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Tuesday, November 27, 2018 - 11:45am
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Book shows how to live the ‘Five Laws of Love’ and find greater joy and peace in life

Dr. Judith Stay Moore weaves a tale of diverse cultures, religions and beliefs, and show how to grow in unity and love

 

MIDWAY, Utah — In her medical practice, Dr. Judith Stay Moore has dealt with a lot of people with chronic illness which is often worsened by traumatic or emotional issues.  She relays that many times relationships are fractured, the patient is living in a lot of anxiety related to past trauma, and often there is much fear about the divisiveness among families, religions, sexes, sexual orientation, politics, etc. Moore wrote “The Five Laws of Love: Enriching the Love Within” (published by Balboa Press) to assist people through the trauma and fear in their lives by learning how to heal their hearts.

 

Moore takes the reader on an emotional journey with a Hopi girl and her brother from the mesas of northern Arizona to the Pueblo de Los Angeles. Moore weaves a tale of diverse cultures, religions and beliefs while the characters learn through their experiences how to increase in love, forgiveness, joy and gratitude.

 

In the book, Moore offers a juxtaposition of memoir, fiction, psychology and religion to show that “there is more about each of us that is the same than that which is different.” Adding that, “By following the principles in this book, we learn to see the ways in which we are all the same and celebrate the differences rather than divide ourselves because of them.”

 

Moore includes five guided meditations which can be downloaded. In essence, the book shows to readers how to live the “Five Laws of Love” and change their fear, depression and worry to peace and love.

 

“The Five Laws of Love: Enriching the Love Within”

By Dr. Judith Stay Moore

Hardcover | 6x9 in | 280 pages | ISBN 9781982213480

Softcover | 6x9 in | 280 pages | ISBN 9781982213466

E-Book | 280 pages | ISBN 9781982213473

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

 

About the Author

Dr. Judith Stay Moore lives in a log cabin called Shiver Me Timbers in the mountains above the small mountain village of Midway, Utah, in the Heber Valley. She is an osteopathic physician and medical director of the Diamond Spring Wellness Center in Midway. She specializes in treating chronic and difficult cases, looking for the cause rather than simply treating the symptoms. She treats both physical and emotional illness, as she feels the mind and spirit affect the body and vice versa. Moore is a mother to seven children, grandmother to 20, and great-grandmother to one at the time of this writing, and she expects her prosperity to continue to grow both in numbers and in love.

 

Balboa Press, a division of Hay House, Inc. – a leading provider in publishing products that specialize in self-help and the mind, body, and spirit genres. Through an alliance with indie book publishing leader Author Solutions, LLC, authors benefit from the leadership of Hay House Publishing and the speed-to-market advantages of the self-publishing model. For more information, visit balboapress.com. To start publishing your book with Balboa Press, call 877-407-4847 today. For the latest, follow @balboapress on Twitter.

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3 Reasons To Avoid – Or Delay –

Knee-Replacement Surgery

 

Hitting your 50s or 60s can bring several life changes, and increasingly those include artificial joints. For much of the aging U.S. population, knees in particular are wearing out.

 

More than 600,000 knee replacements are performed annually in the U.S., according to The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. That number is expected to swell to 3 million by the year 2030, the publication’s study reported, partly because people are working longer and obesity is on the rise.

 

But while knee replacements are becoming a popular elective surgery, some studies estimate 20 percent or more of recipients aren’t pleased with the result. Medical experts question whether replacement surgery is being done too soon – or whether some people need a new knee at all.

 

“Surgery should only be done as a last resort,” says Dr. Victor Romano (www.romanomd.com), an orthopedist and author of Finding The Source: Maximizing Your Results – With and Without Orthopaedic Surgery. “A knee replacement can be life-changing, but they can also be painful, wear down prematurely and become infected.

 

“If you have debilitating pain and difficulty walking because of degenerative arthritis, surgery may be your best option no matter your age. Otherwise, there are sound reasons to avoid a knee replacement, or at least to postpone it until a more appropriate time.”

 

Romano says there are three main reasons to avoid or put off knee replacement surgery:

  • Plastic debris. A total knee replacement consists of metal moving on plastic. The plastic wears down over time, and that can be a pain – physically and financially – to patients who may have to get the prosthesis replaced once, twice or more. “The plastic debris accumulates in the knee joint,” Romano says. “The more active you are, the heavier you are, the more debris. The white cells, which attack foreign invaders, start attacking the surrounding bone. When it’s time to replace the plastic joint, we also have to replace the bone – and that’s a significant and unpleasant surgery.”

  • A prosthesis doesn’t last 30 years. This is a key reason why Romano thinks younger replacement candidates should wait as long as possible. “A total joint replacement in a 70-year-old patient will typically last 15 years,” Romano says. “With the average life expectancy being 85, chances are this would be the only knee replacement that patient would need. But for a 40-year-old who’s more active, it may only last 10 years. And remember, recovery is challenging. So it’s better to wait for technology to catch up. As it does, the better the knee replacements will be.”

  • Other remedies may work. Many people experiencing chronic knee pain are overweight or obese. “A healthy diet and exercise program can bring the weight down and take pressure off the knees,” Romano says. “Also, a hinged knee brace, supplements that aid in repairing worn cartilage, and injections such as cortisone or hyaluronic acid could reduce pain and restore quality of life.”

“There are ways to at least buy time,” Romano says. “And there are patients who were told they needed a knee replacement, but with conservative therapy options, happily discovered otherwise and returned to their favorite activities without pain.”

 

About Dr. Victor Romano

Dr. Victor Romano (www.romanomd.com) is an orthopedic surgeon in Oak Park, Ill.,

and the author of Finding The Source: Maximizing Your Results – With and Without

Orthopaedic Surgery. He is board-certified in orthopedics and sports medicine with

over 25 years of experience in the field. He graduated cum laude from the University of

Notre Dame and completed medical school at the University of Loyola-Chicago.

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Dear Friends of Torrey House Press,

It’s #GivingTuesday, and we need your help to publish eight books in 2019, including a monkeywrenching mystery based in Arches National Park (Arches Enemy by Scott Graham, June 2019) and an in-depth look at oases, natural and faux, in the West (The Oasis This Time by Rebecca Lawton, March 2019). Your donation will help us bring these books to the page.

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With gratitude, 
The Torrey House Team

 

 

 

Enjoy exclusive behind-the-book interviews with Rebecca Lawton and Scott Graham: