The 4Leaf for Life Story—from a simple idea in 2009

Simple concept–flexible execution–powerful results

4-Leaf For LifeThe 4Leaf concept originated in 2009, the logo was designed in 2010, it appeared in my blog in early 2011 and is featured in Chapter 10 of our book. So how did it begin?

When I first began studying all about the optimal diet for humans back in 2002, I discovered a great deal more confusion than clarity. From Atkins and Dukan on one end of the spectrum to Campbell, Esselstyn and the other plant-based medical doctors on the other end. I noticed that most “diet books” featured the name of the creator as the name of the diet—implying that his/her diet was the only “right way to eat.”

Looking for clarity over confusion, read the works of Dr. T. Colin Campbell and Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn, Jr. --- Bill Clinton did and it probably saved his life.

Our 4Leaf “common ground” foundation begins with Dr. Campbell & Dr. Esselstyn—and includes doctors Barnard, Ornish, McDougall and Fuhrman.

Even among my plant-based heroes, there was quite a bit of disagreement. And as we know, disagreement among the experts breeds more confusion for the public. So, I wanted to create something simple, positive, and flexible—yet powerful. And I wanted it to be built on the foundation of the common ground principles shared by ALL of the plant-based experts. I discovered that common ground in November of 2009 over breakfast at Dr. T. Colin Campbell’s home.

As we discussed, a truly healthy diet is all about what you ARE eating — not what you’re avoiding. And while we don’t recommend the consumption of any animal products, 4Leaf for Life is not necessarily vegetarian or vegan. After all, you could eat nothing but potato chips and Diet Coke and call yourself a vegetarian — but that would definitely not be a healthy diet.

As for that common ground, I suddenly realized that all of the plant-based medical doctors agreed with this simple statement by Dr. Campbell:

“The closer we get to eating a whole foods, plant-based diet, the better off we will be.”

We know that the closest that we could possibly get would be 100% of our calories from those healthiest of foods. So, for our 4Leaf Program, we set the top bar at 80%—meaning that if you consume 80% or more of your calories from whole plants, you’ll be eating at the 4Leaf level. From 60 to 79%, the score is 3Leaf and so forth.

This poster did a great job of attracting people to our booth. Everyone seems to like taking surveys and it gives us a great opportunity to engage them in conversation. It was a lot of fun and left us feeling real good about our survey.

I use this poster at our booth at trade shows and speaking engagements.

But how do you measure it? At first, I used the old fashioned way—I counted my calories for a few days and tweaked my meals until I was consistently eating at the 4Leaf level. But most people are not going to count calories; nor did I want “calorie counting” to be associated with the 4Leaf for Life way of eating. Counting calories is associated with “weight-loss diets” and we wanted 4Leaf to be known as a healthy way of thinking about food for the rest of your life.

So for two years, I thought about how we could easily estimate the 4Leaf level of an individual—quickly, easily, and accurately. Then after several attempts, I settled on what we now know as The 4Leaf Survey, which is also available in a daily reporting version. The 4Leaf Survey was launched on this website earlier this year and has now been taken almost 4,000 times in over 100 countries.

4-LEAF_MASTERThe Algorithm (the points earned for each selection) on the current one-page printed version is visible while the individual is taking the survey. In other words, you can see what points you’re going to gain or lose while you’re taking the survey.

But in the future, the survey will be administered via an APP on a computer or a smartphone—and the points for each answer will not be revealed. Instead, after answering the 12 multiple choice questions, a report will be emailed immediately with a full set of helpful tips for improving your score. In the meantime, you can easily see where you gained or lost points and what you can do to improve the score.

A beautiful way to eat

4Leaf eating in the great outdoors—a beautiful and healthy way to eat—for the rest of your life.

Flexibility is key in the mainstream. As we begin taking our 4Leaf for Life concept to corporate America in our consulting work, we’re finding that our clients really appreciate its flexibility. We realized early-on that we wouldn’t get to first base with most clients if we were talking about trying to sell their workforce on becoming vegetarians or vegans.

Most people don’t like anything that implies “all or nothing” and it seems that the V words carry a certain stigma that most people simply don’t like. But everyone seems to love the simplicity and flexibility of 4Leaf for Life (now a registered trademark)

Consecutive daily blogs. My grandsons will like this picture.

Consecutive daily blogs. My grandsons will like this picture.

For your convenience, I have provided below a list of forms, blogs and other information regarding 4Leaf for Life:

The 4Leaf logo was designed by Thomas Mitchell of Lindberg Marketing & Media. We received the official registration certificate earlier this month.

Happy New Year!

Handy 4-piece take-charge-of-your-health kit—from Amazon.com

Want to find out how healthy your family is eating? Take our free 4Leaf Diagnostic Survey. It takes less than five minutes and you can score it yourself. After taking the survey, please give me your feedback as it will be helpful in the development of our future 4Leaf app for smartphones. Send feedback to jmorrishicks@me.com

International. We’re now reaching people in over 100 countries. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter or get daily blog notices by “following” us in the top of the right-hand column. For occasional updates, join our periodic mailing list.

To order more of my favorite books—visit our online BookStore now

J. Morris Hicks, working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

For help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4Leaf page or some great recipes at Lisa’s 4Leaf Kitchen.

Got a question? Let me hear from you at jmorrishicks@me.com. Or give me a call on my cell at 917-399-9700.

SHARE and rate this post below.

Blogging daily at hpjmh.com…from the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

—J. Morris Hicks, board member, T. Colin Campbell Foundation

Posted in Activism & Leadership | Leave a comment

Reaching the leaders who save $$ when we get healthy

Beginning with terrific advice that can apply to almost anything:

Figure out what you want—and learn how to ask for it. — That is exactly what I done.

Cure for health careWhat do I want? Corporate clients with enlightened CEOs who are willing to listen to a powerful health promotion approach to improving profitability in their organizations.

So how do I ask for that? By asking everyone I know to help me find those special CEOs out there. Read on.

Making it easy for people to help me. By providing you with the simple message, a sample letter below that you can customize for your own purposes and a hefty referral fee for introductions that lead to consulting revenue.

A little background. After blogging for almost 700 consecutive days, I concluded that my primary niche in changing the world should be in the area of assisting corporations lower their cost of health care—simply by helping ALL of their associates learn how to take charge of their own health. With a 30-year plus career in consulting and senior corporate management, this is the highest value work that I can be doing.

Health care costsAbsence of leadership. Consider that none of our elected officials in this country (or any other world leaders) have a financial incentive for us to be healthy. Let’s face it: large corporate CEOs are the ONLY prominent leaders in the world who have that $$ incentive to promote health and lower the cost of healthcare for their workforce.

So my number one priority is to find those enlightened CEOs who understand that investing in the health of their associates is a way to establish a powerful strategic advantage over their competitors.

Eventually, the CEOs who DO NOT help their associates take charge of their health will no longer be able to compete with those who do. My entire consulting approach is explained in an earlier blogpost blogpost: Slashing the cost of health care in businesses…

Anyone at ANY level can help. One avenue for gaining introduction to potential CEO clients is to ask their employees (at any level) to send a letter along with a copy of our book (and maybe a Forks Over Knives DVD) to the CEO via inter-company mail. Pasted is a sample letter that was sent out by a 15-year veteran of a grocery company who employs over 100,000 people in just the USA.

Referral fees. Nothing would make me happier than sharing my revenue with you.

Referral fees. Nothing would make me happier than sharing my revenue with you.

What about those referral fees? I am looking for introductions to CEOs who might have an interest in talking. And I look forward to paying referral fees for those introductions that lead to consulting work.

As for those fees, I will be happy to pay 20% of my first 12 months of consulting work for introductions that lead to that work. My billing rate is $250/hour. So if I bill $50,000 during the first twelve months, the referral fee would be $10,000 payable monthly throughout the first year.

Sample Letter to CEO from employee at any level

  • To: Mr. Tom Abernathy (real situation, fictitious name)
  • CEO, Group of Grocery Chains
  • Subject: Strategy to effectively and quickly cut Healthcare Costs

Dear Mr. Abernathy:

Congratulations on taking the helm as the U.S. head of our company, and on your bold reorganization efforts!

I’ve been working for one of our divisions in Maine for over fifteen years, and have discovered a strategy which would save significant money in health care costs. This strategy is working at one of our competitors, Whole Foods Market, and with a test group at Blue Cross-Blue Shield (44%- see link below). I suggest that we execute a similar strategy, only do it better.

With over 100,000 employees, I estimate that our company pays over $1,000,000 per day for health care.  If no action is taken, this number will almost certainly rise by 6-10% a year, depending on the growth of our workforce. The good news is that we can not only eliminate the increases in these costs, but significantly cut down that daily million dollar figure.

We have an opportunity to reduce our health care costs much like John Mackey at Whole Foods Market is doing.  At the same time, we would improve the lives of 100,000 employees and their families.  Within just the first 6 months of launching its program, Whole Foods employees reduced their weight by 7%, their systolic blood pressure by 15%, diastolic pressure by 14%, triglycerides by 11% and LDL cholesterol by 11%.  All this means lower costs for Whole Foods and much healthier, happier employees.

Briefly, the key to lowering the cost of health care is to promote health and the most powerful way to do that is with the right food.  The best, quickest way for you to gain an understanding of this process is to check out this blog:

Slashing the cost of health care in businesses

Then watch the enclosed Forks over Knives video (90 minutes), and read the enclosed book Healthy Eating, Healthy World.

The impact of our food choices goes far beyond our own health and “disease care” costs.  It continues with the extremely wasteful, incredibly harmful, and grossly unsustainable way we’re feeding ourselves in the western world.

After reviewing these materials, I suggest that you contact/agree to a visit from the author of Healthy Eating, Healthy World, J. Morris Hicks (Jim).  He can discuss some specifics of how to leverage our knowledge and cut costs in our company.

In the meantime, I would be happy to answer any questions you may have, or supply more background information. You can contact Mr. Jim Hicks directly at jmorrishicks@me.com or on his cell phone at 917-399-9700.

Sincerely, Joyce Davis

Consecutive daily blogs

Consecutive daily blogs

The Bottom Line. My #1 priority for 2013 and beyond is to engage corporate clients in promoting health and lowering the cost of health care. If you have questions about any of the above, please give me a call at your convenience to discuss. 917-399-9700.

J. Morris Hicks consulting credentials for this kind of work

Handy 4-piece take-charge-of-your-health kit—from Amazon.com

Want to find out how healthy your family is eating? Take our free 4Leaf Diagnostic Survey. It takes less than five minutes and you can score it yourself. After taking the survey, please give me your feedback as it will be helpful in the development of our future 4Leaf app for smartphones. Send feedback to jmorrishicks@me.com

International. We’re now reaching people in over 100 countries. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter or get daily blog notices by “following” us in the top of the right-hand column. For occasional updates, join our periodic mailing list.

To order more of my favorite books—visit our online BookStore now

J. Morris Hicks, working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

For help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4Leaf page or some great recipes at Lisa’s 4Leaf Kitchen.

Got a question? Let me hear from you at jmorrishicks@me.com. Or give me a call on my cell at 917-399-9700.

SHARE and rate this post below.

Blogging daily at hpjmh.com…from the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

—J. Morris Hicks, board member, T. Colin Campbell Foundation

Subtitle for this new blog

Begin writing here.

The following five books and one DVD can be purchased on Amazon for a grand total of less than $60—and will enable you to understand the overwhelming challenges we face—along with the single most-powerful solution of all.

Six-Pack from Hicks—for health, hope & harmony on planet Earth

  1. Healthy Eating, Healthy WorldThe “big picture” about food (our book)
  2. A life changer for millions, including James Cameron. Forks Over Knives DVD 
  3. An essential scientific resource: The China Study by Dr. T. Colin Campbell; the primary book that influenced Bill Clinton to adopt a whole food, plant-based diet.
  4. What have we done to our planet? Full Planet, Empty Plates by Lester Brown
  5. A horrifying wake-up call for leaders. TEN BILLION by Dr. Stephen Emmott
  6. Food choices are the primary cause of our environmental problems, yet our world leaders, scientists & experts are Comfortably Unawareby Richard Oppenlander.

Why should we be eating mostly plants? The “big picture” in 4 minutes.

Want to find out how healthy your family is eating? Take our free 4Leaf Survey. It takes 2 or 3 minutes and you can score it yourself. After taking the survey, please give me your feedback as it will be helpful in the development of our future 4Leaf app for smartphones. Send feedback to jmorrishicks@me.com

International. We’re now reaching people in over 100 countries. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter or get daily blog notices by “following” us in the top of the right-hand column. For occasional updates, join our periodic mailing list.

J. Morris Hicks, working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

To order more of my favorite books—visit our online BookStore now

For help in your own quest to take charge of your health, visit our 4Leaf page and also enjoy some great recipes from Lisa’s 4Leaf Kitchen.

Got a question? Let me hear from you at jmorrishicks@me.com. Or give me a call on my cell at 917-399-9700.

—J. Morris Hicks, board member since 2012; click banner for more info:

Nutrition Certificate

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Good News = Complacency = One Sick Nation

Having a positive attitude is good. Having your head in the sand is not.

NY Times LogoThe New York Times source article cited below caught my attention last week. It was entitled, “Heart Disease in Military Shows Steep Drop Since Korean War.” From the article:

A new study shows that the rate of American service members with signs of coronary artery disease has declined sharply in the last half century, falling to roughly 1 in 10 military personnel today from about 8 in 10 during the Korean War.

The authors of the new study, which was published in The Journal of the American Medical Association on Tuesday, drew their findings from autopsies and medical records of nearly 4,000 service members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2001 to 2011. Most of them were men, with an average age of 26. Over all, 8.5 percent had some degree of hardening and narrowing of the coronary arteries, known as coronary atherosclerosis.

The findings came as a surprise to some researchers, who expected that the nationwide rise in obesity and Type 2 diabetes, including among young people, might have led to a similar trend in heart disease in the military. But instead it appears that national reductions in other risk factors for heart disease, like hypertension, smoking and high cholesterol, have had a greater effect on cardiovascular health.

Statin use by year and age in the United States

Statin use by year and age in the United States

So is this article supposed to make us feel good about how our nation is doing when it comes to heart disease? Personally, I have my doubts about the current data compared to the data collected following the Korean War. I would like to see what Dr. Esselstyn has to say about this data.

But I don’t have any doubts about the following data from the CDC or this graph showing statin usage in the USA. Although we hear about cancer overtaking heart disease as our leading cause of death, heart disease is still holding onto the #1 slot at least through 2011:

Number of deaths for leading causes of death (CDC 2011)

  1. Heart disease: 599,413
  2. Cancer: 567,628
  3. Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 137,353
  4. Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 128,842
  5. Accidents (unintentional injuries): 118,021
  6. Alzheimer’s disease: 79,003
  7. Diabetes: 68,705
  8. Influenza and Pneumonia: 53,692
  9. Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 48,935
  10. Intentional self-harm (suicide): 36,909

Childhood obesity declines. Also last week, I saw an article about “childhood obesity being on the decline” in the United States. (See link below) After checking another article on the study posted on Web MD, I found this quote:

The rate of child obesity rose from 13.05% in 1998 to 15.21% in 2003. But it fell to 14.94% in 2010.

Well, whoop-dee-do! In seven years, the rate of obesity appears to have fallen about 1/4th of one percentage point. Does anyone really believe that childhood obesity is getting better?

National statistics show that Vermont is dropping from its perch near the top of national rankings of the least obese states. In 1995, 13.4 percent of Vermonters were considered obese. By 2011, the figure was 23.5 percent.

National statistics show that Vermont is dropping from its perch near the top of national rankings of the least obese states. In 1995, 13.4 percent of Vermonters were considered obese. By 2011, the figure was 23.5 percent.

News about the Top 25 Healthiest States. Check out the “positive spin” that ABC put on the recently announced state-by-state health rankings. Although every state got worse in terms of diabetes and obesity, the article made it sound like the 25 states who did “less poorly” were to be congratulated. See my earlier blog below on this one.

Check out the photo of two of the residents of our “healthiest” state.

The Bottom Line. We’re not winning the war on heart disease. Our children are not getting skinnier. And none of our states have a healthy population. We are one sick nation and getting sicker all the time. And each year it costs more money to be sick in this country as we pass the 18% of GDP spent on health care—far more than any other nation—and absolutely nothing to show for it—except big profits for the food, cancer, diabetes and heart disease businesses.

This pile of $100 bills wouldn't pay half of the annual cost of Mr. Lalli's cancer drug.

A pile of money is what our food and “disease” businesses are making while our innocent population believes that they both really care about our health.

Until our nation aggressively publicizes EXACTLY what we should be eating to be healthy, we can’t expect to see much improvement. And since our lawmakers are sold out to special interests in the food business, that’s not likely to happen anytime soon.

Posted below the source articles are two of my earlier blogs about the dangers of complacency regarding the state of our health.

Handy 4-piece take-charge-of-your-health kit—from Amazon.com

Consecutive daily blogs

Consecutive daily blogs

Want to find out how healthy your family is eating? Take our free 4Leaf Diagnostic Survey. It takes less than five minutes and you can score it yourself. After taking the survey, please give me your feedback as it will be helpful in the development of our future 4Leaf app for smartphones. Send feedback to jmorrishicks@me.com

International. We’re now reaching people in over 100 countries. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter or get daily blog notices by “following” us in the top of the right-hand column. For occasional updates, join our periodic mailing list.

To order more of my favorite books—visit our online BookStore now

J. Morris Hicks, working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

For help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4Leaf page or some great recipes at Lisa’s 4Leaf Kitchen.

Got a question? Let me hear from you at jmorrishicks@me.com. Or give me a call on my cell at 917-399-9700.

SHARE and rate this post below.

Blogging daily at hpjmh.com…from the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

—J. Morris Hicks, board member, T. Colin Campbell Foundation

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