
Dear,
What if you could lose 6-14lbs in a week without even thinking about it?
How about 62lbs in just a few short months without strict dieting or vigorous exercise?
Well, that's exactly what a group of women and men were recently able to do in a groundbreaking Italian diet study.
The lucky volunteers were granted exclusive access to test this new weight loss nutrient.
And here's the crazy thing...
The study participants ate normally, keeping foods they loved and not having to diet.
They worked out lightly...with brisk walks or other moderate exercise just 3 times a week, and were never in the gym.
In the end, their transformations were staggering.
They reported results like...
- 14lbs of weight loss in 8 days
- 62lbs of weight loss in a matter of months
- 30.1 pounds of AVERAGE fat loss across 50 participants (some lost much more!)
- 10-14% average fat percentage reduction
- Lower blood pressure and blood sugar readings
- Dramatically increased energy levels
- Over 94% success rate (almost everyone in the study group lost weight)
==> Rare 'super-nutrient' could end obesity by 2019
Barton Rogers
Weight Management Team
PS: If you find you’re losing more than a pound a day for over 2 weeks, it might be time to taper back the dose a bit.
There were two methods of playing in ancient times. The first, and probably the primitive method, consisted in tossing up and catching the bones on the back of the hand, very much as the game is played today.
In ancient Rome, it was called tali (knucklebones): a painting excavated from Pompeii, currently housed in the National Archaeological Museum of Naples, depicts the goddesses Latona, Niobe, Phoebe, Aglaia and Hileaera, with the last two being engaged in playing a game of knucklebones. According to an epigram of Asclepiodotus, astragali were given as prizes to schoolchildren. This simple form of the game was generally only played by women and children, and was called penta litha or five-stones. There were several varieties of this game besides the usual toss and catch; one 
being called tropa, or hole-game, the object of which was to toss the bones into a hole in the earth. Another was the simple game of odd or even. A 1734 Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin painting depicting a girl playing knucklebones
The second, probably derivative, form of the game was one of pure chance, the stones being thrown upon a table, either from the hand or from a cup, and the values of the sides upon which they fell were counted. The shape of the pastern bones used for astragaloi as well as for the tali of the Romans, with whom knucklebones was also popular, determined the manner of counting. Pastern bones
The pastern bone of a sheep, goat, or calf has two rounded ends upon which it cannot stand and two broad and two narrow sides, one of each pair being concave and one convex. The convex narrow side, called chios or "the dog", was counted as 1, the convex broad side as 3, the concave broad side as 4, and the concave narrow side as 6.


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