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  1. El Dr. Ludwig Johnson es el creador del protocolo de reversión de diabetes tipo 2 que lleva su propio nombre, Conferencista Internacional y Autor de los Best Sellers: Pare la diabetes en 14 días; La gordura no es su culpa; Su endocrino en 1 minuto; y Diabetes (cómo evitarla si no la quiere y revertirla si ya la tiene).

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      El Dr. Ludwig Johnson es el creador del protocolo de...

    • Teresa Villarreal
    • ¿Por qué hacer el 5x5? En este video el doctor Ludwig Johnson explica de manera muy clara que todos los seres humanos tenemos parásitos y que por mucho que nos cuidemos a veces no se pueden detectar, por lo que nos hacen mucho mal y la zanahora es perfecta para eliminarlos.
    • ¿Qué nos hacen los parásitos? El doctor Johnson pregunta a sus pacientes si sufren de fatiga, de artritis, de dolor, de inflamación abdominal o fibromialgia, de depresión, de ataques de pánico y dermatitis, así como de enfermedades autoinmunes.
    • La base de esta dieta detox es tomar jugo de zanahoria. El Dr. Ludwig Johnson considera que para realizar esta dieta del 5x5 se requiere beber jugo de zanahorias 5 veces al día por 5 días y hay que asegurarse de que sea jugo fresco que nosotras mismas preparemos en un extractor de jugos.
    • ¿Cómo se hace el 5x5? Se beben 5 vasos de jugos de zanahora (8 onzas por vaso) repartidos a lo largo del día o se pueden tomar todos a la vez, el objetivo es que se beban 40 onzas en total cada día por 5 días consecutivos.
  2. Samuel Johnson (18 September 1709 [OS 7 September] – 13 December 1784), often called Dr Johnson, was an English writer who made lasting contributions as a poet, playwright, essayist, moralist, literary critic, sermonist, biographer, editor, and lexicographer.

    • Overview
    • Early life

    Samuel Johnson (born September 18, 1709, Lichfield, Staffordshire, England—died December 13, 1784, London) English critic, biographer, essayist, poet, and lexicographer, regarded as one of the greatest figures of 18th-century life and letters.

    Johnson once characterized literary biographies as “mournful narratives,” and he believed that he lived “a life radically wretched.” Yet his career can be seen as a literary success story of the sickly boy from the Midlands who by talent, tenacity, and intelligence became the foremost literary figure and the most formidable conversationalist of his time. For future generations, Johnson was synonymous with the later 18th century in England. The disparity between his circumstances and achievement gives his life its especial interest.

    Samuel Johnson was the son of Michael Johnson, a bookseller, and his wife, Sarah. From childhood he suffered from a number of physical afflictions. By his own account, he was born “almost dead,” and he early contracted scrofula (tuberculosis of the lymphatic glands). Because of a popular belief that the sovereign’s touch was able to cure scrofula (which, for that reason, was also called the king’s evil), he was taken to London at the age of 30 months and touched by the queen, whose gold “touch piece” he kept about him for the rest of his life. This was succeeded by various medical treatments that left him with disfiguring scars on his face and neck. He was nearly blind in his left eye and suffered from highly noticeable tics that may have been indications of Tourette syndrome. Johnson was also strong, vigorous, and, after a fashion, athletic. He liked to ride, walk, and swim, even in later life. He was tall and became huge. A few accounts bear witness to his physical strength—as well as his character—such as his hurling an insolent theatregoer together with his seat from the stage into the pit or his holding off would-be robbers until the arrival of the watch.

    From his earliest years Johnson was recognized not only for his remarkable intelligence but also for his pride and indolence. In 1717 he entered grammar school in Lichfield. The master of the school, John Hunter, was a learned though brutal man who “never taught a boy in his life—he whipped and they learned.” This regime instilled such terror in the young boy that even years later the resemblance of the poet Anna Seward to her grandfather Hunter caused him to tremble. At school he made two lifelong friends: Edmund Hector, later a surgeon, and John Taylor, future prebendary of Westminster and justice of the peace for Ashbourne. In 1726 Johnson visited his cousin, the urbane Reverend Cornelius Ford in Stourbridge, Worcestershire, who may have provided a model for him, though it was Ford’s conviviality and scholarship rather than his dissipation (he is thought to be one of those depicted carousing in William Hogarth’s A Midnight Modern Conversation [1733]) that attracted Johnson.

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    From Moby-Dick to Space Odysseys

    In 1728 Johnson entered Pembroke College, Oxford. He stayed only 13 months, until December 1729, because he lacked the funds to continue. Yet it proved an important year. While an undergraduate, Johnson, who claimed to have been irreligious in adolescence, read a new book, William Law’s A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life, which led him to make concern for his soul the polestar of his life. Despite the poverty and pride that caused him to leave, he retained great affection for Oxford. He would later say with reference to the poets of his college, “We were a nest of singing birds.” In 1731, the year of his father’s death, his first publication, a translation of Alexander Pope’s “Messiah” into Latin, appeared in A Miscellany of Poems, along with the poetry of other Oxford students. Pope was the leading poet of the age, and throughout most of his lifetime Johnson would comment on Pope’s achievement in various writings.

    In the following year Johnson became undermaster at Market Bosworth grammar school, a position made untenable by the overbearing and boorish Sir Wolstan Dixie, who controlled appointments. With only £20 inheritance from his father, Johnson left his position with the feeling that he was escaping prison. After failing in his quest for another teaching position, he joined his friend Hector in Birmingham. In 1732 or 1733 he published some essays in The Birmingham Journal, none of which have survived. Dictating to Hector, he translated into English Joachim Le Grand’s translation of the Portuguese Jesuit Jerome Lobo’s A Voyage to Abyssinia, an account of a Jesuit missionary expedition. Published in 1735, this work shows signs of the mature Johnson, such as his praise of Lobo, in the preface, for not attempting to present marvels: “He meets with no basilisks that destroy with their eyes, his crocodiles devour their prey without tears, and his cataracts fall from the rock without deafening the neighbouring inhabitants.”

    • Robert Folkenflik
  3. Dr. Ludwig Johnson. @LudwigJohnsonTV ‧. 58.5K subscribers ‧ 66 videos. COMO ELIMINAR BARRIGA, FATIGA O DOLORES MUSCULARES Y DEPRESION....

  4. Dr. Johnson. Escritor inglés. Nació el 18 de septiembre de 1709 en Lichfield, Staffordshire, Inglaterra. Hijo de Sarah Ford y Michael Johnson, un librero. Se dice que creció en la pobreza y su educación se basó fundamentalmente la lectura de los clásicos. Desde 1728, cursó estudios en la Universidad de Pembroke, Oxford.

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