Special to The Oregonian By Elisabeth Dunham
If it hadn't been for her daughter's stubbornness, Mary DeMorest says, she might still be dragging herself through life sick, tired and cranky all the time.
"Hopeless" is how she describes her state two years ago.
After experiencing a long-term decline in her health and getting little help from conventional medicine, she was starting to feel as if she was beyond aid. Her daughter, however, had become a believer in juice fasting, which she had tried under the supervision of her naturopath, and she was insistent her mom at least talk to him.
If it hadn't been for her daughter's stubbornness, Mary DeMorest says, she might still be dragging herself through life sick, tired and cranky all the time.
"Hopeless" is how she describes her state two years ago.
After experiencing a long-term decline in her health and getting little help from conventional medicine, she was starting to feel as if she was beyond aid. Her daughter, however, had become a believer in juice fasting, which she had tried under the supervision of her naturopath, and she was insistent her mom at least talk to him.