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by Marilyn Shannon

  • ISBN: 0926412094
  • Category: Medical Books
  • Author: Marilyn Shannon
  • Subcategory: Medicine
  • Other formats: mbr rtf docx rtf
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: Couple to Couple League (1991)
  • Pages: 204 pages
  • FB2 size: 1846 kb
  • EPUB size: 1304 kb
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 510
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Fertility Cycles & Nutrition was the best of the ten. In her book, Marilyn Shannon lays out a plan of nutrition and supplementation to follow for four months promising pregnancy at the end of those four months.

Fertility Cycles & Nutrition was the best of the ten. I followed her plan precisely. The last of those four months, I went to a homeopath, and was prescribed the remedy of Angus Castus (Vitex).

Fertility, Cycles & Nutrition book. Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read

Fertility, Cycles & Nutrition book. Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Naturally! as Want to Read: Want to Read saving.

Fertility, Cycles and Nutrition: Self Care for Improved Cycles and Fertility. Never mind the fact that this kind of diet has caused reproductive problems in a whole generation of educated health food enthusiasts

Published by Thriftbooks. com User, 17 years ago. Let me start by saying that I am 39 years old and expect to deliver my first child a few days before my 40th birthday!I give this partly to Marilyn Shannon. I was unwilling to do synthetic fertility treatment, and a bit discouraged (sometimes very discouraged) because of my age at the chances of getting pregnant.

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Fertility, Cycles and Nutrition: How Your Diet Affects. Author:Paul M. Insel. Book Binding:Hardback. Each month we recycle over . million books, saving over 12,500 tonnes of books a year from going straight into landfill sites

Fertility, Cycles and Nutrition: How Your Diet Affects. by Shannon, Marilyn M. £. 0. million books, saving over 12,500 tonnes of books a year from going straight into landfill sites. All of our paper waste is recycled and turned into corrugated cardboard.

Marilyn M. Shannon, February 28, 1999 Diet, vitamins and minerals for improved fertility. Thyroid function can affect cycles and fertility; I refer to the work of Dr. Broda Barnes, who asserts that you may have low thyroid function even though your thyroid test probably came back normal. Nutritional boosts for the thyroid are included.

Vitamin supplement shop in Miami, Florida. And today when you get Cacao Bliss, they are including a free recipe book.

The most important decision a couple can make is to have a child. Vitamin supplement shop in Miami, Florida.

Menstrual Cycles and Fertility. Previous page Next page.

It gives me the right balance of vitamins and minerals I need. In addition to some Traditional Chinese Medicinal herbs prescribed by a practitioner, this has helped regulate my cycles, which were very irregular, and has restored energy and balance. I depend upon them now. I have only found them online, so they are a bit hard to come by.

Third Edition How your diet affects your menstrual cycles and fertility... Self help strategies for PMS, infertility, painful periods, premenopause, repeated miscarriages, irregular cycles, heavy bleeding, pregnancy, and male infertility.
Reviews about Fertility, Cycles & Nutrition (7):
Eta
Having struggled with infertility for two and a half years, I read aproximately ten books on the subject. Fertility Cycles & Nutrition was the best of the ten. In her book, Marilyn Shannon lays out a plan of nutrition and supplementation to follow for four months promising pregnancy at the end of those four months. I followed her plan precisely. The last of those four months, I went to a homeopath, and was prescribed the remedy of Angus Castus (Vitex). By the end of the fourth month, I was pregnant. I'm certain that the plan prepared my body for pregnancy. Placebo? Hope for conception was gone by the time I picked up Fertility Cycles & Nutrition -probably not.
I highly recommend this book and following her plan if you are struggling with the same issue. Hang in there, it's a tough road.
Marilyn Shannon, in the off chance that you read this review, I'd like to thank you for my daughter Frances (without your book, she wouldn't be part of our family). God bless you.
Brajind
This book has some interesting information on nutrition and fertility/cycles. It does stray from the topic a couple times though and focuses on proper ways to raise a child or gardening or other topics not totally related to fertility or cycles. But, I still found those sections interesting, even if not really on topic.

I think the book has good information for those who are having trouble with PMS, anovulation, heavy cycles, etc. But, I do think some of her vitamin recommendations are a bit extreme. One of the charts recommends more vitamin A than other sources I've read deem safe for pregnant women. But, the author has a master's in a nutrition related field and has had around 8 children (one of those was born to her close to age 50), so it seems she knows quite a bit about the topic. For people looking for other books related to fertility and cycles, I highly recommend Taking Charge of Your Fertility by Toni Weschler.
Uafrmaine
by following the suggestions in this book, i have been able to overcome my PMS and dysmenorrhea. this book also motivated me to eat healthier and exercise regularly even though i am not overweight. most of all, marilyn shannon actually convinced me to cut down drastically on my consumption of chocolate and other sweets! what a difference all this has made: no more headaches! no more afternoon slumps! more energy! a smaller waistline! the information in this book is definitely NOT common knowledge. the author is pro-life and has some extreme beliefs (for instance, that masturbation is immoral), but this should not detract from the wealth of information and knowledge that this book offers. the index is one of the most detailed i've ever encountered. there are numeours typos and the design & lay-out could be much improved. nevertheless, i give it five stars. it is an excellent complement to toni weschler's "taking charge of your fertility", because shannon gives more detailed explanations for irregularities in temperature, cervical fluid, and luteal phase. the ultimate good news: on my last visit to the obgyne, she confirmed that i was ovulating again!
TheMoonix
I love this book because it explains how nutrition plays an important part in fertility. I let my friend borrow it and she must have loved it because she didn't return it. My friend had trouble with her cycles and the book also explains how men's fertility can be effected by nutrition. I plan to buy another one.
Cordaron
very outdated information would not recommend
Orevise
I was really impressed with the information in this book. I do not agree with some of the "moral issues" but I do understand that it is a Catholic author, coming from that point of view.

I wish that it would have been a little more detailed or more in depth about some of the issues discussed, but I was pleased with all of the general topics covered, including fertility issues with men.
Tantil
I found this book to contain some good information, some of it not available in other fertility books I've read. Its biggest drawback is probably its length- it's about 140 pages, and much of that space is spent discussing general nutrition, as well as more controversial topics such as fertility and night lighting. I would therefore recommend it as a supplement to a more comprehensive book, not as the only book to buy. Women who experience PMS, irregularity or menstruation problems will find some good help in this book and should probably buy it.
This book is written by a Catholic author and published by the Couple to Couple league, so it takes a Catholic view on many issues. Those who cannot tolerate Catholic thought might not enjoy this book for that reason, as is evident from a few of the reviews below. However, the book does *not* discuss any issue that is not directly related to fertility and/or nutrition. It will therefore be very useful to anyone interested in these topics, Catholic or not.
This book provides some very very useful information.

I found the tone to be a real turnoff though...seemed overly newagey and preachy.

I preferred to use it as a reference and basically skim it for the info I needed. I read certain sections that applied to what I was observing in my cycle more closely. I also applied a lot of my own common sense to her recommendations. I erred on the side of taking the supplements she recommends in the lower dosages since I have a very small frame.

I would recommend this sort of book and any other book that approaches fertility naturally to be read with "Taking Charge of Your Fertility". I believe that you really need to chart your cycle to see exactly where things are going amiss.

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