Brown vs. Yale — in the first ever “4-Leaf Challenge?”

Healthy Eating comes to the Ivy League? Just in the idea stage right now — searching for leaders

Leveraging the simple, yet powerful concept of maximizing the percent of your calories from whole plant foods -- still in nature's package

As a new author and activist, I am naturally always looking for ways to get more people involved in taking charge of their own health and, in so doing, contributing mightily to the health of the planet and so much more.

The latest idea that we’ll be discussing today with our marketing consultants is a 4-Leaf Challenge that involves a competition between two or three organizations — with each fielding a team of twenty people — all committing to eating at the 4-Leaf level for 4 weeks. The winning team will have the best composite percentage improvement in two key factors: weight and total cholesterol.

Location. So what about Brown vs. Yale? Two things: international name recognition and location. I reside in the seaside village of Stonington, CT, which lies exactly halfway between Providence, RI and New Haven, CT, the home of Ivy League stalwarts Brown and Yale respectively. Location is important for our first few 4-Leaf Challenges because of our need to visit with the respective teams regularly during those crucial four weeks.

Leadership. For our first 4-Leaf Challenge, it is imperative that we get the top leader involved. The President of the University or the CEO of the participating company must be one of the twenty competitors. Why? Because as a former senior executive, I know very well the importance of leadership when it comes to driving positive change; particularly when that change involves something as foreign as eating mostly whole plant foods for a whole month. If the top leader is a participant, the program WILL succeed, and it will attract media attention. It will also lead to permanent, positive change within the entire organization. We prefer not to compromise on this all-important element.

4-Leaf Publicity. Our timing is good; as our book and 4-Leaf Program was a feature story in the area’s largest newspaper, The New London Day, on Wednesday, October 12 — front page of the Daybreak Section. The writer of that story, Amy Barry, read our book and interviewed me for a half-hour before writing the piece. She told me that she had been writing about food for many years and was absolutely amazed at some of the things she learned from reading our book. So, as we begin to contact the CEO’s of possible 4-Leaf Challenge participating organizations, we’ll have some very recent published information to show them.

Possible Participants. I have been thinking about this 4-Leaf Challenge idea for about a week now and just recently identified Brown University as a possible participant. I was one of two authors who spoke one evening at the Brown University BookStore in Providence, Rhode Island. One of the attendees was the head of Wellness Programs for the university, which employs over 4,000 faculty and staff. Now, if she can help me get the university president on board, we’re in business. With the location factor our first cut, here are some five other possibilities for our very first 4-Leaf Challenge:

  • Mystic Aquarium vs. Mystic Seaport
  • Electric Boat (builds submarines) vs. Pfizer — just a few miles apart (both employ thousands)
  • L&M Hospital (New London) vs. The Westerly Hospital (Westerly, RI)
  • The Town of Stonington vs. The Town of Groton (beginning with the two mayors)
  • The Mohegan Sun vs. Foxwoods (the two largest casinos in the world; both within 20 minutes of where I am sitting right now at the Mystic Starbucks)

Program Outline. Here are my initial thoughts. After we get the all-important two CEO’s on board, we’ll ask each of them for a one-hour meeting with them and all of their direct reports. Each person will get a copy of our book at that meeting and will be required to read it before the next meeting in two weeks. At the second meeting, we’ll discuss how the twenty voluntary participants will be recruited. Hopefully, several of them will be among the CEO’s direct reports. As plans are firming up, we’ll bring in the media to publicize the upcoming competition. After the two teams of twenty have been selected, the program will go something like this:

  • A kickoff meeting will be held with the groups of twenty (after they have all read the book)
  • Recipe and meal-planning materials will be provided to all participants.
  • A medical organization will record the “before” data for both teams.
  • My son (co-author) and I will be on call as needed; giving our personal email and phone numbers to all participants.
  • Weekly follow-up meetings will be held with each group of twenty.
  • At the final meeting, the medical people will record the “after” data after four weeks of competition.
  • The media will keep the public informed throughout the process.

What next? Obviously, in our initial discussions with the CEO’s, we’ll stress the importance of this being a permanent lifestyle change, not just a temporary gimmick to lose weight. We’re talking about life and death here — for ourselves, our country and our planet. We will stress the importance of rolling out this program to the entire organization and providing incentives for people to participate. Why?

We know that the formula works. We know that an improved diet will lower the cost of health care and will improve productivity. Finally, we know that eating mostly whole plants will work wonders for our global environment as we all embrace the inevitable process of bringing our human lifestyle back into harmony with nature.

Authors J. Stanfield Hicks and J. Morris Hicks hiking the White Mountains of New Hampshire

If you like what you see here, you may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

Posted in Activism & Leadership, Book Promotion | 2 Comments

Rainbows – Reviews – Reality — and Making a Difference

BIG BLUE (our book) is up and running, and I am following the lead of the late Steve Jobs in passionately spreading her message

A lovely double rainbow over the saltwater marshes next to the vineyard as the party began. I will take that as a good thing.

Rainbows. Seven days ago, our book was officially launched at the Saltwater Farm Vineyard in Stonington, CT. Earlier that morning, while driving through a steady rain to retrieve my daughter Diana from Boston Logan, I remember thinking about finding a positive in that gloomy weather. My answer was simply, “You gotta have rain if you’re gonna have a rainbow.” And as the kick-off time of 5:30 p.m. approached, it was beginning to look like we had all the makings for just that.

Along about 4:00 p.m., while setting up tables and stacking over 400 books with Michael Connery, our host for the evening, I jokingly asked him what he could do about ordering up a rainbow for our event. But I wasn’t really joking, I was actually envisioning what a nice touch it would be — to have Mother Nature bless our event with one of her most glorious productions — a colorful rainbow. And she did.

And not just one rainbow, but several, including at least one double rainbow — I lost count at four. With an overall theme in the book of promoting health, hope and harmony on planet Earth, I simply can’t describe the exhilaration of having that colorful endorsement from the queen of our planet herself — on the birthday of “Big Blue.”

Having already signed every book with my new standard signature, “H3 — JMH,” it made that “H cubed” much more meaningful and a permanent reminder of a very special evening in Stonington, CT. FYI, you will find the word harmony in the first sentence of the Introduction and you will find the phrase health, hope and harmony in the final paragraph on the last page of the book.

"Big Blue" will be joining me for my very first college campus speech -- tonight at Brown University in Providence, RI, about 45 minutes from where I am now sitting at the Mystic, CT Starbucks.

Reviews. After spending a year researching, writing and editing — then another six months reading, proofing, correcting and polishing; I had no idea what the typical new reader would have to say about our book after reading it the for first time. Would she find it helpful? Would it help her believe that she could take charge of her own health? Would it influence her to get started? Would she tell others about her experience?

Will enough readers make enough changes to put a big smile on the face of Mother Nature? I am still wondering about all of those things, but at least I know that for a few dozen readers so far — Big Blue is already making a difference. Here is one review that I got yesterday:

FABULOUS. Jim, I finished reading “THE” book on the flight home yesterday.  It is truly outstanding, compelling, exceptionally well-written, insightful, informative, and….I believe….destined to become a best-seller.  I’m ordering another case—my third—and may need even more.  I must say, though, that the entire section on the factory farming was difficult to read—-I literally had to rest my head in my hand as I was reading some of those sections. EVERYONE needs to read this and be forced to learn about the stark reality of what’s taking place.

Susan Benigas -- sailing off Stonington, CT on 9-30-11. My Director of Encouragement

You’re reignited the fire inside me; now I have to figure out what to do about it.  This message needs passionate, resourceful, creative messengers—-but messengers who have the time to act!  Fortunately, you’ve been in the perfect season of your life to make this happen—with gusto! From Susan Benigas, St. Louis, MO 

As for the very first review, it was written by Dr. Bob Wyatt in Dallas and is now posted in the #1 position on Big Blue’s Amazon page and is featured here in an earlier post: First Book Review…from a PhD in Dallas

Steve and his company brought me my constant companion (My MacBook Pro) and for that I will be forever grateful.

Reality and Making a Difference. The entire world knows about the passing of Steve Jobs yesterday. And they also know that his life, his work and his passion made a difference for all of us.

Suspecting that Steve was approaching his final days, I dedicated a recent post to him last month on 9-8-11. (See below). The reality is that all of us are “on the clock.” No one lives forever. But, as Steve has demonstrated, it is simply amazing what a single person can get done if he is truly passionate about what he’s doing.

Now that I have found my passion, I know exactly what Steve was talking about in that commencement address at Stanford a few years ago. The reality is that we only have a limited number of days on this planet — the question is whether or not we’re going to do our best to make a difference in the limited time that we have? Steve’s speech on that topic is provided in its entirety in the link below. Here’s a brief excerpt from that speech:

“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice.”

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

Steve Jobs — passion, vision and excellence

Order “Steve Jobs” biography by Walter Isaacson on Amazon

One final note about Apple, I am proud to say that the new leader at the helm of Apple, Tim Cook, is a graduate of my alma mater, Auburn University. If you like what you see here, you may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

Posted in Activism & Leadership, Book Promotion, Celebrities | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Multivitamins? Harmful, harmless or helpful? Dr. Greger

In this provocative video, what Dr. Greger has to report may surprise you.

This is the last in a series of six posts featuring Dr. Michael Greger, who is now in the process of following through with his commitment to publish a new video for the first 365 days of his new site. While traveling this week, I pulled together a few of the most provocative videos that he has published so far.

Here is one (about 2.5 minutes) about the use of multivitamins and their impact on the risk of breast cancer. As always, Dr. Greger presents well-documented information regarding these vitamins which 40% of American women consume — at a cost of $4 billion. Is that investment doing them any good?

From the nutritionfacts.org website: Michael Greger, M.D., is a physician, author, and internationally recognized speaker on nutrition, food safety, and public health issues.  A founding member of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, Dr. Greger is licensed as a general practitioner specializing in clinical nutrition. Currently he serves as the Director of Public Health and Animal Agriculture at the Humane Society of the United States. Dr. Greger is a graduate of the Cornell University School of Agriculture and the Tufts University School of Medicine.

Two other blogs on this topic: Vitamins; a review — with new info on B12 from Dr. Greger

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

Vitamins…a 27 billion dollar folly?

If you like what you see here, you may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

Dr. Greger and The Jesse & Julie Rasch Foundation | NutritionFacts.org

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

Posted in Vitamins & Supplements | 1 Comment