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WHEE Spotlight
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WHEEKLY ARTICLE
WHEE for Pregnancy, Labor and Delivery – Part 1
Daniel J. Benor, MD, ABIHM
A grand adventure is about to begin. - Winnie the Pooh
WHEE can be of enormous help in pregnancy, labor and delivery.
Having a baby is a very sp...
WHEE TESTIMONIALS
Personal Use Of WHEE
Dear Dan, I am continually amazed with the results of the WHEE session you did with me in Phoenix. Every time I revisit the event of losing my beautiful home - I see it as a beautiful memory forever filed in my consciousness as an achievement, to have known, felt and experienced.&n...
FEATURED THERAPIST
Featured Practitioner (July 2010)
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Photo #3 (November 2007)
SEVEN DUSTY SISTERS
Except for the night, we could never know the stars.
- German proverb
 Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, J. Stauffer (SSC, Caltech)
Hurtling through a cosmic dust cloud a mere 400 light-years away, the lovely Pleiades or Seven Sisters star cluster is well-known in astronomical images for its striking blue reflection nebulae. At visible wavelengths, the starlight is scattered and reflected by the dust, but in this portrait in infrared light by the Spitzer Space Telescope, the dust itself glows. The false color image spans about 1 degree or seven light-years at the distance of the Pleiades, with the densest regions of the dust cloud shown in yellow and red hues. Exploring this young, nearby cluster, the Spitzer data have revealed many cool, low mass stars, brown dwarfs or failed stars, and possible planetary debris disks.
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