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Aisha Ahmed Revolutionizes Personal Growth with Collaborative Award-Winning Book 'The INside Effect'

Aisha Ahmed Revolutionizes Personal Growth with Collaborative Award-Winning Book 'The INside Effect'

Expert Aisha Ahmed Co-Author Book Showcasing Neuroscience and Quantum Energetics for Lasting Change
Ontario, Canada, February 16, 2025 -- Aisha Ahmed, a renowned expert in the subconscious mind and quantum energetics, proudly announces her participation in the internationally bestselling and award-winning book, The INside Effect: How the Body Heals Itself. This groundbreaking book is a beacon of hope that explores the transformative power of inner work and its significant impact on personal and professional success. The INside Effect is a comprehensive guide to mastering one's inner world, offering practical tools and techniques for healing emotional wounds, rewiring limiting beliefs, and harnessing the power of quantum science. Aisha's unique approach blends neuroscience, somatic practices, and energetic tools, helping readers unlock their true potential, achieve lasting success, and create a life of abundance.
'Harness the power of your subconscious mind and your energy to create limitless miracles in your life, relationships, and business,' states Aisha. With a background in IT and quantum computing, Aisha has dedicated her life to helping individuals and organizations achieve their highest potential through inner work and holistic healing. Her groundbreaking work in personal transformation is particularly inspiring as a Muslim woman leading the conversation on subconscious mastery and quantum energetics. Her presence in the field of holistic healing and corporate wellness highlights the increasing diversity and inclusivity in spaces traditionally dominated by Western methodologies, offering a fresh perspective that bridges science, spirituality, and cultural depth. Aisha's innovative techniques and compassionate approach have transformed countless lives, empowering people to overcome challenges and create the lives they truly desire.
Aisha speaks internationally and is known for the informative and transformative experiences she creates for the audience. She covers various topics, including emotional mastery for leaders and teams, work-life harmony, and overcoming setbacks to achieve resilience. As a certified subconscious mind expert and corporate trainer, Aisha has worked with numerous organizations, including the Toronto Police Department, helping employees and leaders overcome mental health challenges and achieve work-life harmony. Her unique approach, garnered widespread acclaim, focuses on transforming workplace culture and fostering emotional intelligence. To book Aisha as a speaker, visit www.aishaheals.com/keynotes. Aisha's work addresses the growing need for mental health support and personal growth resources in the face of mounting workplace stress and burnout. Recent studies estimate that mental health issues affect one in five adults worldwide, with stress and anxiety being the leading causes of poor mental health in the workplace. Aisha's services offer a comprehensive solution to these concerns, providing readers and clients with the tools they need to heal, grow, and thrive. Her coaching services, including Power Hour, One-on-One, and group programs, are tailored to meet each client's unique needs, providing a holistic approach to unlocking their full potential and achieving their desired outcomes. Readers can learn more at https://www.aishaheals.com/work-with-aisha.
Aisha Ahmed is excited to introduce the Quantum Alchemy Mentorship Program, a fully customized and soulful 1:1 mentorship designed to support individuals in their healing and expansion journey. This exclusive program offers the highest level of support for those looking to elevate their life, relationships, and businesses to extraordinary levels of success and fulfillment. Through a blend of quantum physics, neuroscience, and bioenergetics, Aisha helps clients rewire their subconscious minds for success. As a mentor and guide, she provides a compassionate, supportive space for emotional release, visionary partnership, and energy activation. Quantum Alchemy aims to transform lives by shifting relationships, business/career, health, and mindset, ensuring no aspect of personal development is overlooked.
The INside Effect aligns with Aisha's mission as a global authority in holistic healing, subconscious mind mentoring, and business growth. Aisha offers a range of speaking engagements and coaching services designed to help ambitious women and business leaders achieve their highest level of success without compromising their peace of mind, values, relationships, or sanity. Aisha is offering a gift to those who visit her website. This powerful 'Emotion Belief Alchemy' process helps users get to the root of their issues, release emotional triggers, and heal unaligned stories from past experiences. For more information about Aisha Ahmed and her services, visit www.AishaHeals.com.
About the Author:
Aisha Ahmed, an international bestselling author, award-winning expert in subconscious mind and quantum energetics, certified subconscious mind expert, corporate trainer, mentor for wellness business owners, and founder of Aisha Heals, brings a unique blend of expertise in IT and quantum computing to the field of holistic healing. Her dedication to helping individuals and organizations achieve their highest potential through inner work and holistic healing is evident in her innovative techniques and compassionate approach, which have transformed countless lives, empowering people to overcome challenges and create the lives they truly desire.
About the Company:
AishaHeals was founded in Toronto, Canada, in 2017 by Aisha Ahmed. Since its inception, AishaHeals has been dedicated to empowering coaches, healers, business owners, and individuals through innovative education and community support worldwide. Specializing in personal transformation and dimensional therapy, AishaHeals provides a range of services designed to help clients unlock their full potential, heal emotional and energetic blocks, and achieve lasting success in both personal and professional spheres. With a focus on holistic healing and inner work, AishaHeals has become a beacon for corporations and individuals seeking profound and sustainable change.
About the company: The Media Magic division of Business Acceleration Network, Inc., is a pioneering force in media and event production. Focusing on crafting important and impactful messages, they specialize in creating engaging narratives and executing memorable events that captivate audiences worldwide. Their dedication to excellence and passion for producing meaningful results have refined their expertise in delivering high-quality content across various media platforms.
Organization: AishaHeals
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Bari Weiss's Free Press Wants You to Know Some Kids Being Starved by Israel Were Already Sick
Bari Weiss's Free Press Wants You to Know Some Kids Being Starved by Israel Were Already Sick

The Intercept

time16 hours ago

  • The Intercept

Bari Weiss's Free Press Wants You to Know Some Kids Being Starved by Israel Were Already Sick

Starving Palestinian children line up for meals at the Nuseirat refugee camp in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on Aug. 18, 2025. Photo: Moiz Salhi/Anadolu via Getty Images What killed Anne Frank? The Nazis killed Anne Frank. To suggest that any other cause was primary in her vastly premature death is tantamount to vile Holocaust denialism — which is why Holocaust denialists do indeed point out that Frank died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. This is precisely the logic that Israel's apologists in the media have deployed in recent days when it comes to the deliberate starvation of the population of Gaza. The right-wing Free Press published a story on Sunday, framed as an investigative exposé, revealing that at least 12 of the Palestinian children featured in viral images depicting the state of Israel-induced famine were not only starving, but … were also sick. The supposed gotcha is that children with disabilities and preexisting health conditions, who cannot get the treatment and nutrition they need because of Israel's genocidal siege, are not representative of the population. And — the horror! — photographs of these non-representative children are prompting global outrage. The idea is we are supposed to be less horrified by the fact that children with disabilities like cerebral palsy and cystic fibrosis are starving to death under the deliberate siege policies of a wealthy, occupying nation-state and its backers. The Free Press, helmed by former New York Times columnist Bari Weiss, is suggesting that in failing to either emphasize or mention the children's health conditions as well as the Israel-induced malnutrition that is killing them, Western media sources using the images are unfairly maligning Israel — despite the fact that it is Israel's genocidal actions that have brought the children to a condition of bare life. It is the very nature of genocide to involve the destruction of conditions necessary for sustaining life, such that sickness as well as direct slaughter destroys, in part or whole, the targeted population. 'This information does not change the fact that the children depicted in this story are suffering from malnutrition due to the difficulties they face accessing aid in Gaza, as reported,' a CNN spokesperson told the Free Press, after the publication informed the network that Hajjaj, a 6-year-old girl featured in a CNN story about starvation in Gaza, was not only starving but also had an 'esophagus condition.' Founded in 2021 by former New York Times writer Bari Weiss, the Free Press pitches itself as home for 'heterodox' thinking, but it has been a reliable platform for the anti-woke, anti-trans, and pro-Israel talking points of mainstream American conservatism. Weiss, who has dedicated her professional life to anti-Palestinian animus and unwavering support for Israel, is reportedly in talks with CBS's new parent company Skydance about buying the online outlet for $250 million. The Free Press is actively stoking genocide denial, but it's not the first media organ to take this odious tack of minimization. In late July, the New York Times cravenly appended a lengthy editor's note and update on a story featuring the image of emaciated 18-month-old Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq to include the fact that he had other health issues 'affecting his brain and his muscle development.' Even if Israel's siege were only leading to the death of Palestinians with preexisting health issues and disabilities, we would still have on our hands a case of intolerable, eugenic slaughter — as if Palestinian sick children's lives are worth less. Needless to say, Israel's project of genocide and ethnic cleansing takes aim at all Palestinians. The Free Press goes as far as to admit, 'It's not that there isn't hunger in Gaza. There is.' It's a gross understatement. As is well documented and widely recognized, Israel is deliberately starving the population of Gaza. This has been made clear in both intent — as expressed by Israeli government ministers — and effect, as evident in the mounting starvation-based death toll of a reported 266 people from malnutrition-related causes, likely a significant underestimate. Reports from health care workers and international humanitarian groups, the desperate direct pleas of thousands and thousands of Palestinians in Gaza, and the exorbitant prices of barely available basic ingredients all confirm the same. Israeli troops, and perhaps security contractors hired by an Israeli-backed aid group, have killed over 1,400 Palestinians attempting to get food at aid sites since May. Palestinians continue to try to access these death traps daily, simply because there is not enough food elsewhere — all by Israeli design. As the historian Adam Tooze pointed out in a recent newsletter, the purposeful starvation of Gaza by Israel is exceptional. There are 11 places in the world currently where more people are at serious risk of hunger than in Gaza, including Yemen and Sudan, but Tooze pointed out that Gaza is unique: 'Being the result of deliberate policy by a powerful state, commonly regarded as belonging to the exclusive club of 'advanced economies', the mass starvation in Gaza in the summer of 2025 is quite unlike that anywhere else in the world.' Tooze added that, while around half of the populations of Yemen, Sudan, South Sudan, and Haiti are at risk of famine, 100 percent of Palestinians in Gaza are. In Gaza, he writes, the 'risk of famine is total.' Read our complete coverage If a person can, after nearly two years of genocidal onslaught, witness the scenes and testimonies from Gaza — of which the images of these malnourished children are just a tiny slice — and find the main problem is that not enough people know that some of the most vulnerable in Israel's genocide have preexisting health conditions, then we are are not speaking from a framework of shared humanity. I dare say there is nothing such a person could see of Palestinians suffering that would permit them to shift their worldview at this point, because the humanity of Palestinians has been a priori excluded from it. The fact that the Free Press story's authors and publishers do not see that their claim is the modern-day equivalent to suggesting that Frank primarily died of typhus makes all too clear that they do not see Palestinians as fully human. It is a supremacist, eugenicist lens that is beneath contempt, yes, but also beneath debate. A worldview that holds Israel's righteousness firmly at its center resists destabilization — even by images of systematically starved and slaughtered children and babies. After all, Zionist propaganda has for decades had to account for the fact that Israel maims, imprisons, and slaughters children. Images of dead Palestinian children and babies did not only start circulating in this genocidal phase of the ongoing Nakba. A decade ago, the late Charles Krauthammer — a Zionist Washington Post columnist — wrote a column titled 'Moral clarity in Gaza,' praising Israel's actions during its 2014 Gaza assault, which killed over 2,000 Palestinians including over 500 children. Atrocity images circulated then, too, including photos of the mangled, limp frames of four Palestinian kids killed on a Gaza beach by Israeli missiles. Krauthammer described the children as 'telegenically killed' — a line that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu himself then picked up to blame Hamas for using the 'telegenically dead.' Netanyahu admits that Israel's victims are often telegenic — young children tend to be — but relies on dehumanization of Palestinians so inflexible that even the worst scenes of massacred and starved babies can be consumed without compelling immediate action against Israel as génocidaires. The Free Press's so-called corrections are a ghoulish reminder: It is not a problem of insufficient evidence, it is not a problem of knowledge, that continues to fuel, with support and funds, this genocide.

Age of happiness? Oh to be blissfully young or older and wiser
Age of happiness? Oh to be blissfully young or older and wiser

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Age of happiness? Oh to be blissfully young or older and wiser

There is disagreement among researchers regarding the age and stage of life when people are most happy. It is a complicated issue with many factors – but a number of studies have come to the same basic conclusion: Older adults are happier than younger adults. The following is from a Psychology Today publication titled 'Happiness Over the Lifespan:' 'The happiness curve refers to the trajectory that happiness tends to follow as we age. People begin life fairly happy. Around age 18, their happiness begins to decrease, reaching a low point in their 40s. But after age 50, happiness begins to rise again. This U-shaped happiness curve has emerged consistently in large studies of Western societies.' An excerpt from a Princeton University report on research completed (along with two other universities) on the topic is as follows: 'When looking at life satisfaction scores across regions, the researchers confirmed a well-known 'U-shaped curve' that bottoms out between the ages of 45 and 54 in high-income, English speaking countries. These countries include the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand. This curve indicates that, in these countries, middle-age residents report the lowest levels of life satisfaction, which eventually bounces back up after age 54.' The increase in happiness with age was again reflected in a study at the School of Social Ecology at University of California, Irvine. UCI researchers followed 1,000 people age 22 to 95, over two decades. Participants were asked about their emotional well-being (positive and negative emotions they were feeling) that day, in the past week and in the past month. The study, which was titled 'Growing Old and Being Old: Emotional Well-Being Across Adulthood,' and published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, concluded that older people were, in general, happier (more positive) and less negative than younger adults. Susan Charles, UCI professor of psychological science and nursing science, was quoted as follows: 'We found that when looking at all responses across all participants, older adults reported the highest level of well-being compared to all other age groups. They reported the lowest levels of distress (great sadness and anxiety) as well as the lowest level of reported negative emotions (feeling lonely, afraid and upset). They also reported the highest levels of positive emotions (being calm, enthusiastic and cheerful) than younger adults.' The findings should come as no big surprise. Not many of us zoom through high school and college, find the perfect life partner, get the perfect job, then live happily ever after with perfect children. The middle years are often fraught with disappointments – bad relationships, unmet expectations, financial difficulties. In contrast, it sometimes doesn't take much to produce happiness in the very young – although studying this population would seem to be a challenge. A survey consisting of questions, for instance, might not work with toddlers since many are not yet able to talk. To 'happy-assess' a toddler, the parents or grandparents would most likely need to be surveyed. 'Right now, (2-year-old) Benjamin (Azahares Vazquez) seems happiest when he is throwing things,' said his grandmother, Anabel Perez, laughing. 'Maybe one day he'll throw a baseball 100 miles an hour, make a fortune in the major leagues, and share the money with his family.' There is no definitive age of peak happiness. But if the experts are correct, living beyond the 50s age range may provide the answer. Benjamin's baseball career would be over by then. Mark Ryan is a Tallahassee RN. This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Happiest years? Researchers find young adults struggle Solve the daily Crossword

Breastfeeding Reduces Risk of Early Puberty
Breastfeeding Reduces Risk of Early Puberty

Newsweek

time2 days ago

  • Newsweek

Breastfeeding Reduces Risk of Early Puberty

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Kids who are exclusively breast-fed as infants are less likely to experience early puberty. This is the conclusion of South Korean researchers who studied the development and infant diets of more than 300,000 children. The team found that breastfeeding during the first four–six months of life was linked with a lower risk of so-called "central precocious puberty" (CPP) in both boys and girls. This association was partially mediated by differences in body weight throughout childhood, with childhood obesity linked to early pubertal onset. While it can lead to an early growth sport compared to other children, adults who went through early puberty tend to be shorter on average. CPP has also been linked to an increased risk of anxiety, depression and low self-esteem. Early puberty has also been associated with an increased risk of substance abuse, eating disorders and having sex at an early age. In women, early puberty is also known to increase the risk of breast cancer as adults. CPP has been on the rise globally, a trend that doctors Lin Yang and Shengxu Li—who were not involved in the study, but authored an accompanying comment paper—say is "particularly concerning given the growing prevalence of childhood obesity." The findings, the researchers note, add to the growing body of evidence highlighting the critical role of early-life nutrition in long-term health. A woman breastfeeds her newborn baby. A woman breastfeeds her newborn this nationwide, retrospective study, researchers compared the incidence of early puberty among children who were exclusively breastfed, formula-fed or mixed-fed during their first four to six months of life. Compared to exclusively breastfed children, formula-fed children had the greatest risk of CPP in boys and girls, followed by mixed-fed boys and girls. In their commentary paper, Yang and Li noted that the findings "contradict prior claims that breastfeeding is unrelated to the timing of pubertal onset in non-Western settings." They explained that the study's findings "suggest a potential developmental pathway through which infant feeding may influence early weight gain and the subsequent pubertal timing." However, they also acknowledged that the source of these associations remains uncertain, and that it is not yet clear whether excess body fat directly contributes to the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis—a hormonal pathway that regulates reproduction and development—or regulates upstream signals like the hypothalamic kisspeptin system, responsible for regulating the onset of puberty. The duo highlighted the study's importance in filling a research gap on puberty timing in boys. They noted: "Boys who were exclusively formula-fed had a 16 percent increased risk of CPP compared with those who were exclusively breastfed, and [excess body fat] mediated this association in a pattern similar to that observed in girls." The experts pointed out that this increase in CPP risk observed in boys contrasts with the 60 percent increase observed in girls—which might help explain the lack of similar reports on puberty timing in boys. Ultimately, the study's findings support the view that breastfeeding during early infancy may help protect against CPP in both sexes. As Yang and Li concluded: "Disease starts early, so should its prevention." Do you have a tip on a health story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about CPP? Let us know via health@ References Choe, Y., Ryu, S., Choi, J., Na, J. Y., Lee, K. S., Kim, Y. J., & Yang, S. (2025). Breastfeeding, prepubertal adiposity, and development of precocious puberty. JAMA Network Open, 8(8). Yang, L., & Li, S. (2025). Breastfeeding, adiposity, and precocious puberty in boys and girls. JAMA Network Open, 8(8).

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