Well-Being & Women’s Health: A Whole-Life Approach
Why in the world are 23% of American women between the ages of 40 to 59 unwell and unfortunate; and on top of that they’re prescribed addictive pain pills, antidepressants and sleeping pills for situational depression?
For a woman’s well-being to rise up and flow out powerfully from her authenticity she must be happy, healthy and prosperous. She needs to be in a good space and place in life; to be spirited and courageous while maintaining her composure under stress, and sometimes under great strain. For her to be well she must have the ability to control her emotions (feelings) and mental agitations (thoughts). Well-Being means the state of being happy, prosperous, pleasing, fortunate, free and healthy. Well-Being comes with having the capacity to integrate emotional, mental, physical, and spiritual health, bringing contentment, peace, prosperity, harmony and wholeness.
The PEP System® is an innovative way to dismantle the overuse of prescription drugs and alcohol for situational depression. The PEP System® is a proven method that works to bring about well-being through whole-life transformation.
Start Discovering Your Excellence Now with The PEP and The PEP System®!
The concept of The PEP System® is the most innovative transformational training and professional whole-life coaching system available. It is a profiling, coaching and training method that observes, considers, evaluates, and elevates the whole person.
The PEP System® is based on the theory that each individual has twelve key abilities that are utilized in our everyday existence to make our life work and flow. The hidden secret is that most individuals are completely unaware of this, and as a result the majority of us have all of our key vital abilities collapsed together. This method of whole-life coaching cuts right through to the source of the matter to treat the cause and not the effect.
It is through integrating emotional, mental and physical health that women thrive and flourish. It’s Well-Being.
Between the ages of 40 to 59 a woman’s life can be challenging, to say the least. However, the key to creating and maintaining harmony and well-being during this time is about focusing on remaking and revitalizing our lives. We are not supposed to wear out, give out, or die from situational depression and prescription drugs. How many more women will have to die before we find other natural alternatives to combat emotional, mental and physical disharmony? When will we learn that the way out of a situation in to work through it… not to cover it up with prescription medication, drugs and alcohol?
These statistics are alarming. It is time we insist that our doctors work to get to the source of women’s pain and and work on a whole-life approach and know that it is impossible to treat an effect (or situational depression) with an effect.
Why are so many women depressed in the first place?
The PEP System® shows women how to readjust, revive, restore, and to reverse and revitalize their energy and excellence, and it demonstrates how to direct this power into reversing these alarming statistics. Women between the ages of 40 to 59 can live a more joyous, successful, fulfilled, prosperous and harmonious life and lifestyle.
Did you know that antidepressant use is up in the United States nearly 400 percent over the last two decades? Why? What can we do about it?
A new report from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) finds that antidepressants are the drug of choice for adults in the U.S. The study says that 11 percent of Americans are taking Prozac, Paxil or another type of antidepressant. According to the report antidepressants are the most common drug taken by adults under 45, and women take the pills more than men at every age group. Women ages 40 to 59 are most likely to take antidepressants — 23 percent of them are taking the pills. This CDC report involved about 13,000 people over three years. It shows a huge leap in the use of antidepressants, up by 400 percent from a similar report out in the mid-1990s. The report also says most people taking antidepressants have been doing so for more than two years, but they don’t appear to be checking in with their doctors. A vast majority say they haven’t had contact with a mental health professional for more than a year.



