My dad was 46 when he died. He dropped dead in a shop as he was collecting a suit from a gentleman's outfitter. He was far from home where he used to live with us. Mum and dad separated a few years before. He moved for work and found lodgings with a landlady that cooked for him and did his washing.
Why such an early death? I believe it was because of his unhealthy lifestyle, and his attitude towards life in general. He denied his kids a family life. He thought his main role was to go to work, earn the money, hand over some of it to his wife, and spend the rest of it down the pub with his mates. Me and my siblings missed out on what a real family is supposed to be. He came home drunk and we listened to the rows from our bedrooms. My mum had to double up as both mother and father to us.
Smoking sixty Capstans a day and downing many pints of beer every night was not a good recipe for a long life. It caught up with him.
Looking after your health has got to be priority, unless of course if you want to take risks with eating rubbish food, and boozing until your brain is reduced to a pulp, you may well find that eventually your body gives up. Anyone with addictions would do well to get help.
Sick people are a godsend to Big Pharma, the drug pushers as I call them. They are happy when people trash their health and go to the doctor for medicine to cure whatever ailment they have through their unhealthy habits. Don't worry, there will be a pill to put things right, with a big fat payout to their shareholders.
A lot of food is poison and should never be eaten. There should be health warnings on it. Eat this crap and you will be one step closer to death. Another bottle of vodka and your liver will be pickled. And now they are working on synthetic shit produced in a lab. Just say no.
Dr Aseem Malhotra says in this video, 'You can't drug people into being healthy'. He made this speech before the plandemic. Watch the video and read the comments.
"Most medical research is financed by pharma companies: this creates a conflict of interest whereby many studies & clinical trials are intentionally designed to make drugs look good by exaggerating benefits, & ignoring side effects, even when severe."
I look after an elderly neighbour who takes a huge amount of medications. I have witnessed doctors talking to her and they never ask about her diet (it's appalling). She recently called the GP about diarrhea and he proscribed anti-diarrhea tablets without a single question.
Mainstream overmedication needs mainstream media coverage, but almost never gets it. Sad to see, but not nearly as sad as seeing loved ones struggle with pills to “fix” the side effects of the other pill.
Looking like I can get back out into the garden. The sun is shining.
We'll catch up soon. Toodle pip. ilona