Alcoholism Treatment Recovery Rehabilitation
You Are About To Learn
The Most Controversial…
…And The Most Effective
Alcohol Addiction Treatment
Ever Invented!
I know your time is valuable, so I’ll get straight to the point:
This is not your traditional information on alcohol addiction or another 12 step program like Alcoholics Anonymous.
If you’re looking for an EASY, LOWER COST alternative to traditional addiction therapy you’ve found the right site.
This site can teach you something VERY different. Something VERY powerful.
But before you go further, I give you this warning: This isn’t like other addiction recovery websites.
On this site you’ll find a method that will release your addiction. Period.
With knowledge comes Personal Responsibility without excuses…
So…why haven’t you changed?
Because most of us just aren’t ready to give up their addictions…if you are ready keep reading…
There are only four causes of all addiction…You have one or more of the following:
1. A chemical imbalance in your brain;
2. Unresolved events from your past;
3. Beliefs you hold, from your past, that are inconsistent with what is true;
4. An inability (because of 1-3) to cope with the current conditions of your life.
Notice I didn’t list genetics as a cause….Why?
There are millions of people (including me) whose parents/grandparents were addicts or alcoholics, yet they are not. Either they do not use alcohol at all, or they can use alcohol socially without abusing themselves with it, or becoming dependent.
Bottom line…Genetics play a minor role.
OK, so let’s get to the point…
You may have read the surveys asking WHAT MOST MEN THINK about addiction counseling…
It just doesn’t work.
Most men ARE RIGHT…
Is it because counseling can be “Wasted Time and Energy”?…
A form of “Emotional Masturbation”?
The Real Reason May Surprise You…
and, by the way, it isn’t due to EGO, which is WHAT SOME WOMEN BELIEVE…
The REAL REASON is:
“SUBCONSIOUSLY we men suffering with addiction FEEL ASHAMED by the possibility that WE COULD BE WEAK FAILURES.”
We men are problem solvers by nature.
Yet, most of us seeking change are resistant to counseling because we don’t believe in it.
If we problem-solving-men believed counseling would really work for us, we would seek it.
This is further reinforced by the fact that, at some point in time, all men seek and receive specialized knowledge and advice from a coach, professor, teacher, authority, spiritual figure, seminar presenter, etc.
So why our resistance to counseling? Male, problem-solving Intuition.
Years ago, a behavioral study unearthed a shocking discovery about traditional counseling methods.
Many of those who enrolled in traditional counseling methods for addictions, compulsions, infidelity, relationship issues or other unwanted behaviors and/or thinking took longer to recover than those who didn’t!
There may be a variety of reasons that contribute to this, yet the most important is this:
We adults forget 90% of what’s ever happened to us. Through our childhood filters, we deem 10% ‘Important enough to remember’ and the rest is ‘lost’ to our subconscious.
This means, at best, most traditional counseling methods only have access to 10% of our significant information.
The unresolved core issues existing in our other 90% remain LOCKED AWAY, indelibly recorded in our brain…below our conscious awareness. More on this at:
http://www.TheLiberatorMethod.com
The Principle of Real Estate applies…”LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION!”
You must LOCATE and ‘OWN’ (identify) the problem in order to FIX IT long term.
Dr. Erik Erikson, the famous psychologist (1902-1994) who proposed “The Eight Psychosocial Stages of Human Development”,
…found that unresolved childhood developmental tasks “leave a life-long residue of emotional immaturity.”
Bottom line…
Your original, immature, unidentified subconscious issues are controlling your behaviors—
A form of hypnotically induced ENCODING AND PROGRAMMING that continues to predetermine your future and your path.
In an attempt to fix your problem—these subconscious
emotional immaturities—
traditional counseling gets you in touch with your feelings…an experience that can be very difficult for men to embrace.
And although expressing your feelings is beneficial and feels good, without locating the root issue, like your addiction, it only provides a temporary “fix”.
In fact, I’ve known women who I’d call ‘counseling junkies’.
Traditional counseling can leave 90% of your issue untouched. This is why clients remain in traditional counseling for 18 months on average…
On top of this memory statistic, addictive behaviors are learned automatic responses to triggers.
This type of triggered learning was first explained by Russian Physician, Dr. Ivan Pavlov, and nicknamed named “Pavlov’s Law”.
Pavlov tested ringing a bell while simultaneously presenting dogs with food. Before long, the dogs ‘learned’ to salivate to the sound of the bell, without the food. The bell became a ‘trigger’ for the response of salivation.
Addictions have triggers just like the bell. On the 10% conscious level they don’t seem to make reasonable sense. The reasons lie in the 90%.
Obviously if a form of counseling worked and made logical sense, without taking years to complete, men would be more enthusiastic.
So, what’s the solution?
Scientists have shown that if you touch a precise location on the brain with an electrode, the memory stored in this location, and all the feelings associated with this memory, will surface.
Do you see what I see in this study?
If we could ‘touch’ the forgotten 90% of our traumatic, childhood memories locked deep in our subconscious…WE COULD SEE AND QUICKLY FIX THE ROOT CAUSE OF OUR BEHAVIORS (including troubled thinking)…no longer being endlessly controlled by the ‘personal bells’ that TRIGGER our addictive behaviors.
I am reminded of my favorite DEFINITION OF INSANITY:
Doing the same thing over and over, yet expecting a different outcome.
Talk about a WASTE OF TIME!
OK…ARE YOU WITH ME? Let me summarize…
I’m saying that your alcohol problem is NOT due to your having the “Disease” of alcoholism or addiction.
Neither addiction nor alcoholism are diseases, but… merely symptoms of a different type of dis-“EASE” caused by one or more of the four causes above…
That once the causes have been discovered and healed, your addictive behaviors—your dependency on, or abuse of yourself with—drugs, or alcohol will end; permanently. PERIOD!
No relapse
So, it is crucial to you that you ‘heal’ those underlying Root Causes because until you do, you are going to continue to misuse drugs or alcohol.
My name is Taz,
And I am about to DIRECT YOU TO EXPERIENCE the most profound and influential knowledge about alcohol addiction known to man.
As “extreme” as that sounds, it is VERY true. Pay close attention.
Here’s the deal:
Human Behavior has never been a fascination for me. It’s been an Obsession.
For years I researched how to improve my behavior to be the best I could be…
…and although therapy is a valid part of our culture, and thousands of books have been written on the subject, it was TOO SLOW and TOO COSTLY for me…
I’m not talking about “that” kind of therapy.
I’m talking about the kind of instant change that I heard about with hypnosis, such as:
- Losing 50 lbs in 6 MONTHS
- Ending Depression
- Relieving Anxiety
- Smoking Cessation, etc.
However, as I continued to research these amazing results, I soon learned that:
Even clinical hypnosis wasn’t effect on certain addictions like alcohol and drugs long term.
WHY?
Because removing the symptom doesn’t remove the root subconscious issue.
The core issue morphs into another form—a new symptom!
- For example, a person quits smoking through hypnosis and then gains 30 LBS.
Still intrigued, I imagined what it would be like to access this ‘super power’ of alcohol addiction release, if possible…
…but most of what I found ‘out there’ was useless for my ‘inner struggles’.
I had reached a point in my search where 99% of the info I found was regurgitated old information…the books, manuals and audio programs I purchased didn’t hold my interest.
They were too long, too complicated, and too much work—OR they just didn’t offer the RESULTS I WANTED.
They even TOLD ME that WHAT I WANTED WASN’T POSSIBLE!
For example: AA and SAA (and other 12 Step Programs)
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Sex Addiction Anonymous (SAA) are hugely popular programs with, in my opinion, less than successful results (about a 5% remission rate).
I’m not here to bash AA—or any other 12 step-program. I acknowledge the value of these programs.
At the same time, I found several problems that I could not come to terms with.
1-The successful remission rate of people who independently quit an addiction is the same as SAA and AA…5%. This success rate was not high enough for me.
2-The necessity of believing in a higher power greater than myself in order to heal left me to assume that atheists would necessarily be excluded from this program. This conditional requirement results in excluding those who do not share a belief in a higher power. I was seeking a program that believes in me, as I am. I was not willing to accept conditions.
3-The statement “Hi I’m Taz and I’m an alcoholic” or (sex addict) did not feel entirely true to me. As a matter of fact, it felt downright disempowering.
The truth for me is this:
I come from a family of alcohol addiction, and although it is true that in the past (even if my past was yesterday) I have experienced myself as an alcoholic, this is NOT WHO I AM.
I Will Not Tell myself that I AM, AND ALWAYS WILL BE, SOMETHING THAT I AM NOT.
What I wanted was to acknowledge the truth of my past experience, access my own power, and then CHANGE MY FUTURE EXPERIENCE. I wanted to be able to drink alcohol in moderation—without abusing it, myself, or anyone else around me in the process.
Ditto all these for any addiction
Another example: Pastoral Counseling
My attempts to dominate, control, or overrule my behavior with SELF DISCIPLINE or SHEER WIILLPOWER, even with God’s help, didn’t work long term. Why?
They didn’t address my bottom line, subconscious issue…
…and Shame and Guilt don’t work long-term.
At the end of my rope, I found what EXACTLY what I was looking for…
I found a subculture of practitioners—therapists devoted to inspire human behavior on a level I never knew existed—
A group combining and practicing clinical recovery treatment AND ‘core issue’ therapeutic healing methods…
LIFE CHANGING RESULTS were ‘normal’.
Their methods came from a totally new fresh perspective founded on the work of the famous Dr. Viktor Frankl.
In his book Man’s Search for Meaning, this ‘father of LOGOTHERAPY’ stated, “Between stimulus and response there is a space…
…In that space is the power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom”.
He would know about freedom and personal power…
He spent two years as an inmate in a Nazi Concentration Camp where many inhumane experiments were preformed on him.
What, exactly, is this Space he talks about?
It is the pause in time where we choose how we are going to respond to our stimulus.
Remember Pavlov’s dog? If we’ve become ‘Conditioned’ to salivate to a bell, we’ve inaccurately decided that the bell means food.
We’ve lost ‘control’ of our response. Our subconscious holds all sorts of these inaccurate decisions.
Now back to my point…
This group of practitioners also focused on hearing the deeper messages coming from this subconsciously closed Space—
the significant messages coming from the other 90% of your forgotten memories that have been LOCKED AWAY.
They spent very little time discussing symptoms.
One practitioner in this Select Group Stood Out.
Her name is ‘Rhonda Christensen’
Rhonda had unearthed and organized some VERY valuable and powerful information in her clinical therapy practice. http://theliberatormethod.com
She knows how to unlock your subconscious mind and re-open the space between your stimulus and response.
In that space she shows you the choice you’ve made that continues to bind you to your alcohol addiction.
For the first time, you get to consciously re-decide your issue.
She named her program The Liberator Method™.
Rhonda has written a series of articles entitled:
“THE 8 SECRETS YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS DOESN’T WANT YOU TO KNOW.”
You can get a copy of this emailed to you for FREE .
Rhonda looks like any other ‘normal’ person (you can see her on video)…
But when you talk with her you start to realize that there is something vastly different going on…
And I admit it:
At first I was as skeptical as they come—“I’ll believe it when I see it.”
Well, let me tell you this:
When I SAW IT, it totally moved me.
That’s the day I found out that THE LIBERATOR METHOD™ is real … this stuff she’s talking about is VERY real.
My Name Is TAZ, and
I Am NO LONGER Addicted to Alcohol!
Seriously…
I am a Raving Fan of this method!
Bottom line…
The information Rhonda offers is simply powerful. If you aren’t truly ready for change don’t tease yourself any longer…
The Liberator Method™ is only for people who are actively SEEKING knowledge.
What you’ll get from RHONDA is a treasure map to the mental caverns of your subconscious mind…
You’ll see how your very own personal “subliminal messages” are holding your behaviors in “play.”
EVERY TIME YOUR BELL RINGS…
This is the ‘real deal’.
If you feel afraid you can’t handle something this straight forward…I understand.
If you are NOT WILLING TO OPEN YOUR MIND…don’t waste another second reading.
For the rest of you, click below to view Rhonda’s website and get ready to remove the original programming that motivated your negative, unwanted behavior in the first place.
…AND by the way this method is completely effective over the phone. You don’t even need to leave your own home.
Eliminate the cause and watch your addiction fade away…
Seriously…call her.
I hope you find this info useful!
TAZ
The Liberator Method Official site:
http://www.TheLiberatorMethod.com
END>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
TOPICS: alcohol treatment, alcohol- Drug treatment, medication, alcohol abuse, alcohol rehab, drug addiction treatment, alcohol recovery, rehab centers, sober living, substance abuse centers, alcoholics, alcoholic symptoms, alcoholics pictures, how to help alcoholics, alcoholic behavior, effects of alcohol, am i an alcoholic? alcohol addiction, alcoholic statistics, alcoholics anonymous, rehabilitation, recovery, counseling, Alcoholism, Related searches: alcoholic symptoms, how to help alcoholics, alcoholic behavior, Alcohol and Health, Short-term effects of alcohol, Long-term effects of alcohol, Alcohol and cardiovascular disease, Alcoholic liver disease, Alcoholic hepatitis, Alcohol and cancer, Alcohol and weight, Fetal alcohol syndrome, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Alcoholism, Blackout (alcohol-related amnesia), Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome, Recommended maximum intake,
[edit] References and info:
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^ Blume Laura N., Nielson Nancy H., Riggs Joseph A., et all (1998). “Alcoholism and alcohol abuse among women: report of the council on scientific affairs”. Journal of women’s health 7 (7): 861–870.
^ Karrol Brad R. (2002). “women and alcohol use disorders: a review of important knowledge and its implications for social work practitioners”. Journal of social work 2 (3): 337–356. doi:1468-0173(200212)2:3;337-356;029430.
^ Karrol Brad R. (2002). “women and alcohol use disorders: a review of important knowledge and its implications for social work practitioners”. Journal of social work 2 (3): 337–356. doi:1468-0173(200212)2:3;337-356;029430.
^ Blume Laura N., Nielson Nancy H., Riggs Joseph A., et all (1998). “Alcoholism and alcohol abuse among women: report of the council on scientific affairs”. Journal of women’s health 7 (7): 861–870.
^ Karrol Brad R. (2002). “women and alcohol use disorders: a review of important knowledge and its implications for social work practitioners”. Journal of social work 2 (3): 337–356. doi:1468-0173(200212)2:3;337-356;029430.
^ Karrol Brad R. (2002). “women and alcohol use disorders: a review of important knowledge and its implications for social work practitioners”. Journal of social work 2 (3): 337–356. doi:1468-0173(200212)2:3;337-356;029430.
^ Karrol Brad R. (2002). “women and alcohol use disorders: a review of important knowledge and its implications for social work practitioners”. Journal of social work 2 (3): 337–356. doi:1468-0173(200212)2:3;337-356;029430.
^ CDC. (2004). Fetal Alcohol Syndrome: Guidelines for Referral and Diagnosis. Can be downloaded at http://www.cdc.gov/fas/faspub.htm
^ Streissguth, A. (1997). Fetal Alcohol Syndrome: A Guide for Families and Communities. Baltimore: Brookes Publishing. ISBN 1-55766-283-5.
^ “Global Status Report on Alcohol 2004″ (PDF). World Health Organization. http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/global_status_report_2004_overview.pdf. Retrieved on 3 January 2007.
^ “Economic cost of alcohol consumption”. World Health Organization Global Alcohol Database. http://www.who.int/globalatlas/dataQuery/objectInterface.asp?objID=359&boCat=&p=null&lvl=0&catID=520700000000&level=2. Retrieved on 3 January 2007.
^ “Q&A: The costs of alcohol”. BBC. 19 September 2003. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3122244.stm.
^ “World/Global Alcohol/Drink Consumption 2007″. http://www.finfacts.ie/Private/bestprice/alcoholdrinkconsumptionpriceseurope.htm.
^ “The World’s Drunks: The Irish”. http://clippednews.wordpress.com/2007/03/14/the-worlds-drunks-the-irish/.
^ Stivers, Richard (2000). Hair of the dog: Irish drinking and its American stereotype. London: Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-1218-1.
[edit] Further reading
Alasuutari, Pertti (1992). Desire and Craving: A Cultural Theory of Alcoholism. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791410978. OCLC 24107485.
Beauchamp, Dan E. (1980). Beyond Alcoholism: Alcohol and Public Health Policy. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press. ISBN 0877221898. OCLC 6355436.
Berry, Ralph E.; Boland James P. The Economic Cost of Alcohol Abuse The Free Press, New York, 1977 ISBN 0-02-903080-3
Browman, K. E. and J. C. Crabbe (2001, 2002). “Alcoholism: Genetic Aspects”. in Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. Amsterdam, The Netherlands; New York, NY: Elsevier. pp. 371–378. ISBN 0080430767.
Clark, Walter B. and Michael E. Hilton (1991). Alcohol in America: Drinking Practices and Problems. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791406954. OCLC 22494114.
Díaz, Héctor Luis and Thomas D. Watts (2005). Alcohol Abuse and Acculturation among Puerto Ricans in the United States: A Sociological Study. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 0773461051. OCLC 60311906.
Fingarette, Herbert (1988). Heavy Drinking: The Myth of Alcoholism as a Disease. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 0520062906. OCLC 16870623.
Galanter, Marc (2005). Alcohol Problems in Adolescents and Young Adults: Epidemiology, Neurobiology, Prevention, Treatment. New York, NY: Kluwer Academic/Plenum. ISBN 0306486253. OCLC 133155628 56653179 57724687 71290784.
Goodwin, Donald W. (2000). Alcoholism, the Facts (3rd edition ed.). Oxford, UK; New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 019263061X. OCLC 41834977 42622081 57339357 57621778 70861649.
Gusfield, Joseph R. (1996). Contested Meanings: The Construction of Alcohol Problems. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0299149307. OCLC 33281934.
Hedblom, Jack H. (2007). Last Call: Alcoholism and Recovery. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9780801886775. OCLC 237901552 77708730.
Helzer, John E. and Glorisa J. Canino (1992). Alcoholism in North America, Europe, and Asia. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195050908. OCLC 22813697 231433712.
Holder, Harold D. (1998). Alcohol and the Community: A Systems Approach to Prevention. Cambridge, UK; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521591872. OCLC 36900925 41499013 86004981.
Klingemann, Harald, Jukka-Pekka Takala, and Geoffrey Hunt (1992). Cure, Care, or Control: Alcoholism Treatment in Sixteen Countries. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791410595. OCLC 23971326.
Kunitz, Stephen J., Jerrold E. Levy, and Tracy J. Andrews (1994). Drinking Careers: A Twenty-Five-Year Study of Three Navajo Populations. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300060009. OCLC 30072175.
Lindstrom, Lars (1992). Managing Alcoholism: Matching Clients to Ttreatments. Oxford, UK; New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192619020. OCLC 185499265 24467909 26316175.
Mack, Avram H. John E. Franklin, and Richard J. Frances (2001). Concise Guide to Treatment of Alcoholism and Addictions (2nd edition ed.). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Pub.. ISBN 0880488034. OCLC 45500376.
Mayes, A. (2001, 2002). “Korsakoff’s Syndrome”. in Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. Amsterdam, The Netherlands; New York, NY: Elsevier. pp. 8162–8166. ISBN 0080430767.
Milam, Dr. James R. and Ketcham, Katherine Under The Influence: A Guide to the Myths and Realities of Alcoholism. Bantam, 1983, ISBN 0-553-27487-2
Moos, Rudolf H., John W Finney, and Ruth C Cronkite (1990). Alcoholism Treatment: Context, Process, and Outcome. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195043626. OCLC 20168177 231158156.
{{cite book
|last=Murphy |first=George E. |editor= |title=Suicide in Alcoholism |edition= |year=1992 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York, NY |isbn=0195071530 |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |oclc=243735768 24378872}
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Etiology and Natural History of Alcoholism.
O’Farrell, Timothy J. and William Fals-Stewart (2006). Behavioral Couples Therapy for Alcoholism and Drug Abuse. New York, NY: Guilford Press. ISBN 1593853246. OCLC 64336035.
O’Reilly, Edmund B. (1997). Sobering Tales: Narratives of Alcoholism and Recovery. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 1558490647. OCLC 34674872.
Pence, Gregory, “Kant on Whether Alcoholism is a Disease,” Ch. 2, The Elements of Bioethics, McGraw-Hill Books, 2007 ISBN 0-073-13277-2.
Perkinson, Robert R. (2004). Treating Alcoholism: Helping Your Clients find the Road to Recovery. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471658065. OCLC 54905506 56645146 70720151.
Plant, Martin A. and Moira Plant (2006). Binge Britain: Alcohol and the National Response. Oxford, UK; New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199299404. OCLC 238809013 64554668.
Royce, James E. and Scratchley, David Alcoholism and Other Drug Problems Free Press, March 1996 ISBN 0-684-82314-4 ISBN 978-0-684-82314-0
Saggers, Sherry and Dennis Gray (1998). Dealing with Alcohol: Indigenous Usage in Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Cambridge, UK; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521620325. OCLC 39033162.
Smart, Lesley (2007). Alcohol and Human Health. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199237357. OCLC 163616466.
Soyka, M. (2001, 2002). “Alcohol-Related Disorders”. in Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. Amsterdam, The Netherlands; New York, NY: Elsevier. pp. 359–365. ISBN 0080430767.
Stimmel, Barry (2002). Alcoholism, Drug Addiction, and the Road to Recovery: Life on the Edge. New York: Haworth Medical Press. ISBN 0789005530. OCLC 46575047 52287994 59502027.
Sutton, Philip M. (2007). “Alcoholism and Drug Abuse”. in Michael L. Coulter, Stephen M. Krason, Richard S. Myers, and Joseph A. Varacalli. Encyclopedia of Catholic Social Thought, Social Science, and Social Policy. Lanham, MD; Toronto, Canada; Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press. pp. 22–24. ISBN 9780810859067.
Thatcher, Richard (2004). Fighting Firewater Fictions: Moving beyond the Disease Model of Alcoholism in First Nations. Toronto, Canada; Buffalo, NY: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802089852. OCLC 55473625.
Tracy, Sarah W. (2005). Alcoholism in America: From Reconstruction to Prohibition. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801881196. OCLC 56876909.
Valliant, George E., The Natural History of Alcoholism Revisited, Harvard University Press, May 1995 ISBN 0-674-60378-8 ISBN 978-0-674-60378-3
Warren Thompson, MD, FACP. “Alcoholism.” Emedicine.com, June 6, 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-02.
Watts, Thomas D. and Roosevelt Wright, Jr. (1989). Alcoholism in Minority Populations. Springfield, IL: Thomas. ISBN 0398055416. OCLC 18557340.
Watts, Thomas D. and Roosevelt Wright, Jr. (1983). Black Alcoholism: Toward a Comprehensive Understanding. Springfield, IL: Thomas. ISBN 039804743X. OCLC 8627283.
Weinberg, Thomas S. (1994). Gay Men, Drinking, and Alcoholism. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0809318571. OCLC 29548188.
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Marie Minnesota (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Minnesota) • Bloomington • Duluth • Minneapolis • Minnetonka • Saint Paul • Port Huron Mississippi (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Mississippi) • Biloxi • Greenville • Jackson • Natchez • Tupelo • Vicksburg Missouri (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Missouri) • Cape Girardeau • Columbia • Hannibal • Jefferson City • Kansas City • Saint Joseph • Saint Louis • Springfield Montana (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Montana) • Anaconda • Billings • Bozeman • Butte • Great Falls • Helena • Missoula Nebraska (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Nebraska) • Lincoln • North Platte • Omaha Nevada (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Nevada) • Carson City • Fallon • Fernley • Gerlach • Las Vegas • Reno New Hampshire (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in New Hampshire) • Concord • Portsmouth New Jersey (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in New Jersey) • Asbury Park • Atlantic City • Camden • Hackensack • Jersey City • Newark • Passaic • Trenton New Mexico (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in New Mexico) • Alamogordo • Albuquerque • Clovis • Las Cruces • Los Alamos • Roswell • Santa Fe New York (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in New York) • Albany • Buffalo • Elmira • Lockport • New York City • Newburgh • Niagara Falls • Poughkeepsie • Rochester • Schenectady • Syracuse • Utica • Watertown • White Plains • Williamsburgh • Yonkers North Carolina (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in North Carolina) • Asheville • Cary • Charlotte • Durham • Fayetteville • Greensboro • Greenville • Raleigh • Wilmington • Winston-Salem North Dakota (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in North Dakota) • Bismarck • Fargo • Grand Forks • Mandan • Minot Northern Mariana Islands • Saipan Ohio (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Ohio) • Akron • Cincinnati • Cleveland • Columbus • Dayton • Kent • Steubenville • Toledo • Youngstown Oklahoma (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Oklahoma) • Oklahoma City • Stillwater • Tulsa Oregon (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Oregon) • Bend • The Dalles • Eugene • Klamath Falls • Medford • Portland • Salem Pennsylvania (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Pennsylvania) • Allentown • Altoona • Erie • Gettysburg • Harrisburg • Philadelphia • Pittsburgh • Reading • Scranton • York Puerto Rico (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Puerto Rico) • Aguadilla • Areceibo • Bayamon • Caguas • Carolina • Fajardo • Guánica • Guayanilla • Mayagüez • Ponce • Playa de Ponce • San Juan Rhode Island (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Rhode Island) • Newport • Pawtucket • Providence South Carolina (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in South Carolina) • Charleston • Columbia • Greenville • Spartanburg South Dakota (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in South Dakota) • Aberdeen • Pierre • Rapid City • Sioux City • Watertown Tennessee (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Tennessee) • Chattanooga • Clarksville • Franklin • Jackson • Knoxville • Memphis • Nashville • Oak Ridge Texas (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Texas) • Abilene • Amarillo • Austin • Baytown • Beaumont • Brownsville • Corpus Christi • Dallas • El Paso • Fort Worth • Galveston • Houston • Laredo • Lubbock • McAllen • Marshall • Nacogdoches • Port Arthur • San Antonio • Tyler • Waco United States Virgin Islands • Charlotte Animalie • Christiansted • Cruz Bay • Port Alucroix Utah (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Utah) • Ogden • Provo • Salt Lake City Vermont (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Vermont) • Burlington • Montpelier Virginia (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Virginia) (Note: Virginia uses the concept of the Independent city for most actual cities so some of these locations may be counties, towns, or place names rather than true ‘cities’.) • Alexandria • Arlington • Blacksburg • Charlottesville • Chesapeake • Fairfax • Fredericksburg • Hampton • Lexington • Lynchburg • Manassas • Newport News • Norfolk • Radford • Richmond • Roanoke • Stafford • Staunton • Suffolk • Tysons Corner • Virginia Beach • Williamsburg Washington (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Washington) • Aberdeen • Bremerton • Olympia • Richland • Seattle • Spokane • Tacoma • Walla Walla • Yakima West Virginia (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in West Virginia) • Charleston • Harper’s Ferry • Huntington • Martinsburg • Morgantown • Parkersburg • Weirton • Wheeling Wisconsin (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Wisconsin) • Eau Claire • Fond du Lac • Green Bay • La Crosse • Madison • Milwaukee • Oshkosh • Racine • Wausau Wyoming (for a more exhaustive list, see List of cities in Wyoming) • Casper • Cheyenne • Jackson Hole • Laramie • Rock Springs Cities by population U.S. cities with a population greater than 100,000 (according to the 2000 U.S. Census) 1. New York, New York – 8,008,278 2. Los Angeles, California – 3,694,820 3. Chicago, Illinois – 2,896,016 4. Houston, Texas – 1,953,631 5. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – 1,517,550 6. Phoenix, Arizona – 1,321,045 7. San Diego, California – 1,223,400 8. Dallas, Texas – 1,188,580 9. San Antonio, Texas – 1,144,646 10. Detroit, Michigan – 951,270 11. San Jose, California – 894,943 12. Indianapolis, Indiana – 791,926 13. San Francisco, California – 776,733 14. Jacksonville, Florida – 735,617 15. Columbus, Ohio – 711,470 16. Austin, Texas – 656,562 17. Baltimore, Maryland – 651,154 18. Memphis, Tennessee – 650,100 19. Milwaukee, Wisconsin – 596,974 20. Boston, Massachusetts – 589,141 21. Washington, DC – 572,059 22. Nashville-Davidson, Tennessee – 569,891 23. El Paso, Texas – 563,662 24. Seattle, Washington – 563,374 25. Denver, Colorado – 554,636 26. Charlotte, North Carolina – 540,828 27. Fort Worth, Texas – 534,694 28. Portland, Oregon – 529,121 29. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma – 506,132 30. Tucson, Arizona – 486,699 31. New Orleans, Louisiana – 484,674 32. Las Vegas, Nevada – 478,434 33. Cleveland, Ohio – 478,403 34. Long Beach, California – 461,522 35. Albuquerque, New Mexico – 448,607 36. Kansas City, Missouri – 441,545 37. Fresno, California – 427,652 38. Virginia Beach, Virginia – 425,257 39. San Juan, Puerto Rico – 421,958 40. Atlanta, Georgia – 416,474 41. Sacramento, California – 407,018 42. Oakland, California – 399,484 43. Mesa, Arizona – 396,375 44. Tulsa, Oklahoma – 393,049 45. Omaha, Nebraska – 390,007 46. Minneapolis, Minnesota – 382,618 47. Honolulu, Hawaii – 371,657 48. Miami, Florida – 362,470, 49. Colorado Springs, Colorado – 360,890 50. Saint Louis, Missouri – 348,189 51. Wichita, Kansas – 344,284 52. Santa Ana, California – 337,977 53. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – 334,563 54. Arlington, Texas – 332,969 55. Cincinnati, Ohio – 331,285 56. Anaheim, California – 328,014 57. Toledo, Ohio – 313,619 58. Tampa, Florida – 303,447 59. Buffalo, New York – 292,648 60. Saint Paul, Minnesota – 287,151 61. Corpus Christi, Texas – 277,454 62. Aurora, Colorado – 276,393 63. Raleigh, North Carolina – 276,093 64. Newark, New Jersey – 273,546 65. Lexington-Fayette, Kentucky – 260,512 66. Anchorage, Alaska – 260,283 67. Louisville, Kentucky – 256,231 68. Riverside, California – 255,166 69. Saint Petersburg, Florida – 248,232 70. Bakersfield, California – 247,057 71. Stockton, California – 243,771 72. Birmingham, Alabama – 242,820 73. Jersey City, New Jersey – 240,055 74. Norfolk, Virginia – 234,403, 75. Baton Rouge, Louisiana – 227,818 76. Hialeah, Florida – 226,419, 77. Lincoln, Nebraska – 225,581 78. Greensboro, North Carolina – 223,891 79. Plano, Texas – 222,030 80. Rochester, New York – 219,773 81. Glendale, Arizona – 218,812 82. Akron, Ohio – 217,074 83. Garland, Texas – 215,768 84. Madison, Wisconsin – 208,054 85. Fort Wayne, Indiana – 205,727 86. Bayamon, Puerto Rico – 203,499 87. Scottsdale, Arizona – 202,705 88. Fremont, California – 203,413 89. Montgomery, Alabama – 201,568 90. Shreveport, Louisiana – 200,145 91. Augusta, Georgia – 199,775 92. Lubbock, Texas – 199,564 93. Chesapeake, Virginia – 199,184 94. Mobile, Alabama – 198,915 95. Des Moines, Iowa – 198,682 96. Grand Rapids, Michigan – 197,800 97. Richmond, Virginia – 197,790, 98. Yonkers, New York – 196,086 99. Spokane, Washington – 195,629, 100. Glendale, California – 194,973 101. Tacoma, Washington – 193,556, 102. Irving, Texas – 191,615 103. Huntington Beach, California – 189,594 104. Modesto, California – 188,856 105. Durham, North Carolina – 187,035 106. Columbus, Georgia – 186,291 107. Orlando, Florida – 185,951, 108. Boise City, Idaho – 185,787 109. Winston-Salem, North Carolina – 185,776 110. San Bernardino, California – 185,401 111. Jackson, Mississippi – 184,256 112. Little Rock, Arkansas – 183,133 113. Salt Lake City, Utah – 181,743 114. Reno, Nevada – 180,480 115. Newport News, Virginia – 180,150 116. Chandler, Arizona – 176,581 117. Laredo, Texas – 176,576 118. Henderson, Nevada – 175,381 119. Knoxville, Tennessee – 173,890 120. Amarillo, Texas – 173,627 121. Providence, Rhode Island – 173,618 122. Chula Vista, California – 173,556 123. Worcester, Massachusetts – 172,648 124. Oxnard, California – 170,358 125. Carolina, Puerto Rico – 168,164 126. Dayton, Ohio – 166,179 127. Garden Grove, California – 165,196 128. Oceanside, California – 161,029 129. Tempe, Arizona – 158,625 130. Huntsville, Alabama – 158,216 131. Ontario, California – 158,007 132. Chattanooga, Tennessee – 155,554 133. Ponce, Puerto Rico – 155,038 134. Fort Lauderdale, Florida – 152,397 135. Springfield, Massachusetts – 152,082 136. Springfield, Missouri – 151,580 137. Santa Clarita, California – 151,088 138. Salinas, California – 151,060 139. Tallahassee, Florida – 150,624 140. Rockford, Illinois – 150,115 141. Pomona, California – 149,473 142. Paterson, New Jersey – 149,222 143. Overland Park, Kansas – 149,080 144. Santa Rosa, California – 147,595 145. Syracuse, New York – 147,306 146. Kansas City, Kansas – 146,866 147. Hampton, Virginia – 146,437 148. Lakewood, Colorado – 144,126 149. Vancouver, Washington – 143,560 150. Irvine, California – 143,072 151. Aurora, Illinois – 142,990 152. Moreno Valley, California – 142,381 153. Pasadena, Texas – 141,674 154. Hayward, California – 140,030, 155. Brownsville, Texas – 139,722 156. Bridgeport, Connecticut – 139,529 157. Hollywood, Florida – 139,357 158. Warren, Michigan – 138,247 159. Torrance, California – 137,946 160. Eugene, Oregon – 137,893 161. Pembroke Pines, Florida – 137,427 162. Salem, Oregon – 136,924 163. Pasadena, California – 133,936 164. Escondido, California – 133,559 165. Sunnyvale, California – 131,760 166. Savannah, Georgia – 131,510 167. Fontana, California – 128,929 168. Orange, California – 128,821 169. Naperville, Illinois – 128,358 170. Alexandria, Virginia – 128,283, 171. Rancho Cucamonga, California – 127,743 172. Grand Prairie, Texas – 127,427 173. Fullerton, California – 126,003 174. Corona, California – 124,966 175. Flint, Michigan – 124,943 176. Mesquite, Texas – 124,523 177. Sterling Heights, Michigan – 124,471 178. Sioux Falls, South Dakota – 123,975 179. New Haven, Connecticut – 123,626, 180. Topeka, Kansas – 122,377 181. Concord, California – 121,780 182. Evansville, Indiana – 121,582 183. Hartford, Connecticut – 121,578, 184. Fayetteville, North Carolina – 121,015 185. Cedar Rapids, Iowa – 120,758 186. Elizabeth, New Jersey – 120,568 187. Lansing, Michigan – 119,128 188. Lancaster, California – 118,718 189. Fort Collins, Colorado – 118,652 190. Coral Springs, Florida – 117,549 191. Stamford, Connecticut – 117,083 192. Thousand Oaks, California – 117,005 193. Vallejo, California – 116,760 194. Palmdale, California – 116,670 195. Columbia, South Carolina – 116,278 196. El Monte, California – 115,965 197. Abilene, Texas – 115,930 198. North Las Vegas, Nevada – 115,488 199. Ann Arbor, Michigan – 114,024 200. Beaumont, Texas – 113,866 201. Waco, Texas – 113,726 202. Independence, Missouri – 113,288 203. Peoria, Illinois – 112,936 204. Inglewood, California – 112,580 205. Springfield, Illinois – 111,454 206. Simi Valley, California – 111,351 207. Lafayette, Louisiana – 110,257 208. Gilbert, Arizona – 109,697 209. Carrollton, Texas – 109,576 210. Bellevue, Washington – 109,569, 211. West Valley City, Utah – 108,896 212. Clearwater, Florida – 108,787 213. Costa Mesa, California – 108,724 214. Peoria, Arizona – 108,364 215. South Bend, Indiana – 107,789 216. Downey, California – 107,323 217. Waterbury, Connecticut – 107,271 218. Manchester, New Hampshire – 107,006 219. Allentown, Pennsylvania – 106,632 220. McAllen, Texas – 106,414 221. Joliet, Illinois – 106,221 222. Lowell, Massachusetts – 105,167 223. Provo, Utah – 105,166, 224. West Covina, California – 105,080 225. Wichita Falls, Texas – 104,197 226. Erie, Pennsylvania – 103,717 227. Daly City, California – 103,621 228. Clarksville, Tennessee – 103,455 229. Norwalk, California – 103,298 230. Gary, Indiana – 102,746 231. Berkeley, California – 102,743 232. Santa Clara, California – 102,361 233. Green Bay, Wisconsin – 102,313 234. Cape Coral, Florida – 102,286 235. Arvada, Colorado – 102,153 236. Pueblo, Colorado – 102,121 237. Athens, Georgia – 101,489 238. Cambridge, Massachusetts – 101,355 239. Westminster, Colorado – 100,940 240. Ventura, California – 100,916 241. Portsmouth, Virginia – 100,565 242. Livonia, Michigan – 100,545 243. Burbank, California – 100,316 .
atlanta austin boston chicago dallas denver houston las vegas los angeles miami minneapolis new york orange county philadelphia phoenix portland raleigh sacramento san diego seattle sf bayarea San Francisco wash dc SF bay area abilene akron / canton alaska albany albuquerque altoona-johnstown amarillo ames, IA ann arbor annapolis appleton-oshkosh-FDL asheville athens, GA athens, OH atlanta auburn augusta austin bakersfield baltimore baton rouge beaumont / port arthur bellingham bend binghamton birmingham, AL blacksburg bloomington bloomington-normal boise boone boston – includes merrimack valley, metro west, north shore, south shore boulder bowling green brownsville brunswick, GA buffalo cape cod / islands carbondale catskills cedar rapids central NJ central michigan champaign urbana charleston, SC charleston, WV charlotte charlottesville chattanooga chautauqua chicago chico cincinnati, OH clarksville, TN cleveland college station colorado springs columbia / jeff city columbia, SC columbus columbus, GA corpus christi corvallis/albany dallas / fort worth danville dayton / springfield daytona beach decatur, IL delaware denver des moines detroit metro dothan, AL dubuque duluth / superior east idaho east oregon eastern CT eastern NC eastern shore eau claire el paso elmira-corning erie, PA eugene evansville fargo / moorhead farmington, NM fayetteville fayetteville, AR flagstaff / sedona flint florence / muscle shoals florence, SC florida keys fort collins / north CO fort smith, AR fort wayne fredericksburg fresno ft myers / SW florida gadsden-anniston gainesville galveston gold country grand island grand rapids green bay greensboro greenville / upstate gulfport / biloxi hampton roads harrisburg harrisonburg hartford hattiesburg hawaii hickory / lenoir hilton head houston hudson valley humboldt county huntington-ashland huntsville imperial county indianapolis inland empire – riverside and san bernardino counties iowa city ithaca jackson, MI jackson, MS jackson, TN jacksonville janesville jersey shore jonesboro joplin kalamazoo kansas city, MO kennewick-pasco-richland kenosha-racine killeen / temple / ft hood knoxville la crosse lafayette lafayette / west lafayette lake charles lakeland lancaster, PA lansing laredo las cruces las vegas lawrence lawton lehigh valley lexington, KY lima / findlay lincoln little rock logan long island los angeles louisville lubbock lynchburg macon madison maine manhattan, KS mankato mansfield martinsburg mcallen / edinburg medford-ashland-klamath memphis, TN mendocino county merced milwaukee minneapolis / st paul mobile modesto mohave county monroe, LA montana monterey bay montgomery morgantown muncie / anderson muskegon myrtle beach nashville new hampshire new haven new orleans new york city north dakota north jersey north mississippi northern michigan northwest CT ocala odessa / midland ogden-clearfield oklahoma city olympic peninsula omaha / council bluffs orange county oregon coast orlando outer banks palm springs, CA panama city, FL parkersburg-marietta pensacola / panhandle peoria philadelphia phoenix pittsburgh plattsburgh-adirondacks poconos port huron portland, OR prescott provo / orem pueblo pullman / moscow quad cities, IA/IL raleigh / durham / CH reading redding reno / tahoe rhode island richmond roanoke rochester, MN rochester, NY rockford rocky mountains roseburg roswell / carlsbad sacramento saginaw-midland-baycity salem, OR salt lake city san antonio san diego san luis obispo san marcos sandusky santa barbara santa fe / taos sarasota-bradenton savannah scranton / wilkes-barre seattle-tacoma sheboygan, WI shreveport sierra vista sioux city, IA skagit / island / SJI south bend / michiana south coast – southern bristol and plymouth counties south dakota south florida – includes separate sections for miami/dade, broward, and palm beach counties south jersey southeast missouri southern maryland southwest michigan space coast spokane / coeur d’alene springfield, IL springfield, MO st augustine st cloud st george st louis, MO state college stillwater stockton syracuse tallahassee tampa bay area terre haute texarkana toledo topeka treasure coast tri-cities, TN tucson tulsa tuscaloosa twin falls tyler / east TX upper peninsula utica valdosta ventura county vermont victoria, TX visalia-tulare waco washington, DC waterloo / cedar falls watertown wausau wenatchee west virginia (old) western KY western maryland western massachusetts western slope wheeling, WV wichita wichita falls williamsport wilmington, NC winston-salem worcester / central MA wyoming yakima york, PA youngstown yuba-sutter yuma alabama alaska arizona arkansas california colorado connecticut dc delaware florida georgia guam hawaii idaho illinois indiana iowa kansas kentucky louisiana maine maryland massachusetts michigan minnesota mississippi missouri montana north carolina new hampshire nebraska nevada new jersey new mexico new york north dakota ohio oklahoma oregon pennsylvania puerto rico rhode island south carolina south dakota tennessee texas utah vermont virginia washington west virginia wisconsin Wyoming
http://www.theliberatormethod.com
More info on The Liberator Method Below:
About Me…TAZ
I’ve written the following free info on The Liberator Method giving this method a ‘man’s perspective’ as it applies to real hard core behaviors:
Marriage/Couples Counseling Doesn’t Work For Men
http://marriage-couple-counseling.webs.com/
http://www.marriagecouplescounseling.wordpress.com
Sexual Addiction Counseling Doesn’t Work For Men
http://www.sexual-addiction.webs.com
Porn Addiction Counseling Doesn’t Work For Men
http://www.pornograpy.wordpress.com
http://www.sexual-addiction.weebly.com
Infidelity Counseling Doesn’t Work For Men
http://www.infidelities.wordpress.com
Masturbation Addiction Counseling Doesn’t Work For Men
http://www.Masterbation1.webs.com
http://www.masterbation.wordpress.com
Hypnosis Weight Loss Diet Doesn’t Work
http://hypnosisweightlossdiet.wordpress.com/
http://hypnosis-weight-loss-diet.webs.com/
http://weightlossandyourmind.wordpress.com/
Anxiety-Mood Disorders Panic Attack, Phobias
http://anxietyattackdisorder.wordpress.com/
Anger Management Counseling
http://angermanagementcounseling.wordpress.com/
http://anger-management-counseling.webs.com/
Anxiety Depression Addiction
http://anxietydepressionaddiction.wordpress.com/
http://anxiety-depression-addiction.webs.com/
The Liberator Method has the following free VIDEOS:
Your Powerful Subconscious Mind affects all aspects of your daily life. (30 second Intro Video)
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=45485768
Anxiety, Depression, Relationship Issues…
Are you experiencing Anxiety, Depression, Addictions…Relationship Difficulties, or not reaching your full potential? Hi, I’m Rhonda Christensen, founder of The Liberator Method, a revolutionary system that FREES your subconscious to serve you instead of sabotage you.
Visit my website at…
http://www.TheLiberatorMethod.com
…and schedule your FREE consultation with me. I guarantee results.
RELEASE ADDICTIONS TO SEX PORN GAMBLING INTERNET VIDEO (4 minutes)
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=29344481
THE LIBERATOR METHOD with Rhonda Christensen founder. I begin by answering the single most fundamental question for taking control of your life and that is…What Determines my behavior? Can you answer this question? Well, I can help you permanently change or improve your life course! In other words, just knowing this one answer can begin to prepare you for a journey that will unlock your full potential. Why is it Important to Take Control of Your Subconscious? Everything you have ever heard, seen, smelled, tasted or felt is stored in your subconscious mind. Many believe this is located in the left brain (if you are right handed). The subconscious uses this information to determine how you emotionally react to the world around you. To give you an idea of the power of the subconscious it runs approximately four-five times faster than you can speak and right now you do not even know what it is doing. In other words… if you do not know how your subconscious works…You are Not Running Your Life – Your subconscious is running you…
PORN, SEXUAL ADDICTION & PAVLOV’S LAW Video (2 minutes)
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=30939211
Pavlov’s Law was the discovery of conditioned response learning in DOGS. The experiment was simple: Ring a bell and present a plate of food to a hungry dog. Result? The dog, naturally, salivates. After a series of repetitions, Pavlov found the dog would respond with the same intensity of salivation even when the food was no longer presented. Salivation became an automatic response—subconsciously conditioned to the stimulus of the sound of the bell. Human beings ‘learn’ addictive behaviors in the same way. PORN, SEX ADDICT, SEXUAL ADDICTION, AFFAIR, CHEATING, ADULTERY, INFIDELITY, PORNOGRAPHY.
MARRIAGE COUNSELING-Free Marriage Help—Marriage Advice (40 seconds) THE MID-LIFE CRISIS–Video
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=31183238
Free Advice for Marriage available. IS YOUR MARRIAGE INCHING TOWARD FAILURE? DO YOU FEEL LIKE A HOSTAGE TO YOUR RELATIONSHIP? TRADITIONAL COUNSELING NOT WORKING? THERE IS ANOTHER WAY! THE LIBERATOR METHOD …LIBERATING YOU TO ACCOMPLISH YOUR DESIRES AND LIVE YOUR DREAMS. LIBERATION IS ONE PHONE CALL AWAY!
THE SCIENCE OF SPIRITUALITY Video (2 minutes)
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=30939633
Supra-Mind Essence Entrainment™ is the launching pad to ‘Self Awareness’… see if you would make a good candidate. A new cutting edge Healing Process based in the use of the scientific method that reveals the subconscious Mind/Body/Spirit alignment behind every issue and then forms new agreements and behaviors in alignment with conscious intent. This efficient, accelerated process, used also part of “The Liberator Method” (TLM), …offers a long term solution for relentless physical symptoms—including anxieties, panic attacks, phobias, addictions, relationship issues and other uninvited thinking and behaviors. spirutual-psychology-enlightenment-coach-counsel.webs.com/
The Liberator Method…It Works (4 minute intro.) Video
http://www.break.com/usercontent/2008/3/The-Liberator-Method-It-Works-465707.html
The Liberator Method also offers a long term solution for relentless physical symptoms—including depression, anxieties, panic attacks, phobias, addictions, relationship issues and other uninvited thinking and behaviors.
Subconscious mind, sub-conscious, unconscious, true selves, true-self, real authentic self, subliminal messages, hypnosis, hypnotherapy, SELF REALIZATION, COUNSELOR, BEHAVIOR, BEHAVIORAL, THERAPY, COUNCILER, COUNCELOR, COUNCILING, COUNSELING, COUNSEL, COUNSELING, CONSULT, CONSULTING, LIFE COACH, LIFE COACHING, SPIRITUAL GUIDE, HEALER, EXPERTISE, MENTOR, MENTORING, COACHES, PROTEGES, INTUITIVE.
4 TLM Free Classes
BLOGS:
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http://www.liberatormethod.wordpress.com
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Official site: http://www.TheLiberatorMethod.com