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Directions
Stir 1/4 of a teaspoon into a glass of water and consume 3 times daily, with meals.
Cautions
May increase the effects of MAO-inhibitors.
Consult a medical professional before using, if you are taking any anti-depressants.
Additional Information
TerraVita is an exclusive line of premium-quality, natural source products that use only the finest, purest and most potent ingredients found around the world. TerraVita is hallmarked by the highest possible standards of purity, potency, stability and freshness. All of our products are prepared with the highest elements of quality control, from raw materials through the entire manufacturing process, up to and including the moment that the bottles or bags are sealed for freshness and shipped out to you. Our highest possible standards are certified by independent laboratories and backed by our personal guarantee.
TerraVita exists to meet and ensure your family's health and wellness without the harmful effects or chemicals and prescription medications. We strive to make all of our products affordable and reliable and are constantly searching the market to maintain our affordability and to look for new ways to serve you and the ones you love. TerraVita has become a trusted household name for many families and can bring you and yours the very best herbal supplements, blends, teas and spices that are on the market today.
TerraVita is packed in childproof, tamper-proof pharmaceutical-grade recyclable containers.
ZooScape is proud to be the exclusive distributor of TerraVita teas, herbs and supplements in the United States, Canada and around the world. Please direct all wholesale and bulk inquiries to Simona Heather at 905-494-1785.
Related Reading - As Voted by You!
Cool Rules: Anatomy of an Attitude
Summary Cool Rules gives readers a fresh sometimes subversive new set of insights on our culture, as it seeks traces of what is cool from African history and jazz, through 60's cinema to 90's loft living. The word "cool" has had so many meanings to so many people, for so long, its use is now taken for granted. Dick Pountain and David Robins thought it deserved a little more, so they sought to delve beyond the word's universal, unexamined synonymies, gave it a capital C and set offlike Marlon Brando in "The Wild Ones", who is asked "But where will you go?" "Aw, man, we're just gonna go."
Drawing on the methodologies of cultural anthropology, psychology, sociology, journalism, and some light semiotics, the authors pursue the following contentious questions:
Where is the line between Hip and Cool?
Is Cool an attitude of detachment or reckless fervor?
How has Cool evolved in different cultures?
What is the Cool exchange between the U.S. and the U.K.?
What about between the races? Are women less interested in being Cool than men?
Is it a group attitude or rather a "permannet state of private rebellion?"
Are Cool and therapy (touchy-feely culture) mutually exclusive or children of the same parent?
Is Cool even still rebellious or is it now the late-capitalist status quo is once flouted
The result is a thorough and wide-ranging, surprising and iconoclastic cultural tour of the continuing crisis at the heart of Cool. Readers of groundbreaking cultural criticism such as Greil Marcus' Lipstick Traces and Thomas Frank's The COnquest of Cool will value this contribution to the ongoing Cool conversation. WHile informed by plenty of scholarship (from Laura Mulvey to Christopher Lasch and all in-betweens) Cool Rules reads quickly and crisply, and takes many of its departure points from popular reading, and of course the vibrant culture that Constitutes Cool. Unlike any old school book, Cool Rules comes right up to the year 1999 in its references to world events such as murdered rappers and the possibility that the tagline for New Labour came from a Ben & Jerry's flavor (flavour?).
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Products are intended to support general well being and are not intended to treat, diagnose, mitigate, prevent, or cure any condition or disease. If conditions persist, please seek advice from your medical doctor. The essence of the current American rule on Traditional Uses is, as stated by FTC, "Claims based on historical or traditional use should be substantiated by confirming scientific evidence, or should be presented in such a way that consumers understand that the sole basis for the claim is a history of use of the product for a particular purpose."