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what program is bestMarch 3 2007 at 10:28 AM | Joanne (no login) |
| Hi,
I am on a commercial product (so far no results but have only been on it for a week).
Currently I take BareSucess and one multivitamin tablet a day along with one cup of green tea. I also massage once a day during the week with coco butter and twice a day on the weekend.
I am looking for the best program. From looking at a number of programs there are so many individual herbs to buy, can you really easily purchase all these herbs?
It must cost people a fortune, anyway I am willing to pay if I get the right program but would prefer to just purchase teas or herbs as I do not have the time for 3 massages a day as i spend 4 hrs a day on the train going to work and back.
Any advice appreciated. I am a 10B for reference. |
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| Author | Reply |
 Molly H (Login MollyH) EVE MEMBERS | Re: what program is best | March 4 2007, 6:47 PM |
Most of the things mentioned here are common herbs which can be found very easily. There are a few which are harder to find, but most of them are popular herbs which you shouldn't find it difficult to get (it does depend what country you're in though, as some countries don't seem to have many herbs on sale). |
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Moon (Login -Moon-) SENIOR MEMBER | Re: what program is best | March 4 2007, 8:10 PM |
A custom routine is always cheeper than a commercial product. If it wasn't like that, why would manufacturers make and sale their products? |
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Solitaire (Login solitairian) SENIOR MEMBER | Re: what program is best | March 4 2007, 9:38 PM |
There is an obvious weakness in your argument, which is that someone following a custom routine also has to buy commercial products to make up that routine (unless they grow the herbs in their own garden). After all, if those products were not commercial, why would any manufacturer make and sell them? |
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Anonymous (Login sophie9) | Re: what program is best | March 4 2007, 9:53 PM |
solitaire,
i don't think it is a problem in an "argument," but just a semantical misunderstanding. anything being sold is a commercial item, but commercial also takes on the meaning of large-scale industry for exploitation of profit. a lot of the companies they refer to are ones that sell an herbal concoction in pill form that plays on the emotions of the prospective buyer with a promise to give them the breasts they've always wanted. of course an herb manufacturer expects a profit, but they are not promises on the scale of these companies, and the herbs may be advertised individually as promoting breast growth, but they may not, or they may also advertise the herb for its other known properties. everyone wants to make a profit, but there is a difference in ethics that constitutes the distiction between commerical and "commercial." so there is no need to crouch in your garden and till fennel. |
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