – and yet we appear to have largely ignored their effect on our society.”

She called for targeted government policies to address the social, medical and financial impact of living to 100 years and beyond.

“The consequences of the demographic transition need investigation by health policy-makers and economists,” she said.

“We need a better understanding of changes in disability prevalence, in order to make estimates of the likely short- and long-term cost implications.”

Declining fertility rates, with low population growth in younger age groups, also helped make centenarians the fastest-growing group.

Over 25 years, centenarian numbers have grown by 8.5 per cent a year.

In comparison, the number of children has grown by a meagre 0.3 per cent. Even the elderly population, aged between 80 and 99, has risen by only 4.9 per cent over the same period, the report showed.

Statins may be new weapon against Alzheimer’s

Seattle: The family of anti-cholesterol drugs called statins and taken by millions around the world, can protect against Alzheimer’s disease, according to new research.

An examination of brain tissue has provided the first direct evidence that statins – taken to prevent heart disease and strokes – can also ward off dementia and memory loss. The study is published in the American Journal of Neurology.

The new findings s come from a study of 110 brains – donated for medical research – at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle. The researchers led by Dr Gail Li examined the brains for changes linked to Alzheimer’s -including the creation of ‘plaques’ and ‘tangles’ made from the protein called beta amyloid.

These changes appear in the brain long before any symptoms of dementia develop. Eventually, they damage enough brain cells to trigger confusion, memory loss and eventually death. The researchers found far fewer tangles in the brains of people who had taken statins, compared to those who had not.

The findings were true even after age, sex and the history of strokes were taken into account. This is the first study to compare the brains of people who took statins with those who did not.

Dr Eric Larson, study co-author said: “These results are exciting, novel and have important implications for prevention strategies.”

Statins work by blocking the action of a chemical in the liver which is needed to make the ‘bad’ form of cholesterol, LDL. Reducing levels of bad cholesterol keeps blood vessels unclogged.

The researchers are not sure how statins also prevent the buildup of protein tangles in the brain. They suspect that a healthy flow of blood is a key factor.

Another study, five year’s ago at Boston University found that statins may cut the risk of Alzheimer’s by as much as 79 per cent, even in people with a family history of the disease. Some small- scale studies have found an apparent link between statins and cancer and Parkinson’s disease. Other studies, however, suggest that the drugs can ease the pain of rheumatoid arthritis.