All Your Winter Health News
Feel Well To Live Well
Health and wellbeing are two integral components to a happy life. Sometimes, though, we feel sluggish and unmotivated. We sometimes need motivation and a nudge in the right direction to get back on the right track with our health. Happening both at the end of August on Auckland’s North Shore and at the start of September for Lower Hutt in Wellington, the Healthy Living & Allergy Free Show is a fantastic opportunity for companies, brands and organisations to get together to redefine and promote a greater way of living. Topics to be covered at the two seperate shows will include food allergies, intolerances, dietary needs, lifestyle choices, health, wellness, and personal care.
Tickets to the expo are for free on their website until the 14th (Auckland) and the 30th (Wellington) of August.
Repairing The Joints
For full-body strength and wellness, Adashiko’s Collagen Range supplies massive relief and benefits for our bodies. Be it their Adashiko ULTRA ($94.95) that boosts skin protection and anti-aging, JOINT ($94.95) that offers elasticity, lubrication and easier movement for bones, or Adashiko PURE ($84.95) that has a multidimensional support formula giving a super-boost of supplement to replenish and boost natural collagen production, and repair and strengthen the body.
As well as searching the globe to get their hands on the best possible ingredients for their customers, Adashiko looks closely at how they package their products too. For the last two years, Adashiko have made it their mission to make sure that the planet isn’t jeopardised by the grip of plastic pollution. The new tubs, no longer made from plastic but made from food grade pulp, are a good step into the future for Adashiko, the sustainability of collagen and saving our planet in the process.
Check out their Collagen Range in select stockists or online at ADASHIKO.com
This Is Not How It Ends
New Zealand journalist and TV presenter, Jehan Casinadar, is known as being a national treasure for his insight and reporting style. Little did people know he was struggling a lot and was severely depressed as a result. So he made it his mission to document his emotions down on paper with hope it’d do something – anything – to help. And the result: This Is Not How It Ends.
A journal following four years of emotional turbulence, how storytelling helped him survive, whilst also commentating on newer research. It gives practical tools and tips to help people get through intense emotional strain. The book is rich, raw and moving.
This Is Not How It Ends will be published by HarperCollins on 21 October.