The Value of Being Healthy
Among the forerunners today when it comes towards the important aspects of living is that of being fully aware of the various diseases and illnesses about health. There are a lot of new illnesses cropping up in the world today and most of them can be found over the web and this is something that affordable search engine optimization can very much help in. A lot of them come up with a single key in of the words through an individual’s favorite search engine and the top optimized sites will always be heading the list of site containing pertinent information for it.
Not all sites may be able to provide the necessary information for the health or illness topic requested. However, among the top results from a simple search query, it will surely be something that can provide a gist or an overview of what to expect. In summary, these returned results will most likely return the same info, only differing when it comes to depth of needed information.


















November 12, 2007 at 8:28 am
Guide To Staying Healthy For Life
As a child, I was nice, funny, and fat. And that combination made me perhaps the most vulnerable kid my age I knew. I had been both accepted (invited to parties and sporting events in friends’ backyards) and rejected (picked last on teams, called “fatso” as I played) by my peers.
So thrilled I was for having been invited to anything AT ALL considering my appearance, I found myself berated, in public, even by my closest of “friends.” One time in seventh grade an older boy decided to call me fat the whole way home on the bus. As I waited for my stop, hiding in my seat, embarrassed, and afraid I might cry, I hoped that my best friend, seated right behind me would jump up to my defense. Instead, he jumped up and ripped on me as well, having obviously decided that being friends with the other, older, thinner boy would do more for him socially than I could. And since I had made it clear to my friends that I would come back for more, he didn’t really risk losing my friendship at all.
And then I grew up. I placed limits on how others could treat me. I lost some weight, but was still heavy, but disallowed anyone from thinking I was less than them. Suddenly, my sense of humor and kindness made me among the more popular kids in school. As for my “close friend” on the bus, I explained that once he “walked away from me, he could keep on walking.”
Being fat isn’t a crime, and it doesn’t make you gross. But you can’t make anyone think more of you, or treat you the way you deserve to be treated, until you think more of you, and treat yourself with the respect you hope for from other people.
March 20, 2008 at 4:44 am
Hey man ,seems you have stolen my story(lol),Me too had a same problem.
In my childhood days,i feel very shy to talk to people because of my fat body and everyone likes to tease me.But now am very slim. I lost my weight with the proper guidance and positive attitude.